The world's first course on caring for teenagers and young
adults with cancer to be delivered via the Internet using new and innovative
technology is being launched by the charity Teenage Cancer Trust, in
conjunction with the Paediatric Oncology Nurse Education (PONE) group of the
Royal College of Nursing and Coventry University.
The course, which starts on 19 February 2007, has been designed to be
delivered via the Web using voice tools, web conferencing, an online chat
forum, blogs, podcasts and other multi-media such as video and audio
recordings. Its format will make it possible for students anywhere in the
world to sign up to the course, as well as giving them access to some of the
top experts in the field.
The postgraduate certificate (PGC) in cancer care for teenagers and young
adults (TYAs) is aimed at nurses and other health professionals; it will be
delivered and accredited by Coventry University, UK, which has also been
responsible for designing the web-based technology being used. The content
of the course has been developed by an international group of medical
experts who are involved in the care of TYAs with cancer and in educating
people working in this field.[1]
Helen Langton, who was chair of the PONE group until the end of 2006 and the
driving force behind the course, said: "This is not traditional distance
learning. The course has been designed to use interactive, online resources
to create a virtual Oclassroom' where students can chat, exchange ideas,
listen and respond to presentations given by their fellow students or by
experts in the field. However, because it is an international course that
aims to attract students from anywhere in the world, in different time
zones, it has been designed so that the material can be accessed at any time
during the period that each module runs.
"To my knowledge, this is the first time that an international group of
medical experts have worked together to develop a course in this way, and
this is the only course for those caring for TYAs with cancer that can be
accessed from anywhere in the world."
The National Cancer Director, Professor Mike Richards, welcomed the course.
"Teenagers and young adults with cancer have complex needs and deserve the
very best treatment, support and care. This innovative course will help to
ensure that health professionals are appropriately trained to meet the needs
of their patients," he said.
TCT spent £50,000, which had been donated to the charity by Scottish Widows,
to fund the development of the PGC. Professor Tim Eden, TCT Professor of
Teenage and Young Adult Cancer Medicine, said: "At present, there is no
specialist training available for nurses and other health professionals in
the care of TYAs with cancer. We strongly welcome this exciting new project
and hope that the course will contribute to raising standards of care
worldwide and to ensuring consistency of care provision for young people
with cancer."
The web-based PGC addresses two key problems in educating carers of TYAs
with cancer:
1. that at any one time there are never more than a handful of nurses and
other health professionals available to join a course, making it difficult
to run a viable course in the normal, non-virtual way;
2. medical experts in the field of TYA cancer are few and far-flung around
the world.
Mrs Langton said: "The TCT/Coventry University course enables students
worldwide to join it, ensuring a reasonable-sized body of students (15-20 is
the maximum number for each cohort taking each module of the course), and
gives them access, via the Web, to experts in the field in different
countries."
Students on the course need no special computer technology to access the
course material apart from access to the Internet and a simple headset.
Mrs Juliet Hinrichsen, an instructional designer at Coventry University
where "CUOnline" (an integrated software environment for e-learning) has
been developed and who has designed the way the course is delivered, said:
"I believe this course is exceptional in using such a wide variety of online
tools. Students will be using voice tools for audio discussions and
comments; web conferencing when everyone can use their headsets at the same
time to listen to, or give, a presentation and then discuss it; a feature
called OWho's online' which enables them to chat with each other and which
helps their social networking; blogs, podcasts and multi-media such as
videos and audios.
"All these tools will help students studying at a distance to feel more
engaged with each other, and it brings the course to life. In addition,
using this technology may help students to engage better with their patients
because they are entering a Ocyberculture' of things such as podcasts and
blogs that young people are using all the time, and it may open new avenues
for developing different kinds of support mechanisms for patients."
Amanda Lefebvre, a paediatric oncology out-reach nurse specialist at
Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, UK, is among the students who have signed
up to do the course. "My particular interest is in working with teenagers
and young adults and I wanted to broaden my understanding of the concepts of
cancer care in this age group. I hope this course will enable me, as an
expert practitioner, to deliver a service that meets the needs of teenagers
and young adults and their families and friends. I think the course is
particularly interesting because it's delivered via the Internet, and that
is where TYAs spend so much of their time and feel most comfortable, so it
may give me new insights in this area," she said.
[1] Senior lecturer in child health at the University of Central Lancashire,
Mrs Linda Sanderson, compiled and co-ordinated most of the content for the
course, alongside a group of international experts. This involved setting up
videoed interviews with experts and patients, gathering contributions from
experts in particular subjects, writing course notes, designing the
structure of the course and much else. The resulting course contains three
modules: teenagers and young adults with cancer in today's society; TYAs and
the cancer journey; the impact and influence of the cancer journey on TYAs
and the professional. They cover subjects such as the biological and
physiological development of TYAs, sexuality and relationships, the impact
of cancer, communication, ethical and legal issues, responses to a
life-changing experience, post traumatic growth, palliative care and how to
help TYAs deal with surviving cancer. As part of the course, students will
develop an understanding of global healthcare policies, different approaches
and standards of care and provision in different countries, their potential
role as advocates, and the opportunity for improving patient care when
working as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
The panel of experts included: Helen Langton (formerly Coventry University,
UK, now Dean of the Faculty of Education, Health and Science at Derby
University, UK), Linda Sanderson (University of Central Lancashire, UK),
Faith Gibson (Institute of Child Health, London, UK), Louise Soanes (The
Royal Marsden, UK), Margaret Parr (Nottingham Children's Unit, Queens
Hospital, Nottingham, UK), Sam Smith (Christie Hospital, Manchester, UK) and
Sue Morgan (St James' University Hospital, Leeds, UK), Linda Ewing (Mater
Children's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia) and Donna Drew (Sydney Children's
Hospital, Australia), Karen Bycroft and Jan Mikkelsen (both from the
Starship Children's Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand) and Jan Miller
(Christchurch Hospital, Christchurch, New Zealand). Experts from Canada have
also been involved in the development of the course.
[3] Teenage Cancer Trust is a charity that was established in 1994 to meet
the needs of the most neglected group of cancer patients in the UK ¬
teenagers and young adults. It has built and equipped seven,
state-of-the-art, specialist units for adolescents with cancer and is
planning 15 more. Its aim is to provide a unit in every regional cancer
centre in the country so that every young person with cancer has the option
of being treated in a specialist unit designed and staffed to meet their
needs. Website: teenagecancertrust
[4] Scottish Widows was founded in 1815 as Scotland's first mutual life
office. Becoming part of the Lloyds TSB Group in 2000, Scottish Widows
has become one of the most recognised brands in the life, pensions and
investment industry in the UK. The product range includes ordinary long
term insurance, such as life assurance, pensions, annuities and
permanent health insurance, and savings and investment products. Using a
multi-sales network of Financial Advisers, Direct Sales, Direct
Marketing, the Internet and via the branch network of Lloyds TSB,
Scottish Widows currently employs about 4,000 people. scottishwidows