Perception of stakeholders on current perfusion education in Malaysia / Rafiq Sumardi Omar
Perfusionist is known as a certified medical technician liable for extracorporeal oxygenation of the blood during open-heart surgery. Current curriculum is believed to be at par and is aligned with the National Occupational Skills Standard, however, the scope of perfusion practice keeps changi...
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Format: | Thesis |
Published: |
2021
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/12879/4/rafiq.pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/12879/ |
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Institution: | Universiti Malaya |
Summary: | Perfusionist is known as a certified medical technician liable for extracorporeal
oxygenation of the blood during open-heart surgery. Current curriculum is believed to be
at par and is aligned with the National Occupational Skills Standard, however, the scope
of perfusion practice keeps changing with the advancement of technology and
procedures, and there is a demand for specialty area such as extracorporeal membrane
oxygenation (ECMO). Therefore, current curriculum should be re-evaluated by taking
consideration from multiple stakeholders’ perception on current needs, content,
educational strategies, teaching methods, assessment methods, and curriculum
management. Hence, this study aimed to explore perception of stakeholders in evaluating
current perfusion education in Malaysia. In the context of the present study, stakeholders
of perfusion education in Malaysia were referred to the private providers, manager,
educators, advance diploma holders, perfusionist, and pensioners. This was a qualitative
study which involved in-depth interview approach. A total 10 stakeholders participated
in this study, chosen though purposive sampling. The interview was guided by semi�structured questions to explore participant’s perception. The participants were
approached by the list obtained from the Malaysian Perfusionist Society (MAPS). The
interviews were conducted face-to-face or virtually. Interviews were conducted in
English and Malay languages. The Malay conversation was transcribed into English. The
ethical approval was obtained from University’s research ethic committee. The interview
transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis to address the four components of
Daniel Stufflebeams’s conceptual model for programme evaluation: Context, Input,
Process, and Product. Based on the findings, in terms of the context code, perfusion
programme can be improved by competency acquisition, proper accreditation, having
longer duration of study, benchmark the curriculum, and integrate simulation-based
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training. In terms of input evaluation, the strengths of the institutions were having
sufficient cardiac cases and certificate recognition. However, few weaknesses were
identified, namely the programme is not par with international standard, lack of clinical
experience among trainees due to time constraint, and non-comprehensive syllabus. For
the process evaluation, modifications to improve perfusion educations include to upgrade
existing diploma to degree level, encourage critical thinking through evidence-based
practice, reduce knowledge and practice gap, and to have single exit exam which serve
as standard assessment. As for the product evaluation, current perfusionist trainees were
less competent and the scope of perfusion need to be widened to cater for the
advancement in the field of perfusion. In conclusion, it is hoped that further steps can be
taken to improve the quality of perfusion education in Malaysia, including the absorption
of competency-based education where the number of cases collected should be the
priority to qualifying individual perfusionist. This can be done through three mechanisms
such as the training centres should have adequate number of clinical cases to provide
learning opportunities for the students, prolonging the duration of study, and providing
interdepartmental or inter hospital rotation clinical placements.
Keywords: Perception, stakeholders, perfusion education, Malaysia
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