Using Social Constructivist Learning Theory to Unpack General Practitioners’ Learning Preferences of End-of-Life Care: A Systematically Constructed Narrative Review

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Abstract

General practitioners play a vital role in providing community-based palliative care to patients reaching end of life. In order for GPs to upgrade their skills at end-of-life care delivery, it is imperative that training programs be aligned to their learning needs and preferences. A narrative review was conducted using the electronic databases PubMed, CINAHL, PsycINFO, EMBASE, Scopus, Web of Science, and Cochrane from 01/01/1990 to 31/05/2021. 23 articles (of 10037 searched) were included for the review. Following themes were generated: Value attributed to end-of-life care learning, experience and reflection as a departure point for learning, learning as embedded in the clinical context; autonomy to decide upon their learning needs and learning preferences, learning as a transformative process; and learning as embedded in social interaction and interpretation. Training programs that are aligned to the preferences of GPs will encourage a larger clientele of GPs to access them.

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APA

Atreya, S., Datta, S. S., & Salins, N. (2023). Using Social Constructivist Learning Theory to Unpack General Practitioners’ Learning Preferences of End-of-Life Care: A Systematically Constructed Narrative Review. Indian Journal of Palliative Care. Scientific Scholar. https://doi.org/10.25259/IJPC_50_2023

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