Programplaner og emneplaner - Student
ERGOB1200 Inclusion, Belonging and Social Participation Course description
- Course name in Norwegian
- Inkludering, tilhørighet og samfunnsdeltakelse
- Weight
- 5.0 ECTS
- Year of study
- 2023/2024
- Course history
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- Programme description
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Introduction
All people have a right to an active everyday life and to participate in society. Promoting this right is part of the occupational therapist's social responsibility. If people, for various reasons, do not have the opportunity to live an active and meaningful life with social connections, it can be detrimental to health. In this course, students will work on a project that aims to develop an idea for an activity-based measure to promote inclusion and belonging for a vulnerable group in society.
The students will also participate in the interdisciplinary teaching initiative INTER1100.
INTER1100 ‘The same child - different arenas’ (1.5 credits)
INTER 1100 ‘The Same Child - Different Arenas’ is part of the teaching project Interprofessional Interaction with Children and Youth (INTERACT), which takes place across the programmes of professional study at OsloMet. The goal is to increase the quality of the programmes of professional study that focus on children and young people. Through INTERACT, students acquire research-based knowledge about the everyday lives of children and young people, as well as practice in cooperating with students from other programmes. In this way, INTERACT forms the basis for improved coordination of society’s services directed at children and young people and their parents/guardians. INTER1100 ‘The Same Child - Different Arenas’ makes up the first module of INTERACT.
INTER1100 provides a common academic platform for all students involved. It is about becoming more aware and gain more knowledge about your own and other people’s programmes of professional study that target children and young people's upbringing.
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Required preliminary courses
None.
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Learning outcomes
After completing the course and INTER1100*, the student is expected to have achieved the following learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge, skills and general competence:
Knowledge
The student is capable of
- assessing and presenting inclusive and excluding factors that influence participation and sense of belonging in the big city
- describing the principles for user participation and resource orientation in local communities
- describing the process of growing up in a society characterised by social and cultural diversity*
Skills
The student is capable of
- using relevant legislation when arguing for equal services for different groups in a diverse society
- using occupational science and knowledge about human rights to argue for people's right to occupation and participation
- reflecting on the cultural significance of activities for belonging in a local community
- planning and defending the use of activities to promote inclusion and belonging adapted to a user group in the big city
- cooperating with students from other programmes of professional study on relevant challenges in the everyday lives of children and young people*
- discussing and reflecting on his/her own future professional role in an interprofessional cooperation with children, adolescents and their parents/guardians*
General competence
The student
- is capable of acting respectfully towards and building relationships with fellow students and with people in the city who are involved in the project work
- has an understanding of interprofessional cooperation with children, young people and their families*
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Teaching and learning methods
This course will give the students the competence to contribute to patient-centred pharmacological treatment focusing on vulnerable patient groups such as children and young people, pregnant women, older people and the chronically ill. The course covers issues such as pharmacological variatibility (pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics), aspects of patient safety and individualised treatment with therapeutic drug monitoring. The course also addresses the use of pharmacogenetic analyses, complex pharmacotherapy, compatibility and administration of pharmaceuticals given intravenously and the use of radioactive preparations. The course will give the student an understanding of health literacy. The relationship between health economic principles and rational use of pharmaceuticals will be an important topic, in addition to management and various leadership roles in pharmaceutical enterprises.
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Course requirements
The student must have been admitted to the study programme.
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Assessment
After completing the course, the student should have the following learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge, skills and general competence:
Knowledge
The student
- can critically assess the effects, adverse effects and use of pharmaceuticals in the prevention and treatment of various diseases in a patient-centred manner
- can analyse problems relating to medicine administration, clinical pharmacy and other pharmaceutical services
- can discuss the causes of pharmaceutical variability in advanced pharmaceutical treatment at the individual and group levels
- can critically assess requirements for data collection and documentation of clinical studies of pharmaceuticals
- can assess pharmaceutical issues related to the administration of pharmaceuticals in intravenously
- can discuss the importance of how variations in health literacy influence different patients’ and user groups’ coping with disease, mastery and self-care
- can discuss the importance of the relationship between health economic principles and rational use of pharmaceuticals from an individual and societal perspective
- can analyse and discuss leadership and various leadership roles in pharmaceutical enterprises
Skills
The student
- can follow up patients using advanced pharmaceutical treatment at the individual and group levels for optimal pharmacotherapy
- can identify the causes of variability in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics and propose solutions to advanced pharmacotherapy
- can elucidate issues related to advanced pharmacotherapy in special patient groups such as children, pregnant/breastfeeding women and elderly people
- can contribute advice on medicine administration and apply advanced pharmacotherapy in cooperation with health personnel, next of kin and patients
- can critically evaluate advanced pharmaceutical services that contribute to optimal pharmacotherapy and patient safety
- can analyse and take a critical approach to international research literature and different sources of information, and use them to formulate professional arguments in an independent manner
- can apply key statistical and epidemiological methods
General competence
The student
- can evaluate and communicate pharmacy issues, analyses, research results and conclusions to other health personnel in a structured manner
- can communicate evidence-based knowledge to health personnel, pharmaceutical users and the general public
- can contribute to optimal pharmaceutical treatment for individual patients and groups of patients through interdisciplinary cooperation
- can contribute to interprofessional cooperation on new and innovative treatment options
- can apply their knowledge and skills in professional management
- can contribute to developing the field of pharmacy and the role of pharmacists in society and in international collaborations
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Permitted exam materials and equipment
Work and teaching methods include lectures and student-active seminars using the flipped classroom method, digital learning resources such as medical databases and reference works, and work on group-based case assignments.
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Grading scale
The following must have been approved in order for the student to take the exam:
- A minimum of 90 percent attendance at compulsory teaching activities
- Presentation of two case assignments in groups of 4-5 students
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Examiners
Individual oral exam, up to 30 min.