National Resource Center for Academic Detailing [NaRCAD]
NARCAD
  • Who We Are
    • WHY WE MATTER
    • Our Team
    • Internship Program
    • Testimonials
    • Contact Us
  • LEARNING COURSES
    • Training Series
    • SKILLS LAB
    • ON-DEMAND WEBCASTS
    • Virtual Coaching Sessions
  • Tools
    • Program Planning Hub
    • AD How-To Guides
    • AD Core Toolkits >
      • Inclusivity Toolkit
      • Evaluation Toolkit
      • Opioid Safety Toolkit
      • HIV Prevention Toolkit
      • E-Detailing Toolkit
  • Community
    • COMMUNITY CHECK-INS
    • Peer Connection Program
    • Detailing Community
  • EVENTS
    • CONFERENCE SERIES
    • Present at NaRCAD2025
    • THE CONFERENCE HUB
    • AD Summit Series
    • The AD Summit Hub
  • MEDIA CENTER
    • The Details Blog
    • Podcast Series
    • e-newsletter
    • AD Literature Archives
    • Virtual Bookshelf
  • Who We Are
    • WHY WE MATTER
    • Our Team
    • Internship Program
    • Testimonials
    • Contact Us
  • LEARNING COURSES
    • Training Series
    • SKILLS LAB
    • ON-DEMAND WEBCASTS
    • Virtual Coaching Sessions
  • Tools
    • Program Planning Hub
    • AD How-To Guides
    • AD Core Toolkits >
      • Inclusivity Toolkit
      • Evaluation Toolkit
      • Opioid Safety Toolkit
      • HIV Prevention Toolkit
      • E-Detailing Toolkit
  • Community
    • COMMUNITY CHECK-INS
    • Peer Connection Program
    • Detailing Community
  • EVENTS
    • CONFERENCE SERIES
    • Present at NaRCAD2025
    • THE CONFERENCE HUB
    • AD Summit Series
    • The AD Summit Hub
  • MEDIA CENTER
    • The Details Blog
    • Podcast Series
    • e-newsletter
    • AD Literature Archives
    • Virtual Bookshelf

The DETAILS BLOG

Capturing Stories from the Field: Reflections, Challenges, & Best Practices
subscribe to details

Building Clinician Relationships through Virtual Detailing in British Columbia

2/24/2020

2 Comments

 
An interview with Terryn Naumann BSc(Pharm), PharmD the Director of Academic Detailing and Optimal Use at the British Columbia Ministry of Health by Winnie Ho, NaRCAD Program Coordinator.

Overview:  Terryn previously spoke about her experiences on a virtual detailing panel at the NaRCAD2019 conference. You can watch the video recording here. 

​Tags: Detailing Visits, E-Detailing, International
Picture
NaRCAD: Terryn, thank you so much for speaking with us today about your experiences with detailing in the province of British Columbia. The BC Provincial Academic Detailing (PAD) Service certainly has a lot of ground to cover. Tell us about the program goals and geography.

Terryn: For reference, British Columbia is geographically larger than Texas, but the population of British Columbia is only about 5 million people. We provide our detailing services to family practice physicians, nurse practitioners, and a few other healthcare professionals. Our detailers each do more than 175 visits per year, and collectively, they see about 2000 providers per topic, which includes about a third or so, of all the family physicians in BC.
 
We have 12 detailers in total, half of whom are working in less densely populated areas. For example, the northern end of the province is mostly small communities with only 3-4 providers in each town. One year, one of the detailers drove over 17,000 km (10,563mi) for her visits alone!

Picture
NaRCAD: That’s an incredible amount of work that your detailers have been up to! And you yourself have been active in AD for a long time. What was your experience then like?

Terryn: I started in 1993 with the program that would one day expand to become the PAD service, and I detailed for about 7 years. I came back to academic detailing in 2008 as the coordinator of the provincial program. When I started in 1993, I had just graduated with my PharmD. I had read about AD and was excited to try something new.

You have to realize, at the time, technology wasn’t that advanced... I didn’t even have an e-mail address when I first started.  You couldn’t just send people a note and say “When would you like to meet?” It wasn’t simple to access people. 

​NaRCAD: How would you describe how AD has changed since you started?

Picture
Terryn: When I started, I was the first academic detailer in Canada. There were about 70 physicians that I would go out to visit for each of the topics I put together after having the content reviewed by a local physician specialist from within our own community. One of the things that has changed is the breadth of resources and the growth of the AD community. There are so many more people involved, content is more thoroughly researched, and the literature is more readily accessible through technology.

NaRCAD: Technology has certainly changed the way the world works, and it’s something that detailing programs are turning to more and more to tackle the challenges you’ve mentioned, such as trying to serve a large and scattered population with a limited team. We’ve seen the increased use of tele-communications to do detailing. What has your experience been with virtual detailing, also commonly called ‘e-detailing’?

Picture
Terryn: One of the things we value about AD is that truly interactive, face-to-face encounter and that ability to individualize sessions to the provider’s learning needs. Virtual detailing uses a different methodology altogether. I think there are advantages to virtual detailing, but sometimes I think that it’s not as simple as moving AD to a web platform. I worry about the personal elements you can lose, even when using a web platform where you can see each other. My detailers often end up making slides of the original materials, which sometimes turns the session into more of a presentation.

NaRCAD: Can you elaborate further on the nuances you’ve seen with this new approach?

Terryn: We started with something we called Technology-Enabled AD (TEAD) which was a limited study done to compare the efficacy of TEAD versus a traditional face-to-face visit. They found that there was an effective knowledge exchange during both types of sessions, but the time it took for TEAD was far shorter. However, when we added TEAD as an optional feature for our providers, we ran into multiple challenges, such as detailers and providers not being familiar enough with the technology. The large majority of our providers choose to meet in person when they have that option.

Picture
That said, virtual detailing has been useful considering BC’s terrain and rough winters. Some regions have winter 8 months of the year and travel is limited for safety reasons. We have used virtual detailing, but find that we need detailers that are tech-savvy and can guide providers through accessing the platform easily.

The key is maintaining the interactivity component and having the session not become a presentation. If we can embrace virtual detailing as its own, unique skillset, we may be able to take advantage of all of its benefits. I think that we’re also at a changing point in technology – the next generation of providers (and detailers) will have grown up with and be more comfortable using technology.

NaRCAD: There will be a lot of growth in detailing as we are able to incorporate more options into how we reach providers, with the emphasis being on building a strong relationship.

Terryn: The goal of AD has always been to have a clinician who values a discussion about the evidence, and then is able to incorporate the evidence into their own practice and drug therapy decision making. E-detailing is just another modality for doing that.

​We found that virtual detailing is most effective after establishing a prior relationship with the provider during a face-to-face visit. We received fantastic feedback from one provider who felt the virtual detailing session that he participated in from the comfort and privacy of his home allowed him to ask questions he might otherwise have avoided asking in a group setting. If we can use technology to build relationships like that, then ultimately isn’t that what we want?

​I would say that it is. 

Picture
Biography.
Terryn Naumann is the Director of Academic Detailing and Optimal Use at British Columbia’s Ministry of Health’s Pharmaceutical Services Division. She earned her pharmacy degrees from the University of British Columbia and completed a hospital pharmacy residency at St. Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver. Terryn began her career in academic detailing in 1993 when she worked at Lions Gate Hospital in North Vancouver as the clinical pharmacist for the Community Drug Utilization Program – the first academic detailing program in Canada.
 
Since 2008, Terryn has led BC’s Provincial Academic Detailing (PAD) Service, a team of 12 academic detailing pharmacists who conduct over 2000 academic detailing/small group learning sessions each year. She is a member of the Canadian Academic Detailing Collaboration, having served as chairperson and secretary. She has also been a facilitator at several of the Centre for Effective Practice’s Basic Academic Detailing workshops.

2 Comments
josh mavis
1/12/2025 10:53:12 am

I was really stressed by Erectile dysfunction issues and had consulted Dr Moses Buba. He gave us a thorough consultation and the medicines were equally effective. In a couple of weeks there was big improvement in me and we are very pleased with the progress. We cannot thank Dr Moses Buba enough. Highly recommended. Email [email protected] WhatsApp +2349060529305. you can also reach on his Facebook page ; https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61559577240930 / website page https://bubaherbalmiraclem.wixsite.com/website

Reply
Mavis Wanczyk
3/28/2025 12:45:22 am

Being the winner of a multi-million-dollar lottery certainly is a life-changing event for almost every single lottery winner. My name is Mavis Wanczyk from Chicopee, Massachusetts, the famous Powerball lottery winner of $758 million (£591m). I know many people would wonder how I had won the lottery. Would you believe me if I told you that I did it with spell casting? I met this famous spell caster known as Great Odunga and he was the one who did it for me. As shocking as it was to me, my famous comment to the press was “ I’m going to go and hide in my bed.” Never did I believe that Great Odunga made me wealthy overnight. If you want to have your chance of winning and becoming very wealthy just like me, contact Great Odunga at [email protected] OR Email: [email protected] and WHATS-APP HIM at +2348167159012 and you will be lucky. Thanks for reading and hope to see you at the top

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Highlighting Best Practices

    We highlight what's working in clinical education through interviews, features, event recaps, and guest blogs, offering clinical educators the chance to share successes and lessons learned from around the country & beyond.

    Search Archives
    by Topic:

    All
    ADvice
    Autism
    Cancer
    Cardiovascular Health
    Chronic Illness
    CME
    Conference
    COVID 19
    Data
    Deprescribing
    Detailing Visits
    Diabetes
    Director's Letter
    E Detailing
    Evaluation
    Evidence Based Medicine
    Expert Trainer Insight Series
    Gender Affirming Care
    Harm Reduction
    Health Disparities
    Health Policy
    Hepatitis C
    HIV/AIDS
    International
    Jerry Avorn
    LOOPR
    Materials Development
    Medications
    Mental Health
    Obesity
    Older Adult Care
    Opioid Safety
    Pediatrics
    Podcast Series
    Practice Facilitation
    PrEP
    Primary Care
    Program Management
    Rural AD Programs
    Sexual Health
    Smoking Cessation
    Stigma
    Substance Use
    Sustainability
    Training
    Vaccinations

    virtual bookshelf
    Looking for additional reading? Check out our Virtual Bookshelf! 

    A collection of curated books that inspire, educate, and empower.

​NaRCAD is a program of the Boston Medical Center, founded at Brigham & Women's Hospital, Division of Pharmacoepidemiology & Pharmacoeconomics.
​Privacy Notice
Proudly powered by Weebly
Photo from Marco Verch (CC BY 2.0)