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Interprofessional collaboration: three best practice models of interprofessional education.

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TLDR
Three universities describe their training curricula models of collaborative and interprofessional education, finding one common theme leading to a successful experience among these three interprofessional models included helping students to understand their own professional identity while gaining an understanding of other professional's roles on the health care team.
Abstract
Interprofessional education is a collaborative approach to develop healthcare students as future interprofessional team members and a recommendation suggested by the Institute of Medicine. Complex medical issues can be best addressed by interprofessional teams. Training future healthcare providers to work in such teams will help facilitate this model resulting in improved healthcare outcomes for patients. In this paper, three universities, the Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, the University of Florida and the University of Washington describe their training curricula models of collaborative and interprofessional education. The models represent a didactic program, a community-based experience and an interprofessional-simulation experience. The didactic program emphasizes interprofessional team building skills, knowledge of professions, patient centered care, service learning, the impact of culture on healthcare delivery and an interprofessional clinical component. The community-based experience demonstrates how interprofessional collaborations provide service to patients and how the environment and availability of resources impact one’s health status. The interprofessional-simulation experience describes clinical team skills training in both formative and summative simulations used to develop skills in communication and leadership. One common theme leading to a successful experience among these three interprofessional models included helping students to understand their own professional identity while gaining an understanding of other professional’s roles on the health care team. Commitment from departments and colleges, diverse calendar agreements, curricular mapping, mentor and faculty training, a sense of community, adequate physical space, technology, and community relationships were all identified as critical resources for a successful program. Summary recommendations for best practices included the need for administrative support, interprofessional programmatic infrastructure, committed faculty, and the recognition of student participation as key components to success for anyone developing an IPE centered program. Keywords: interprofessional; healthcare teams; collaboration; interprofessional education; interprofessional curricula models (Published: 8 April 2011) Citation: Medical Education Online 2011, 16 : 6035 - DOI: 10.3402/meo.v16i0.6035

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A BEME systematic review of the effects of interprofessional education: BEME Guide No. 39

TL;DR: This updated review found that key context (presage) and process factors reported in the previous review continue to have resonance on the delivery of IPE.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring the impact of interprofessional education on collaborative practice and patient outcomes.

TL;DR: Interest in interprofessional education and collaborative practice continue to grow but whether IPE improves clinical outcomes is uncertain, and a recent study found that it does not.

Scope of Practice in Speech-Language Pathology

TL;DR: The ASHA Legislative Council's 2000 Ad Hoc Committee on Scope of Practice in Speech-Language Pathology (LC 7-01) as discussed by the authors developed this document, which was approved by the American Speech Language Hearing Association (ASHA).
Journal ArticleDOI

Interprofessional collaboration in research, education, and clinical practice: working together for a better future

TL;DR: An overview of interprofessional collaboration in the areas of clinical practice, education, and research is provided; barriers to collaboration are discussed; and potential means to overcome them are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interprofessional education accreditation standards in the USA: A comparative analysis

TL;DR: Content analysis of IPE-related accreditation statements for all practice-level degrees in dentistry, medicine, nursing, occupational therapy, pharmacy, physical therapy, physician assistant, psychology, public health and social work was performed, identifying four IPE student competency and organizational structure/process domains.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century

Alastair Baker
- 17 Nov 2001 - 
TL;DR: Analyzing health care organizations as complex systems, Crossing the Quality Chasm also documents the causes of the quality gap, identifies current practices that impede quality care, and explores how systems approaches can be used to implement change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness of pre-licensure interprofessional education and post-licensure collaborative interventions.

TL;DR: The empirical research evidence is scanned and summarized and found that the effects of pre-licensure interprofessional education on patient/client care are unknown and there is a growing body of evidence suggesting positive effects on the delivery of care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interprofessional education: The student perspective

TL;DR: Nine students from seven different health care disciplines participated in the second IPE clinical placement in the winter of 2005 on Toronto Rehab's Stroke inpatient unit and the students' perspectives on this IPE experience are discussed.
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