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Journal ArticleDOI

Multiprofessional learning: the attitudes of medical, nursing and pharmacy students to shared learning.

Margaret Horsburgh, +2 more
- 30 Sep 2001 - 
- Vol. 35, Iss: 9, pp 876-883
TLDR
The belief that the effectiveness of patient care will improve through collaboration and teamwork within and between health care teams is providing a focus internationally for ‘shared learning’ in health professional education.
Abstract
Objectives The belief that the effectiveness of patient care will improve through collaboration and teamwork within and between health care teams is providing a focus internationally for ‘shared learning’ in health professional education. While it may be hard to overcome structural and organizational obstacles to implementing interprofessional learning, negative student attitudes may be most difficult to change. This study has sought to quantify the attitudes of first-year medical, nursing and pharmacy students’ towards interprofessional learning, at course commencement. Design The Readiness for Interprofessional Learning Scale (RIPLS) (University of Liverpool, Department of Health Care Education), was administered to first-year medical, nursing and pharmacy students at the University of Auckland. Differences between the three groups were analysed. Setting The Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland. Results The majority of students reported positive attitudes towards shared learning. The benefits of shared learning, including the acquisition of teamworking skills, were seen to be beneficial to patient care and likely to enhance professional working relationships. However professional groups differed: nursing and pharmacy students indicated more strongly that an outcome of learning together would be more effective teamworking. Medical students were the least sure of their professional role, and considered that they required the acquisition of more knowledge and skills than nursing or pharmacy students. Conclusion Developing effective teamworking skills is an appropriate focus for first-year health professional students. The timing of learning about the roles of different professionals is yet to be resolved.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Readiness for interprofessional learning scale: A possible more stable sub-scale model for the original version of RIPLS

TL;DR: An investigation into how to improve the reliability for use of the RIPLS instrument with undergraduate health-care students commenced and the fit of the new four sub-scale model appears superior to either of the original models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interprofessional attitudes amongst undergraduate students in the health professions: a longitudinal questionnaire survey.

TL;DR: It is suggested that students who enter with negative attitudes towards interprofessional learning may gain the least from IPE courses and that an unrewarding experience of such courses may further reinforce their negative attitudes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Student attitudes to undergraduate interprofessional education.

TL;DR: The results showed that students arrive at university with stereotyped views of each other, and that these views appeared to become more exaggerated during the Common Foundation Programme (CFP).
Journal ArticleDOI

Group processes in medical education: learning from social identity theory.

TL;DR: The social identity approach has a long history in social psychology and provides an integrated account of group processes, from the adoption of group identity through a process of self-categorisation, to the biases and conflicts between groups as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Validating the readiness for interprofessional learning scale (RIPLS) in the postgraduate context : are health care professionals ready for IPL?

TL;DR: The process of validating the Readiness for Interprofessional Learning Scale (RIPLS) for use with postgraduate health care professionals is described.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The development of a questionnaire to assess the readiness of health care students for interprofessional learning (ripls)

TL;DR: A rating scale using items based on the desired outcomes of shared learning, to assess the `readiness' of health care students for shared learning activities is developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interprofessional education for medical and nursing students: evaluation of a programme

TL;DR: This paper reports and evaluates a programme of interprofessional education for final‐year medical students and fourth‐year undergraduate BSc nursing students designed in the light of social psychological studies of intergroup behaviour (the contact hypothesis).
Journal ArticleDOI

Living with Myths: Undergraduate Education in America

TL;DR: In this article, living with myths: Undergraduate education in America is described as a "Living with Myths": Undergraduate Education in America: The Magazine of Higher Learning: Vol. 26, No. 1, pp. 28-32.
Journal ArticleDOI

Getting health professionals to work together

Celia Davies
- 15 Apr 2000 - 
TL;DR: Doctors and nurses work together every day, but is there more to working together than making sure that the work of the one profession dovetails with that of the other?
Journal ArticleDOI

AMEE Guide No. 12. Multiprofessional Education: Part 1--Effective Multiprofessional Education: A Three-Dimensional Perspective.

TL;DR: The three-dimensional model offers a tool which can facilitate the planning and implementation of multiprofessional education and is useful also for analysing and evaluating case studies in the field of multiprosessional education.
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