Patient involvement in interprofessional education: A qualitative study yielding recommendations on incorporating the patient’s perspective (original) (raw)

Patients’ Messages as Educators in an Interprofessional Health Education Program

Journal of Research in Interprofessional Practice and Education

Background: Patients have traditionally played a passive role in health professional education. Health Mentors Programs are new, innovative interprofessional education initiatives that involve "health mentors" (volunteer community patient educators), who share their experiences navigating the healthcare system with an interprofessional team of four health professional students. The purpose of this research was to explore what motivated the patient educators to participate in the Dalhousie Health Mentors Program and what messages they wanted to instill in health professional students.Methods: Data were collected through seven semi-structured focus groups (N = 29) and one individual interview (N = 1), which were recorded and transcribed verbatim. Qualitative inductive thematic analysis was used to identify key themes.Findings: Our study demonstrated that patients want to play an active role in educating health professional students with the hope of improving the healthcare s...

Learning for real life: patient-focused interprofessional workshops offer added value

Medical Education, 2004

OBJECTIVES This paper reports relevant findings of a pilot interprofessional education (IPE) project in the Schools of Medicine and Healthcare Studies at the University of Leeds. The purpose of the paper is to make a contribution towards answering 2 questions of fundamental importance to the development of IPE. Is there a demonstrable value to learning together? What types of IPE, under what circumstances, produce what type of outcomes? DESIGN Pre-registration house officers (PRHOs), student nurses and pre-registration pharmacists attended a series of 3 workshops intended to develop participants' understanding about each other's professional roles, to enhance teamworking and to develop communication skills. Evaluation covered the process of development of the workshops, the delivery of the workshops and their effects on both facilitators and participants.

Participant evaluation of an education module on interprofessional collaboration for students in healthcare studies

BMC medical education, 2015

Interprofessional collaboration is considered a key-factor to deliver the highest quality of care. Interprofessional collaboration (IPC) assumes a model of working together, in particular with awareness of the process of interprofessional collaboration, to develop an integrated and cohesive answer to the needs of the client/family/population. Educational modules are developed in response to a perceived need to improve interprofessional collaboration for the benefit of patientcare. Up until 2005 no explicit module on interprofessional collaboration existed in the education programs of the Antwerp University Association (AUHA). During a decade the 'Interprofessional Collaboration In Healthcare (IPCIHC) - module' is organised and evaluated by its participants. One group, post-test design was used to gather data from the participating students using a structured questionnaire. Data was collected between March 2005 and March 2014 from participating final year students in healthca...

The Point of View of Undergraduate Health Students on Interprofessional Collaboration: A Thematic Analysis

SAGE Open Nursing

Interprofessional education (IPE) is essential to prepare future professionals for interprofessional collaboration (IPC). Learning together is essential for students because it is a way to understand the roles of other colleagues, improve their skills, knowledge, competencies, and attitudes to collaborate with the interprofessional teams. To explore how undergraduate students who attend IPE courses define IPC, a qualitative study using semistructured interviews followed by a thematic analysis was performed. Four main themes were identifed: IPC as a resource, requirements for IPC, emotions linked to IPC, and tutor's role to facilitate students' perception of IPC. Students considered IPE important to build IPC, where clinical placement tutors play a key role. The most important findings of the present study include the students' considerations about the importance of IPE when building their IPC definition and the key role played by the tutor during the placement in buildin...

A Mixed Methods Exploration of Values and Attitudes of Healthcare Students towards Interprofessional Education involving an Inpatient in an Acute Hospital Setting

Background Interprofessional education (IPE) occurs when students from two or more professions learn about, from, and with each other. Involving an inpatient in IPE in an acute hospital setting with patient-centred education may encourage movement between individual communities of practice, improving navigation of the broader clinical landscape of practice. Methods Four pilot workshops involving inpatients in an acute hospital occurred. Nine students from later years of their programmes were selected for each workshop by purposive sampling, three each from medicine, nursing and physiotherapy. Each workshop involved three subgroups of mixed disciplines with final full group discussion resulting in documentation of an overall picture of the patient, their clinical care to date and future clinical plan. One subgroup interacted directly with the patient. The other groups accessed relevant hospital documentation about the patient and their admission. A concurrent mixed methods research a...

Collaboration of Healthcare Professions to Provide Interprofessional Experiences through the Eyes of Learners

Health, Interprofessional Practice and Education, 2020

Interprofessional education encourages collaboration between several student healthcare professionals to provide experiences crucial to their success after graduation. Incorporating interprofessional education into the curriculum can be challenging, however it strengthens students' skills to work in a team and establishes understanding of roles and responsibilities. An interprofessional course, created by faculty from multiple institutions, effectively taught students through online learning modules as well as hands-on experiences such as simulations and communication activities. Activities included an identification questionnaire, TeamStepps paper chain, ambulatory care simulation, and a poverty simulation day. Throughout this course students learned about their roles, other professionals' roles, the importance of verbal and nonverbal communication, and the impact effective teamwork has on patient care.

Interprofessional Practice and Education in Clinical Learning Environments: Frontlines Perspective

Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, 2018

This Invited Commentary is written by co-authors working to implement and study new models of interprofessional practice and education in clinical learning environments. There are many definitions and models of collaborative care, but the essential element is a spirit of collaboration and shared learning among health professionals, patients, and family members. This work is challenging, yet the benefits are striking. Patients and family members feel seen, heard, and understood. Health care professionals are able to contribute and feel appreciated in satisfying ways. Learners feel included. Care interactions are richer and less hierarchical, and human dimensions are more central. A crucial insight is that collaborative care requires psychological safety, so that people feel safe to speak up, ask questions, and make suggestions. The most important transformation is actively engaging patients and families as true partners in care creation. A leveling occurs between patients, family mem...

Clinical inter-professional education activities: Students' perceptions of their experiences

2021

Background and purpose Students from different health disciplines should learn together during certain periods of their education to acquire skills necessary for solving the health problems. The Faculty of Health Sciences of University of the Witwatersrand created inter-professional education (IPE) activities for students to assess clinical IPE groups' perceptions of IPE experiences and to identify lessons learnt during IPE sessions. Methods This was a qualitative study with review of the students' post IPE feedback forms. The students were granted ‘protected time’ of three full days over a period of two months to participate in IPE activities. Results Students felt that knowledge about health team members was gained and that IPE groups should have more than one person from each field with the same level of clinical exposure. The students indicated the need to have regular IPE activities and if possible to incorporate this into clinical practice for them to experience it in ...