The Social Organization of an Interprofessional Education Program
Date
2017-07-31T18:53:37Z
Authors
Ezzeddine, Nadine
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Background: Interprofessional Collaboration (IPC) among health care professionals has been identified as essential to enhance patient care. Interprofessional education (IPE) is a key strategy towards promoting IPC. Stereotypes held by students have been recognized as a challenge for IPE and IPC.
Purpose: To describe the norms and limits that shape facilitator’s work in IPE interactions problematized by students’ stereotypes.
Methodology and Methods: The methodology employed was institutional ethnography. Data was collected through observations, interviews, focus groups, and texts. Participants included facilitators, nursing students, and IPE committee members.
Results: Facilitation of IPE is impacted by several factors including: the composition/balance of the students within small groups, interpersonal relations between students across health professions; inconsistent focus on core IPC competencies and formal facilitator training.
Conclusion: Study results include the identification of several strategies to address student stereotypes and enhance collaboration, including directions for future curriculum decisions and the pedagogical organization of IPE.
Description
Keywords
Interprofessional Education, Institutional ethnography, social organization, Facilitators, stereotypes, health care students