Nexus Summit 2023 Seminar Showcase: Diversifying Interprofessionalism: Who’s Missing from the Table?

National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education's picture
Submitted by National Center... on May 2, 2024 - 8:47am CDT

Resource Type: 
Video

This webinar is part of the Nexus Summit 2023 Seminar Showcase series. You may register for this and the other webinars in the Series here.


Series Description:

The Nexus Summit Seminar Showcase is a free webinar series from the National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education. The seminar showcase features the highest rated peer-reviewed seminars offered during last year’s annual conference, the Nexus Summit 2023, and covers topics ranging from artificial intelligence (AI), longitudinal assessment strategies, team well-being, health equity, multi-institutional models, and interprofessional advocacy, among others.  Offered between March - July 2024, the Nexus Summit Seminar Showcase will provide an opportunity to learn from, with, and about the work being done to improve practice, education and health for those we serve.


Abstract:

Proponents of interprofessional education and practice have great opportunity to think beyond the traditional health care team by considering the wide variety of health and social care professionals who serve our communities in their unique and distinct ways. For example, graduates of health-related programs from community colleges provide many of these essential services; yet, they are frequently missing from interprofessional discussions.

When these professions are not included in important conversations about health and social care services, then how inclusive is interprofessionalism? When these professions are absent, diversity of thought is also absent. When diversity of thought is absent, then diversity of persons on our interprofessional teams is absent. If diversity of persons, thoughts, and professions are absent, then we must ask ourselves “how just, equitable, and inclusive are our interprofessional efforts, really?”

This workshop will encourage participant and/or institutional self-assessment, reflection, and action planning about diversity of professions within their institutions, IPE programming, and leadership. These professions may be graduates or students of community colleges and universities and may include clinical, nonclinical, technical, and support personnel. By including these professionals, diversity of thought, persons, and identities grows. By promoting inclusion of diverse, high impact, contributing professionals to patient/client care teams, seats at our interprofessional tables will be filled by the right players at the right time for delivering the highest quality and safest care to consumers of our services.

The Summit’s theme “Interprofessional Collaboration to Address Health Equity, Racism and Bias in Interprofessional Practice” will be addressed by highlighting incomplete diversity of professions and personal identities, which, consequently, contributes to perpetuation of implicit biases, institutional barriers, structural racism, and inequity of not only members of the interprofessional team, but also of consumers of care. Patient/client care is enhanced by a diverse workforce, and analyzing professional diversity of interprofessional teams will contribute toward societal justice, equity, diversity, inclusion, and belonging (JEDI+B).

After attending this session, learners will be able to:

  • Engage in critical self and organizational assessment of interprofessional inclusion for determining which professions are missing from their "interprofessional tables"
  • Identify the critical insights that members of these missing professions might contribute to the interprofessional dialogue for enhancing patient/client outcomes
  • Identify and share at least one action item to increase diversity of professions on their interprofessional team(s)

Knowledge gained from this workshop may be immediately actionable by the creation of a tangible plan for diversifying professions on their interprofessional teams through the lens of JEDI+B (justice, equity, diversity, inclusion, and belonging)

Learning objectives will be achieved by including interactive discussions through chat contributions, word clouds, small group discussion, and building a collective Google Doc that captures group-based action items and then shared with all participants. Lastly, the next scheduled AIHC Social Hour will be the follow-up portion to this workshop for a check-in on progress on action items and plans. This topic will be easily generalizable to Social Hour guests who did not engage in the Summit workshop through encouragement to offer in-the-moment contributions to topic.

 

 

Presenters:

  • Erin Breitenbach, PhD, MEd, A T Still University
  • Gina Baugh, PharmD, West Virginia University
  • Dan Ferguson, MS, Yakima Valley College
  • Kelly Karpa, PhD, FAPE, NAP, East Tennessee State University
  • Amber King, PharmD, BCPS, FNAP, Thomas Jefferson University
  • Angela Cecil, PhD, MBA, OTR, Texas Woman’s University

 

 

Author(s): 
Erin Breitenbach, PhD, MEd, A T Still University
Gina Baugh, PharmD, West Virginia University
Dan Ferguson, MS, Yakima Valley College
Kelly Karpa, PhD, FAPE, NAP, East Tennessee State University
Amber King, PharmD, BCPS, FNAP, Thomas Jefferson University
Angela Cecil, PhD, MBA, OTR, Texas Woman’s University
Subject: 
Collaborative Practice
Ethics
Technology
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