Resource Center

Informing Resource Center

The Resource Center is a digital library of interprofessional practice and education-related content. Anyone with a registered account can contribute to the resource center and comment on a resource’s usefulness.

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Frequently Asked Questions
How does the Resource Center Work?

Think of the Resource Center as a library stocked with information added by its members. Each registered user has the opportunity to add content or make comments describing his or her experiences with interprofessional resources. Just like writing a review of a product online, members are encouraged to discuss a resource’s usefulness, practical application, benefits and even shortcomings (civil, constructive criticism only, please.) It is searchable by subject, resource type and keyword as well as by individual areas of interest or expertise.

What can I find in the Resource Center?

It’s a comprehensive hub for interprofessional practice and education-related content – ranging from information about programs to articles, archived webinars and much more. We use submitted, peer-reviewed and unpublished literature to build collections that are catalogued by topic, making it easier for people to find information applicable to their needs and interests.

Some of the most popular resources include:

  • Previously-published journal articles
  • Reports from conferences and commissioned papers
  • Measurement instruments and other assessment tools
  • White papers, videos, presentation slides, recorded webinars, audio recordings, case studies and book chapters
  • Learning tools, materials, curricula and much more

If there is something missing, just ask. We’ll do our best to track it down.

Who can contribute to the Resource Center?

Anyone with a registered account can add content and comment on existing content.

What about copyright and intellectual property?

Because the Resource Center is freely available to anyone, all content uploaded to the site must be copyright compliant. If you own the copyright to your work and want to make it openly available, that’s great – the Resource Center will provide a search-engine-optimized access point for your content.

If the copyright is owned by someone else (e.g. a publisher), you’ll need to obtain permission from the copyright holder before uploading that content. An alternate strategy for copyright-protected content previously published in scholarly journals is to link to the PubMed version of the article. Although not all articles indexed by PubMed are open access, community members with institutional subscriptions to restricted content will have access, and those without subscriptions will be offered the option to buy or “rent” the content from the publisher. Even so, you should be sure to obtain all copyright permissions before uploading any content to the site.

Is content on the site moderated?

Yes. The Resource Center is actively reviewed by National Center staff and community moderators to ensure all content posted to the site is appropriate.

Does the Resource Center contain only emerging research?

No. The Resource Center offers a home to both peer-reviewed and grey literature allowing information to be shared freely among users. This allows the National Center to chronicle the 50-year history of interprofessional practice and education, by providing a unique perspective to trends through access to seminal works that have never been digitally available before.

Showing 121 - 130 of 2876
This paper outlines the basis of interprofessional education, its relationship to interdisciplinary teamwork in primary care clinical practice, and describes a New Zealand model of postgraduate interprofessional education. Barriers to the implementation of interprofessional education in NZ were...
Jill Romeo Mar 18, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
For the first time [from 2012], New Zealand nursing, medical, physiotherapy, pharmacy and dental students have a chance to participate in a purpose-built interprofessional programme of clinically-based learning as one component of their final year courses.
Jill Romeo Mar 18, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
This longitudinal study aimed to ascertain former students' perceptions of and influences from a final-year pre-registration, rurally-located, clinically-based, 5-week interprofessional program on their subsequent work and career in the health professions. The study found that this work reports...
Jill Romeo Mar 18, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
This paper explores attitudes to, and perceptions of, the impact of interprofessional postgraduate education for primary healthcare professionals, based on a postal survey of 153 primary healthcare professionals undertaking postgraduate qualifications in New Zealand. This study found that...
Jill Romeo Mar 18, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
The evaluations described in this chapter have highlighted the need to have a better understanding of the long-term effect and outcomes of IPE programmes as a whole. From an institutional perspective these results are important for the maintenance of funding streams to support IPE programmes. From...
Jill Romeo Mar 17, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
Interprofessional education serves to strengthen professional identity, value all the health professions, and celebrate difference. It is fundamentally aligned with and integral to a range of important current practice discourses—the need for practitioners to optimise skills, relentlessly pursue...
Jill Romeo Mar 17, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
The successful delivery of primary care– led care requires effective teamwork and interprofessional practice (IPP) on the part of all health professionals. This sounds sensible, and is often assumed, but is much less often achieved.
Jill Romeo Mar 17, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
This study set out to explore roles of, and relationships between, nurses and doctors currently working in New Zealand primary care settings. Findings indicate that effective interprofessional relationships between individual doctors and nurses can, and often do, exist in New Zealand primary care...
Jill Romeo Mar 17, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
This paper is based on an address given (in collaboration with Eileen McKinlay and Tony Dowell) at the WIPA Long Term Conditions Symposium, Porirua, March 2006.
Jill Romeo Mar 17, 2024
Collections: ANZAHPE
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Featured Collections

Resources from the National Center

These resources have been authored by staff and partners of the National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education.

Bud Baldwin Collection

Dr. Baldwin has been a foundational researcher, teacher and champion in the field of interprofessional health care education and collaborative practice for over 60 years. The materials he collected during his career are an invaluable resource for the interprofessional community. All materials which are not copyright-restricted have been made openly available through the National Center's Resource Center.

The Literature Compendium

Browse an extensive scoping review IPE literature from 2008 through 2013

Contribute to the Resouce Center

Every registered user can contribute to the Resource Center. We depend on you to help us tell the past, present and future of interprofessional practice and education.

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