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Primary health care in New Zealand: the impact of organisational factors on teamwork

Primary health care in New Zealand: the impact of organisational factors on teamwork

National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education's picture
Submitted by National Center... on Mar 14, 2014 - 11:14am CDT

BACKGROUND: Although teamwork is known to optimise good health care, organisational arrangements and funding models can foster, discourage, or preclude functional teamworking. Despite a new, enhanced population-based funding system for primary care in New Zealand, bringing new opportunities for more collaborative practice, fully implemented healthcare teamwork remains elusive.

AIM: To explore perceptions of interprofessional relationships, teamwork, and collaborative patient care in New Zealand primary care practice.

DESIGN OF STUDY: Qualitative.

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The policy and the practice: early-career doctors and nurses as leaders and followers in the delivery of health care

The policy and the practice: early-career doctors and nurses as leaders and followers in the delivery of health care

National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education's picture
Submitted by National Center... on Mar 14, 2014 - 11:14am CDT

There are increasing calls, from a range of stakeholders in the health sector, for healthcare professionals to work more collaboratively to provide health care. In response, education institutions are adopting an interprofessional education agenda in an attempt to provide health professionals ready to meet such calls.

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Interprofessional collaboration among junior doctors and nurses in the hospital setting

Interprofessional collaboration among junior doctors and nurses in the hospital setting

National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education's picture
Submitted by National Center... on Mar 14, 2014 - 11:14am CDT

OBJECTIVES:

Evidence suggests that doctors and nurses do not always work collaboratively in health care settings and that this contributes to suboptimal patient care. However, there is little information on interprofessional collaboration (IPC) among new medical and nursing graduates working together for the first time in a multidisciplinary health care team. Our aim was to understand the nature of the interactions, activities and issues affecting these new graduates in order to inform interventions to improve IPC in this context.

METHODS:

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