Resource Center

Literature Compendium Quantitative Methods

Reducing depression in older home care clients: design of a prospective study of a nurse-led interprofessional mental health promotion intervention

Reducing depression in older home care clients: design of a prospective study of a nurse-led interprofessional mental health promotion intervention

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

BACKGROUND: Very little research has been conducted in the area of depression among older home care clients using personal support services. These older adults are particularly vulnerable to depression because of decreased cognition, comorbid chronic conditions, functional limitations, lack of social support, and reduced access to health services. To date, research has focused on collaborative, nurse-led depression care programs among older adults in primary care settings. Optimal management of depression among older home care clients is not currently known.

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

Prevalence, formation, maintenance, and evaluation of interdisciplinary student aging interest groups

Prevalence, formation, maintenance, and evaluation of interdisciplinary student aging interest groups

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

The authors describe the prevalence, formation, maintenance, and evaluation of student aging interest groups. They conducted a cross-sectional electronic survey of the 46 academic medical centers funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation. To evaluate their group of approximately 50 students, the authors conducted an electronic pretest and posttest of attitudes toward interdisciplinary education and knowledge about aging. Twenty-nine of 32 responding institutions funded by the Reynolds Foundation conducted a group; only medical students participated in one half of these groups.

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

Validation of an instrument to measure pharmacy and medical students' attitudes toward physician-pharmacist collaboration.

Validation of an instrument to measure pharmacy and medical students' attitudes toward physician-pharmacist collaboration.

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

OBJECTIVES: To assess the validity and reliability of an instrument to measure pharmacy students' attitudes toward physician-pharmacist collaboration, and compare those attitudes to the attitudes of medical students.

METHODS: One hundred sixty-six first-year pharmacy students and 77 first-year medical students at Midwestern University completed the Scale of Attitudes Toward Physician-Pharmacist Collaboration.

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

Nurses' perceptions of simulation-based interprofessional training program for rapid response and code blue events

Nurses' perceptions of simulation-based interprofessional training program for rapid response and code blue events

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

Following completion of an interprofessional simulation program for rapid response and code blue events, we explored hospital unit nurses' perspectives of the training, through a mixed-methods analysis. The results of this study advocate for the use of simulation training in preparing nurses and promoting communication among team members, effective teamwork, and early recognition of clinically deteriorating patients. This study provides support for the implementation and continued use of simulation interprofessional programs in hospital settings.

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

Putting the world as classroom: an application of the inequalities imagination model in nursing and health education

Putting the world as classroom: an application of the inequalities imagination model in nursing and health education

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

This article focuses on the description of an educational initiative, the Interdisciplinary Population Health Project (IPHP) conducted in the academic year of 2006-2007 with a group of nursing and health care students. Inspired by population health, community development, critical pedagogy, and the inequalities imagination model, students participated in diverse educational activities to become immersed in the everyday life of an underserved urban neighborhood. A sample of convenience composed of 158 students was recruited from 4 health disciplines in a Western Canadian university.

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

The impact of an interprofessional standardized patient exercise on attitudes toward working in interprofessional teams

The impact of an interprofessional standardized patient exercise on attitudes toward working in interprofessional teams

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

Effective interprofessional education engages participants in authentic tasks, settings and roles. Using these guiding principles, an interprofessional standardized patient exercise (ISPE) was developed and implemented for 101 dental, medical, nurse practitioner, pharmacy and physical therapy students. This study describes the ISPE and evaluates its impact on students' attitudes toward working in interprofessional teams. The attitudes toward health care teams (ATHCT) survey was administered pre- and post-ISPE and to a sample of non-participating students.

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

Cultural adaptation and validating a Japanese version of the readiness for interprofessional learning scale (RIPLS)

Cultural adaptation and validating a Japanese version of the readiness for interprofessional learning scale (RIPLS)

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

Readiness for interprofessional education (IPE) can be an important factor to evaluate because of the influences of attitudes toward the outcomes of interprofessional learning activities. However, a dearth of Japanese evaluation tools hinders its evaluation. The readiness for interprofessional learning scale (RIPLS) was selected, because it has been validated in different countries and its items reflected our local situation best. This research aimed to develop and validate a Japanese version of the original 19-item RIPLS.

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

Development of a scale to measure health professions students' self-efficacy beliefs in interprofessional learning

Development of a scale to measure health professions students' self-efficacy beliefs in interprofessional learning

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

A need exists for measures to evaluate the impact of interprofessional education (IPE) interventions. We undertook development and evaluation of a scale to measure self-efficacy perceptions of pre-licensure students in medicine, dentistry and health professions. The scale was developed in the context of a project entitled, "Seamless Care: An Experiential Model of Interprofessional Education for Collaborative Patient-Centered Practice".

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

Changes in attitudes toward interprofessional health care teams and education in the first- and third-year undergraduate students

Changes in attitudes toward interprofessional health care teams and education in the first- and third-year undergraduate students

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

The interprofessional education (IPE) program at Gunma University, Maebashi, Japan, implements a lecture style for the first-year students and a training style for the third-year students. Changes in the scores of modified Attitudes Toward Health Care Teams Scale (ATHCTS) and those of modified Readiness of health care students for Interprofessional Learning Scale (RIPLS) at the beginning and the end of the term were evaluated in the 2008 academic year. Two hundred and eighty-five respondents of a possible 364 completed the survey.

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment

Start the Conversation

Every registered user can comment on website content.

Please login or register to comment