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Showing 871 - 880 of 959 for Collaborative Practice

Domestic violence- Policing and health care: collaboration and practice

The need for effective collaboration when working with survivors of domestic violence is an urgent one. This paper outlines an innovative project that will examine the antecedents of homicide by a current or former partner. The early stages of the project including analysis of closed homicide case records and a survey of police officers' experience of collaboration with health and social care providers is presented. Early findings suggest opportunities where intervention could in future situations prevent homicide.

Scott Reeves - May 13, 2014

Interprofessional collaboration in the hospital: strategies and meanings

OBJECTIVES: Interprofessional collaboration is widely advocated in health and social care policies. However, existing research provides a relatively poor understanding of how professionals collaborate or the meanings they attach to their collaborative work. This paper aims to contribute to understanding of this activity by providing an in-depth account of interprofessional collaboration on medical wards in a large teaching hospital.

Scott Reeves - May 12, 2014

Developing interprofessional education in the pre-registration curricula: mission impossible?

Interprofessional education has long been cited in health and social care policy as a remedy to improve many of the problems faced by the National Health Service (NHS) around co-ordination and collaboration of staff. More recently, this form of education has been acknowledged as having a key role in delivering the government's modernisation agenda to produce a more 'flexible' workforce. Given the large number of logistical problems connected to developing interprofessional education before registration, this type of activity more often occurs after registration.

Scott Reeves - May 12, 2014

Learning to work together: using the presage, process, product (3P) model to highlight decisions and possibilities

Collaborative practice is seen as a core aspect of professional practice and, therefore, a focus of professional education. Current interprofessional and quality assurance literature provides enumeration and discussion of a range of competencies required for effective collaborative practice. Case studies of education and training related to collaborative competences rarely discuss the nature of influences on development, delivery and learning.

Scott Reeves - May 12, 2014

Interprofessional care co-ordinators: the benefits and tensions associated with a new role in UK acute health care

While more flexible models of service delivery are being introduced in UK health and social care, little is known about the impact of new roles, particularly support worker roles, on the work of existing practitioners. This action research study aimed to explore the impact of one such new role, that of interprofessional care co-ordinators (IPCCs). The general (internal) medical service of a UK hospital uses IPCCs to provide support to the interprofessional team and, in doing so, promote efficiency of acute bed use.

Scott Reeves - May 12, 2014

Interprofessional education: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes

BACKGROUND: As patient care becomes more complex, effective collaboration between health and social care professionals is required. However, evidence suggests that these professionals do not collaborate well together. Interprofessional education (IPE) offers a possible way forward in this area.

OBJECTIVES: To assess the usefulness of IPE interventions compared to education in which the same professions were learning separately from one another.

Scott Reeves - May 12, 2014

'Real life' clinical learning on an interprofessional training ward

This paper describes the multi-method evaluation of an interprofessional training ward placement for medical, nursing, occupational therapy and physiotherapy students. Unique in the UK, and an extension of pioneering work in Sweden (Wahlström et al. 1997, Wahlstroöm & Sandén 1998), this interprofessional clinical placement allowed senior pre-qualifying students, under the supervision of practitioners, to plan and deliver interprofessional care for a group of orthopaedic and rheumatology patients.

Scott Reeves - May 12, 2014

What's so great about collaboration?

The authors assert that the interprofessional health care community needs more evidence and less rhetoric.

Scott Reeves - May 12, 2014

Evaluating interprofessional education: two systematic reviews for health and social care

Learning between professions has been widely invoked in health and social care in the belief that it improves collaboration in practice. Evidence to substantiate that belief is, however, elusive. Obstacles to the rigorous evaluation of interprofessional education are formidable, but this article reports progress towards establishing an evidence base. It describes two reviews. One is subject to criteria for Cochrane Collaboration, the other less constrained. Findings are reported for the first and methodology is discussed for the second.

Scott Reeves - May 12, 2014

Proceedings of the 12th Congress of Health Professions Educators

Integrating Clinical Prevention and Population Health into Education, Practice, and Research

This volume contains papers presented at the 12th Congress of Health Professions Educators, Integrating Clinical Prevention and Population Health into Education, Practice, and Research.

Copyright © 2005 Association of Academic Health Centers. Available here with permission.