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Showing 1441 - 1450 of 1999 for Education & Learning

Dealing with Dysphagia- Together

In an interprofessional education program, nursing and speech-language pathology students pool their expertise for better training and patient care.

 

Hagge, D., Noureddine, N., Brady, D., & Ofstad, W. (2015). Dealing with Dysphagia--Together. The ASHA Leader, 20(6), 34–36. doi. 10.1044.Leader.AE.20062015.34.

Clinical Pharmacy: An Example of Interprofessional Education in the Late 1960s and 1970s

In 1968, the associate editor of Modern Hospital announced that clinical pharmacy was the “hot new trend” in pharmacy circles. Pharmacy educators developed the concept of clinical pharmacy—and launched the first clinical pharmacy programs—in the mid-1960s as a new type of pharmacy practice that was patient oriented, rather than drug product oriented.

Setting a Research Agenda for Interprofessional Education and Collaborative Practice in the Context of United States Health System Reform

Interprofessional education (IPE) and collaborative practice (CP) have been prolific areas of inquiry exploring research questions mostly concerned with local program and project assessment. The actual sphere of influence of this research has been limited. Often discussed separately, this paper places IPE and CP in the same conceptual space. The interface of these form a nexus where new knowledge creation may be facilitated.

Developing a School of Health Professions

A set of several documents describing the work by Bruce E. Spivey and Gary M. Arsham in the 1970s to create a School of Health Professions in collaboration with the University of the Pacific at what is now the California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco.

 

The School of Health Professions was designed to address commonly recognized deficiencies in the education of health professionals and in the contemporary delivery of health care. The School focuses on primary health care, interprofessional education and care delivery, and self-paced curricula.

Bruce Spivey - Jul 29, 2015

The Transformation of Academic Health Centers

The Transformation of Academic Health Centers: The Institutional Challenge to Improve Health and Well-Being in Healthcare’s Changing Landscape presents the direct knowledge and vision of accomplished academic leaders whose unique positions as managers of some of the most complex academic and business enterprises make them expert contributors.

 

GT-OSVE: Geriatric Transitions Objective Structured Video Examination

The Geriatric Transitions Objective Structured Video Examination (GT-OSVE) is a series of 3 video cases depicting the same hypothetical patient undergoing transitions of care in different locations: hospital to home, skilled nursing facility to home, and home to an assisted living facility. The GT-OSVE may be used as an evaluative tool to assess trainees' ability formulate transitions plans and to assess team functioning. Alternatively, the GT-OSVE may be used as an educational tool for teaching about transitions of care.

Timothy W. Farrell - Jul 19, 2015

Interprofessional education: First steps

This is an editorial for the special issue of ANATOMICAL SCIENCES EDUCATION on Interprofessional Education in the Anatomical Sciences

Wojciech Pawlina - Jul 15, 2015

A presentation with the Institute of Medicine’s (IOM) Study Chair on Measuring the Impact of Interprofessional Education on Collaborative Practice and Patient Outcomes: Applying Global Ideas to Local Contexts

A growing body of work has shown that interprofessional practice and education (IPE) can improve learners’ perceptions of interprofessional practice (IPP) and enhance collaborative knowledge and skills. In contrast, establishing a direct cause-and-effect relationship between IPE and patient, population and system outcomes has proven more difficult – not unlike other health professional educational interventions.
 

Measuring the Impact of Interprofessional Education (IPE) on Collaborative Practice and Patient Outcomes

Over the past half century, there have been ebbs and flows of interest in linking what is now called interprofessional education (IPE) with interprofessional collaboration and team-based care. Whereas considerable research has focused on student learning, only recently have researchers begun to look beyond the classroom and beyond learning outcomes for the impact of IPE on such issues as patient safety, patient and provider satisfaction, quality of care, health promotion, population health, and the cost of care.