| Literature DB >> 27531724 |
Marcus Jackson1, Ferruccio Pelone1, Scott Reeves1, Anne Marie Hassenkamp1, Claire Emery1, Kumud Titmarsh1, Nan Greenwood1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This systematic review is linked to the multifaceted social, economic and personal challenges of dementia and the international recognition of the value of interprofessional education (IPE) and its influence on health and social care outcomes. This review therefore aimed to identify, describe and evaluate the impact of IPE interventions on health and social care practitioners (prequalification and postqualification) understanding of dementia, the quality of care for people with dementia and support for their carers.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's Disease; MEDICAL EDUCATION & TRAINING; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27531724 PMCID: PMC5013417 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010948
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Outcomes from interprofessional education (IPE)
| Level 1 | Learners' views on the learning experience, its interprofessional nature, and its organisation, presentation, content, teaching methods and aspects of the institutional organisation, for example, time-tabling, materials, quality of teaching. |
| Level 2a | Changes in reciprocal attitudes or perceptions between participant groups towards people with dementia, their care and treatment. |
| Level 2b | Includes knowledge and skills linked to interprofessional collaboration. Examples include the acquisition of concepts, procedures and principles of interprofessional collaboration. |
| Level 3 | Identifies individuals’ transfer of interprofessional learning to their practice setting and their changed professional practice (eg, support for change of behaviour in the workplace). |
| Level 4a | Wider changes in the organisation and delivery of care (eg, interprofessional collaboration and communication, teamwork and co-operative practice, costs to the health and/or social care service). |
| Level 4b | Improvements in health or well-being of patients/carers (eg, health status, disease severity measures, progression of the disease, patient or family carers’ satisfaction, quality of life). |
Adapted from Hammick et al (2007).21
Figure 1Selection of articles for review. IPE, interprofessional education.
Characteristics of the articles included in the review
| Study | Methods | Aim | (A) Mode of delivery | Setting | Beneficiaries | Participating health professionals (n) | Outcomes type* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31 | Online case study design without a comparison group. Mixed methods were used to assess students’ learning outcomes using an interprofessional scale completed pre and post the case study and thematic analysis of free text responses | To investigate whether an IPE dementia case study would increase student comfort, self-perceived ability and value in working with others to meet the needs of patients with dementia | (A) Internet-based learning management system that provided the student participants with an online IPE dementia case study | University | Students training in dementia care | ▸Speech | 2a |
| 32 | Preintervention/postintervention design without a comparison group. Baseline and postintervention data measured using a questionnaire including: (1) demographic and motivational questions; (2) the ATHCTS and (3) the Geriatrics Attitudes Scale | Training on how teams can provide well-coordinated best-practice care by reducing medical errors and decreasing service duplication | (A) 39 different half-day training sessions delivered in three healthcare systems | 1. Teaching hospital | Professionals delivering dementia care | ▸Nursing (34) | 2a |
| 33 | Preintervention/postintervention design without a comparison group. Baseline and postintervention data measured using: (1) an online survey and (2) a paper-based survey | To improve detection and management of dementia through the development of a self-sustaining primary care based memory clinic | (A) 2 day workshop to increase team knowledge and skills followed by 3 day mentorship programme (including 1 day observation) | Primary care (22 FHTs) | Professionals delivering dementia care | ▸Medicine (40) | 1 |
| 34 | Preintervention/postintervention design with a comparison group. Baseline and postintervention data measured using (1) investigator-created semantic differential scale items on attitudes and true–false test on knowledge towards individuals with AD and (2) the ATHCTS | To use an interprofessional approach to increase students’ understanding of the roles they and other professionals play | (A) 4 hour session+5 clinical ‘experiences’ in dyads (nurse and medical students) observing a nurse. | Memory and wellness centre | Students training in dementia care | ▸Medicine (74) | 2a |
| 35 | Preintervention/postintervention design without a comparison group. Baseline and postintervention data measured using a questionnaire based on a five-point Likert scale | To improve staff practice | (A) 2-day course | Acute trust | Professionals delivering dementia care | ▸Nursing (15) | 2b |
| 36 | Preintervention/postintervention design without a comparison group. Baseline and postintervention data measured using the ATHCTS | To evaluate the interdisciplinary approach to treating older adults with dementia | (A) Symposium: 1, (pre) all students reviewed a common article about interdisciplinary team process, discipline-specific readings and an assigned case study. 2, (during) (a) didactic lecture about dementia care; (b) interprofessional team meetings; (c) large group feedback session; | University | Graduate and undergraduate students training in dementia care | ▸Nursing (36) | 2a |
*Kirkpatrick level.
AcD, academic detailing; AD, Alzheimer's disease; ATHCTS, Attitudes Toward Healthcare Teams Scale; FHT, family health centre; ITT, interdisciplinary team training.
Figure 2Methodological quality for included studies.31–36
Summary of learning outcomes
| Outcomes* | Main findings (as reported by the authors) | Study | Quality of the evidence* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level 1 | ▸“There were no statistically significant differences.” page 27 | 33 | Very low quality |
| Level 2a | ▸“Students had an increased appreciation of the importance of teamwork and client-centred care when working with people with dementia and complex health-care needs.” | 31 | Low quality |
| ▸“Results suggest that individuals who have worked longer in the health care system are more likely to perceive the value of teams in the pursuit of quality care and to develop improved attitudes about geriatric care as a consequence of educational interventions.” page 155 | 32 | ||
| ▸“Improved attitudes toward interprofessional teamwork and collaboration were evident in trainees’ responses to open-ended questions about the experience.” page 536 | 34 | ||
| ▸“Student attitudes toward health care teams were more positive after the symposium.” page 405 | 36 | ||
| Level 2b | ▸“Results … demonstrate that more than 4 hours of training are required to demonstrate self-reported improvements in team skills and attitudes about the costs of team care.” page 152 | 32 | Low quality |
| ▸“There were statistically significant increases in self-reported knowledge of and ability to assess and manage cognitive impairment, confidence, comfort level in speaking to patients and caregivers about memory problems and the ability of participants’ FHT to manage cognitive impairment independently.” page 28 | 33 | ||
| ▸“Significant outcomes of this program included increased knowledge about AD on the multiple choice test in the nurse practitioner students.” page 535 | 34 | ||
| ▸“There has been a significant improvement in the learners’ confidence in managing issues relevant to this patient group…”“The course evaluation and posters also suggested positive changes in knowledge and attitude.” page 499 | 35 | ||
| Level 3 | ▸“There were no statistically significant differences...” page 27“Practice changes were reported more frequently for use of standardised tools for assessing cognitive impairment and executive functioning, screening for fitness to drive and use of a clinical reasoning model.” page 28 | 33 | Very low quality |
| Level 4a | ▸“All but 1 of the participating FHTs (number=23) established a memory clinic within their primary care setting that was sustainable over time.” page 28 | 33 | Very low quality |
| Level 4b | – | – | – |
High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect. Moderate: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate. Low: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate. Very low quality: any estimate of effect is very uncertain. *GRADE Working Group rating system.28 29 AcD, academic detailing; AD, Alzheimer's disease; ATHCTS, Attitudes Toward Healthcare Teams Scale; FHT, family health centre; ITT, interdisciplinary team training.