| Literature DB >> 28468651 |
Cora L F Visser1,2, Johannes C F Ket3, Gerda Croiset4, Rashmi A Kusurkar5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To identify facilitators and barriers that residents, medical and nursing students perceive in their Interprofessional Education (IPE) in a clinical setting with other healthcare students.Entities:
Keywords: Affective component of learning process; Barriers; Facilitators; Readiness for IPE
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28468651 PMCID: PMC5415777 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-017-0909-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram
Number of studies per level and category (n = 65; findings of one study could belong in more than one category)
| Level | Cultural | Process | Individual | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Category | ||||
| Readiness for IPE | 1 | 6 | 10 | 17 |
| Facilitators of IPE | 4 | 50 | 7 | 61 |
| Barriers to IPE | 12 | 11 | 4 | 27 |
| 17 | 67 | 21 |
Categories and findings - At Cultural / organizational level
| Category | Papers | Subcategories | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Readiness for IPE | 1 paper [ | - | - When medical students and nurses do not interact well with the other group, IPC is jeopardized by the associated interpersonal sensitivity score of medical students and hostility score of nurses. |
| Facilitators | 2 papers [ | - | - Time to socialize and experience IPC improved perceptions of IPE. |
| 1 paper [ | - | - Positive attitudes towards IPC and perceptions of IPC were maintained and even strengthened once students practiced as qualified professionals. | |
| Barriers | 6 papers [ | - | - Medical students perceived nurses to have a less positive status in society, associated some tasks with nurses’ work and refused to do them in the ITU. |
| 2 papers [ | - Not knowing students from the other professions meant that time was needed to familiarize. | ||
| 1 paper [ | - | - Dissonance between what faculty stated and educational practice | |
| 1 paper [ | - | - Nurses perceived that residents didn’t want to share decision making and vice versa. | |
| 1 paper [ | - | - Attitude towards healthcare teams was significantly poorer in students around one year after graduation, in comparison with 3rd year students after the same IPE training. | |
| 1 paper [ | - | - Gaps in perception of the others’ roles was negatively related to attitudes toward collaborative patient care decision making. |
Categories and findings- At Process / curricular level
| Category | Papers | Subcategories | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Readiness for IPE | 6 papers [ | - | - Readiness for IPE and professional identity were highest at entry, higher in students with prior IPE experience and declined significantly over time. |
| Facilitators | 4 papers – workplace setting [ | - | - Diverse IPE forms, all authentic patient settings, improved the perceptions about interpersonal skills, professional competence, leadership, academic ability, being a team player or independent worker, confidence, decision-making and practical skills of the other health professions. |
| 2 papers [ | - Understanding of team roles and team interdependence scored high. In one study perception of team efficacy decreased after graduation. | ||
| 3 papers [ | - | - Students ask for longitudinal integrated IPE and longitudinal clerkships | |
| - IPE as a training in comparison with lectures resulted in significantly higher mean scores on the subscales ‘quality of care’ and ‘patient-centered care’. | |||
| 7 papers | - | - Training of team communication skills enhances motivation and positive attitudes toward IPC. Students had learned about their performance and lack of professional skills alongside team skills. | |
| 6 papers | - | - A teacher helping students think, plan, do and check their work, thus stimulating teamwork rather than teaching knowledge. | |
| 6 papers | - | - Value in learning about professional differences and identity. Students saw the benefits of shared learning, medical students saw the advantages only early in their training. | |
| 18 papers | - | - Clinical realism, like simulation or interprofessional training unit, offered students an opportunity to identify other professionals’ functions in relation to patient care and to clearly assess and describe patients’ problems and needs. | |
| 1 paper [ | - Readiness for IPE and attitude towards health care teams improved after IPE involving teaching through practice and decreased after IPE involving teaching only through lectures. | ||
| 2 papers [ | - | - Combination of professional specific and IPE learning goals was achieved by students in advanced years (8th semester) | |
| 1 paper [ | - | - A Team communication training was followed by regular IP team meetings. | |
| Barriers | 8 papers | - | - Medical students experienced confusion and tension when profession-specific and IPE objectives are combined. |
| 1 paper [ | - | - Teacher who just transmits knowledge rather than stimulating students to think, plan, do and reflect. | |
| 1 paper [ | - | - IPE loses importance when not assessed, especially for medical students, who are concerned about learning inappropriate skills. | |
| 1 paper [ | - | - Medical students were not used to the requirement to be present in the ward all day. |
Categories and findings- At Individual level
| Category | Papers | Subcategories | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Readiness for IPE | 4 papers [ | - | - Females had more readiness for IPE than males. |
| 2 papers [ | - | - Increased understanding of others’ role and of the students’ own competence in IPC led to lesser stereotyping and more readiness for IPC. | |
| 1 paper [ | - First year students with a parent working in healthcare started with lower readiness. | ||
| 2 papers [ | - | - Earlier work experience in health care did not influence attitudes toward collaboration but it did result in higher readiness for IPE. | |
| 1 paper [ | - | - Younger students achieved more learning outcomes than students who had graduated in some professions. | |
| Facilitators | 1 paper [ | - | - Working together required physical proximity (place), time to interact and intellectual availability, with knowledge about the work they are doing and about each other’s’ roles as care providers. Being receptive is conveying respect, trust and interest in collaboration. |
| 2 papers [ | - | - Professionals interact the best in their group, this was overcome when situations created a feeling of urgency and demanded collaboration. | |
| 4 papers [ | - | - All students groups reported a gain in understanding of the importance of communication and teamwork in patient care; medical students reporting the greatest gain and they also gained most in clarity of own professional role. | |
| Barriers | 2 papers [ | - | - Arrogance or disinterest, aggressive behavior, nurses delaying acting on orders or going to other doctors, the need to “sell oneself” to other professions. |
| 2 papers [ | - | - When medical students focus on professional knowledge rather than on teamwork skills, and when nurses feel intimidated. |
LOT model for Guidance of the learning process in IPE. (adapted from Table 4 of Ten Cate et al. [86])
| Source of guidance of the learning process | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Learning process component | Full external guidance (from the teacher only) | Shared guidance (from students and teacher both) | Full internal guidance (from the student only) |
| Cognitive level | |||
| Learner: what to learn? | Learning with and about others in classroom situation | Learning from others (roles and responsibilities) | Learning from other students and patients |
| Teacher: what to present to the student? | Using examples of complex patient problems | Facilitating students to think and plan a collaborative approach | Facilitating team work |
| Affective level | |||
| Learner: why learn? | Shared learning about patients’ problems | Learning with others to solve patients’ problems | Reflect on quality of care and patient safety |
| Teacher: how to motivate the student? | Expose stereotyped views | Give active, patient centred assignments | Learning in authentic context |
| Metacognitive level | |||
| Learner: how to learn? | Learning goals are assesseda | Integrating profession specific + IPE goalsb | Peer coaching |
| Teacher: how to instruct the student? | - Assessment at cognitive level and reflection for affective level | - | - (Self-)Assessment with reflection and portfolio |
aExamples of learning goals assessment in the included papers are: Final class presentation [58]; Judgement by IP facilitators using a rubric at end of placement [74]; Asking for 3 statements about learning in IP Training Unit [43]; Faculty and Standardized Patient using a Teamwork Global Rating Scale [80]
bWith integrated profession specific and IPE objectives, assessment can be considered a form of guidance as stated by Broadfoot (Broadfoot, Patricia (2007) Introduction to assessment. London: Continuum, p. 135–136): “Self-assessment, therefore, is not really just an assessment practice; it is actually a learning activity. It is a way of encouraging students to reflect on what they have learned so far, to think about ways of improving their learning and to make plans which will enable them to progress as learners and to reach their goals. […] As such it incorporates the skills of time-management, action-planning, negotiation, interpersonal skills, communication - with both teachers and fellow students - and self-discipline in addition to reflection, critical judgment and evaluation”
We incorporated the facilitators found at cultural and process level (indicated with – italic, from our Tables 1, 2 and 3 in the column ‘Subcategories’). Since ‘Assessment’ can be considered a form of guidance (Crooks, 1988) and it was missing in most IPE interventions (barrier at process/curricular level), we added it at the cognitive and meta-cognitive level