| Literature DB >> 29058510 |
Joseph B House1, Jacob Cedarbaum2, Fatema Haque2, Michael Wheaton3, Jennifer Vredeveld4, Joel Purkiss5, Laurel Moore6, Sally A Santen7, Michelle Daniel8.
Abstract
Recent reviews of interprofessional education (IPE) highlight the need for innovative curricula focused on longitudinal clinical learning. We describe the development and early outcomes of the initial clinical experience (ICE), a longitudinal practice-based course for first-year medical students. While IPE courses focus on student-to-student interaction, ICE focuses on introducing students to interprofessional collaboration. Students attend 14 sessions at one of 18 different clinical sites. They work directly with different health professionals from among 17 possible professions, including nurses, pharmacists, social workers, and respiratory, occupational, and physical therapists. Between 2015 and 2016, 167 students completed the course, and 81 completed the end-of-course evaluation. Students agreed or strongly agreed that ICE meaningfully contributed to their understanding of healthcare teams and different professional roles (86%), improved their understanding of healthcare systems (84%), improved their ability to communicate with healthcare professionals (61%), and improved their ability to work on interprofessional teams (65%). Select themes from narrative comments suggest that clinical immersion improves understanding of professional roles, helps students understand their own future roles in healthcare teams, and increases awareness of and respect for other professionals, with the potential to change future practice. ICE may be a template for other schools wishing to expand their current educational offerings, by engaging learners in more authentic, longitudinal clinical experiences with practicing healthcare professionals.Entities:
Keywords: Curricular innovation; interprofessional collaboration; undergraduate education
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29058510 DOI: 10.1080/13561820.2017.1377691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interprof Care ISSN: 1356-1820 Impact factor: 2.338