| Literature DB >> 32762740 |
Joana Berger-Estilita1, Alexander Fuchs2, Markus Hahn2, Hsin Chiang2, Robert Greif2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is agreement among educators and professional bodies that interprofessional education needs to be implemented at the pre-registration level. We performed a systematic review assessing interprofessional learning interventions, measuring attitudes towards interprofessional education and involving pre-registration medical students across all years of medical education.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes; IPE; Interprofessional education; Medical curriculum; Medical education; Medical student; Pre-registration
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32762740 PMCID: PMC7410157 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-020-02176-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Fig. 1PRISMA Study Flow diagram
Categorised description and characteristics of the 23 included studies (Findings of individual studies could belong to more than one category)
| Category | n (%) |
|---|---|
| 16 (64) | |
| 2 (8) | |
| 4 (16) | |
| 2 (8) | |
| 1 (4) | |
| with pre-test-post-test assessment | 23 (100) |
| 11 (47.8) | |
| 2 (8.7) | |
| 10 (43.5) | |
| | 9 (39.1) |
| | 2 (8.7) |
| 7 (30.4) | |
| 5 (21.7) | |
| 7 (15.9) | |
| 6 (13.6) | |
| 5 (11.4) | |
| 4 (9.1) | |
| 4 (9.1) | |
| 4 (9.1) | |
| 3 (6.8) | |
| 2 (4.5) | |
| 2 (4.5) | |
| 2 (4.5) | |
| 5 (11.4) | |
| 3 (13) | |
| 12 (52.2) | |
| 4 (17.4) | |
| 4 (17.4) | |
| 38 (77.6) | |
| 8 (16.3) | |
| 1 (2) | |
| 2 (4.1) | |
| self-reported questionnaire | 35 (76.1) |
| 1 (2.2) | |
| 4 (8.7) | |
| 1 (2.2) | |
| 2 (4.3) | |
| 3 (6.5) | |
| Reliability reported | 4 (12.8) |
| Validity reported | 4 (12.8) |
Extraction grid for selected studies
| Study | Design | Country | Year* | Educational intervention | Research objectives | Duration | Type & number of students | Group size | Name & number of outcomes | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chua et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | SGP | 1/5 Early | Student Medical Education Conference 2013 (IPE components) with IP workshops and plenary sessions | Effectiveness of an IP conference in improving attitudes towards IPE | N/A | MS ( NS ( total | N/A | RIPLS | pre-test M (SD) = 81.54(7.36) vs post-test M (SD) = 85.51(8.08); ( Students with previous IPE experience scored higher in the pre-test |
| Hawkes et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | UK | 1/5 Early | 7-week IPE preparation of a care management plan | Assessment of 1st-year students’ attitudes towards other HCP | 7 weeks | MS ( PS ( NS ( total | N/A | AHPQ | All professions saw a statistically |
| Hess et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | USA | 1/4 Early | Communication skills: asynchronous, online, self-directed learning modules, alternating with live small group session; Recording of SP | Effectiveness of a course in teaching patient-centred IP communication | 4 × 20 hours in 6 months | MS ( PS ( total | 6–7 | CGI | Communication skill construct scores & global rating scores (pre-test M (SD) = 2.2(0.5); Median (IQR) = 2.0(2.0–2.5) vs post-test M (SD) = 4.1(0.6); Median (IQR) = 4.0(3.8–4.5) pre-test scores for rapport building higher for MS |
| Hudson et al. [ | Cross-sectional pre-test-post-test | AUS | 1/4 Early | Chronic care; ICE with local HCP teams | Exploration of changes in MS attitudes toward IPL & patient-centred care | 3 weeks in total | MS ( total | N/A | RIPLS | post-test scores teamwork and collaboration (M = 40.64, SEM = 0.21 vs M = 39.45, SEM = 0.25; p < 0.001); professional identity (M = 30.53, SEM = 0.21 vs M = 29.18, SEM = 0.23; |
| Quesnelle et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | USA | 1/4 Early | Medication; Multi-institutional tele-health TBL event on pharmacogenomics; unique treatment plan for a patient | Assessment of a multi-institutional tele-health TBL activity | 2 h (SS) | MS ( PS ( total | 8 | SATP2C | Post-test Results for shift by category: Responsibility and Accountability M (SEM) = 0.21(+/−.06), p < 0.005; Shared Authority M (SEM) = 0.08(+/−.06), Pharmacogenomics Confidence M (SEM) = 0.56(+/−.09), |
| Sheu et al. [ | prospective cohort study, pre-test-post-test | USA | 1/4 Early | Student-Run Clinic, including preparatory didactic sessions on health disparities & cultural competencies appropriate to the target population & work in the clinic | Analyse the impact of student-run clinic on students | Variable | MS ( NS ( PS ( total | N/A | SAMI RIPLS | RIPLS M (SD) pre vs post by subscales: Team: 4.49 (0.44) vs 4.32 (0.44); Identity: 4.31(0.51) vs 4.04(0.56); Role: 2.71(0.61) vs 2.85(0.68) SAMI M (SD) pre vs post: Exposure 4.02 (.58) vs 4.03 (.58); Perception 3.76(.70) vs 3.83(.67) |
| Sytsma et al. [ | quasi-experimental pre-test-post-test | USA | 1/4 Early | mono and IP teams interventions: 1. Social event, 2. Peer-teaching in Anatomy dissection lab, and 3. Collaborative clinical problem-solving sessions | Describe an IPE experience in gross anatomy and report its lasting impact | 7 weeks | MS ( PT ( total | 8–12 | RIPLS | Overall, students showed pre vs post total M (SD): 81.54(7.36) vs 85.51(8.08); |
| Tuirán-Gutiérrez et al. [ | experimental randomised pre-test-post-test | SP | 1/7 Early | Experimental group received IP training in collaborative work (control group received training on drug addiction prevention) | Are there role differences in early IP training? Does IP training improve attitudes towards IPE? | 18 × 2 hours over 4 months | MS ( NS ( total | N/A | JSE JSAPNC JeffSPLL | Post-test scores for MS in the IPE group remained stable Pre-vs post M (SD) JSAPNC: 48(6) vs 48(7); JSE-S: 104(12) vs 100(14) JeffSPLL-MS: 46(4) vs 46(6) |
| Van Winkle et al. [ | randomized, prospective cohort study pre-test-post-test | USA | 1/4 Early | IP Workshop: Session 1: Management of 2 cases Session 2: individual reflection exercise | Measure changes in collaboration scores after an IP workshop | 2 × 50 min (2–7 days) | PS ( BM ( total | 6 | SATP2C Modified JSE | High baseline commitment scores did not change for MS: SATP2C max 65: pre M = 54; education component increased significantly after IPE for 82% of MS ( |
| Haber et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | USA | 2/4 Early | IP simulation: SP for physical examination providing patient-centred care of an older adult with diabetes and periodontal disease | Effectiveness of an IP clinical simulation and case study experience | 1 h (SS) | MS ( NS ( DS ( total | 8 | ICCAS | Significant change ( MS had lower mean post-test scores compared to other students |
| McCaffrey et al. [ | interventional study, pre-test-post-test | USA | 2/3,5 Late | IP team approach: diagnosis and treatment of dementia with (1) informative session and (2) participation in five clinical exercises | Enhanced competency in Alzheimer’s & IP approach to roles of care | 15 weeks | MS ( NS ( total | 2 | ATITS ATCS | MS with higher initial scores on knowledge test; |
| Pinto et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | USA | 2/4 Early | Simulation (stroke, assessing the patient & developing a care plan, followed by debriefing) | Examination of an IP stroke simulation with SP on student IP growth | 50 min | MS ( PA ( NS (=44; 23,4%) PT ( OT ( total | 5 | IPEC | MS with |
| Shrader et al. [ | randomized pre-test-post-test | USA | 2/4 Early | MUSC Senior Mentor Program: in-home interview, medication history, identification of medication-related issues & group discussions | Impact of a geriatric medication activity on student’s attitudes towards IPE and determination of student satisfaction | 12 h/ Semester | MS (n = 101; 64,7%) PS ( total | 3 | SATP2C | Post: two items significant increased, one item significant decrease in attitudes for MS |
| Zanotti et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | IT | 2/6 Early | Interactions with HCP with (1) on-site observation and (2) review of experience in IP activities | Improved attitudes towards IP teamwork in MS after a new program | 50 h over 1–2 weeks | MS ( total | N/A | IEPS CSI | M (SD) pre vs post: Competency & Autonomy 29.23 (3.51) vs 31.17 (3.58); |
| Berger et al. [ | intervention, comparison group, pre-test-post-test | GER | 3/6 Early | team communication seminar (eMonoprofessional MP (MS) compared with IP small groups) | Develop, “pilot” and evaluate a seminar on team communication | 3½ hours (SS) | MS ( NS ( total | 10–12 | UWE-IP-D | Communication and Teamwork Scale (Pre: M (IP) = 18.5;M (MP) = 18.0; |
| Bridgeman et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | USA | 3/4 Late | IPE workshop “medication errors prevention” | Expose learners to IPE competencies and compare pre- to post workshop changes | 3 h (SS) | MS ( PS ( PA ( total | 5 | ATHCTS | Attitudes improved after IPE, although MS attitudes improved only for team values (subscale 1): Subscale 1 pre % max core vs post % max score 73.0 ± 12.8 vs 76.9 ± 15.8 95% CI − 3.93 (− 6.59, − 1.27), |
| Friman et al. [ | Mixed-methods exploratory, pre-test-post-test | SWE | 3/6 Early | IPE workshop skill stations (Doppler assessment & compression therapy) + 1 case-based reflection on professional identity | Influence of a shared learning activity on attitudes towards IPE | 3 h (SS) | MS ( NS ( total | 2 | JSAPNC | No differences in the MS group over time but initial high scores: pre vs post sum score means (max 60): 51.76 vs 51.76 |
| Erickson et al. [ | pre-test-post-test | USA | 3/4 Late | IPE workshop “Difficult Discussions” (EOL care & communication, simulation) | Reports outcomes after IPE workshop | 1½ hours (SS) | MS ( NS ( total | 25 | JSAPNC ATHCTS SEIEL | MS had higher scores post IPE in the ATHCT post-intervention (Mean (SD) 2.1 (6.1); |
| Oza et al. [ | Cross-sectional observational pre-test-post-test | USA | 3/4 Late | OSCE: Interprofessional case | Relationship between attitudes towards IPE & (1) self-efficacy, (2) prior extracurricular IP, (3) previous IPE | 25 min | MS ( total | N/A | SEIEL | Students’ self-efficacy for IP was associated with IP collaborative practice, self-efficacy for feedback and evaluation were not; Mean SEIEL scores were high. For factor 1, interprofessional teamwork, M (SD) 7.9 (1.3, range 2.0–10.0) and for factor 2, interprofessional feedback and evaluation 7.1 (1.5, range 1.3–10.0). |
| Paige et al. [ | quasi-experimental pre-test-post-test | USA | 3/4 Late | Acute care; Simulation (dual major trauma scenarios with immediate structured debriefing) | Does IP SBT change behaviour over the course & is it as effective as team training? | 2 h (SS) | MS ( total | 3–8 | TAS RIPLS T-TAQ | improvements in the team structure subscale |
| Darlow et al. [ | prospective controlled trial, pre-test-post-test | NZ | 4/6 Late | Chronic care, IP workshops: people with LTC, e-learning platform, visits to a patient in the community, peer-presentation, group discussion | Evaluate if an IPE programme for managing people with LTC changes students’ attitudes to IP teams | 11 h over 4 weeks | MS ( PT ( RT ( DiS (n = 9; 10,8%) total | 3 | ATHCTS RIPLS TSS | Mean post-intervention attitude scores were |
| Lockeman et al. [ | quasi-experimental pre-test-post-test | USA | 4/4 Late | Acute care, simulation: collaboration around acutely ill patients (ACLS algorithms) | Can a series of IP SBT promote changes in attitudes & stereotypes of HCP students | 3x2hours over 2 weeks | MS ( total | 6–7 | SPICE-R2 HSS | No changes in HSS for MS |
| Seaman et al. [ | descriptive matched before-after study, pre-test-post-test | AUS | 6/6 Late | Ambulatory clinical placement, two of four clinical outpatient areas, in IP pairs, interact with HCP supporting the care of patients with chronic illnesses in hospital outpatient clinics and during home visits | Examine students’ beliefs, behaviours and attitudes in relation to IP socialisation in ambulatory care | 2 weeks | MS ( NS ( total | 2 | ISVS | Significant increase of ISVS score in posttest with a mean improvement of 6.76 for the overall ISVS score (p < 0.001) |
*ratio of study year to total duration of studies and classification of “Early” or “Late” depending if the IPE intervention occurred in the first or second half of medical studies
Abbreviations: countries: SGP Singapore, UK United Kingdom, USA United States of America, AUS Australia, SP Spain, IT Italy, GER Germany, SWE Sweden, NZ New Zealand; interventions: IPE interprofessional education, IP interprofessional, IPL interprofessional learning, MP monoprofessional; TBL team-based learning =, HCP health care professional, SP standardised patient, ICE interdisciplinary clinical experience, SBT simulation-based training, OSCE objective structured clinical examination, ACLS advanced cardiac life support, LTC long-term conditions, EOL end-of-life; students: MS medical, NS nursing, PS pharmacy, PT physical therapy, BM biomedical science, DS dental medicine, RT radiation therapy, DiS dietetics, PA physician’s assistant, OT occupational therapy; instruments: RIPLS Readiness for Interprofessional Learning Scale, AHPQ Attitudes to Health Professionals Questionnaire, CGI Common Ground Instrument, SATP2C Scale of Attitudes toward Physician-Pharmacist Collaboration, SAMI Sociocultural Attitudes in Medicine Inventory, JSE Jefferson Scale of Empathy, JSAPNC Jefferson Scale of Attitudes toward Physician-Nurse Collaboration, JeffSPLL Jefferson Scale of Physician Lifelong Learning, ICCAS Interprofessional Collaborative Competency Attainment Scale, ATCS Attitudes Towards Collaboration Scale, ATITS Attitudes Toward Interdisciplinary Teams Scale, IPEC CSI Interprofessional Education Collaborative IPEC Competency Self-assessment Instrument, IEPS Interdisciplinary Education Perception Scale, UWE-IP-D University of the West of England Interprofessional Questionnaire (German Version), ATHCTS Attitudes Towards Health Care Teams Scale, SEIEL Self-Efficacy for Interprofessional Experimental Learning, TAS Teamwork Assessment Scale, T-TAQ Team Strategies and Tools to Enhance Performance and Patient Safety (TeamSTEPPS) Teamwork Attitude Questionnaire, TSS Team Skills Scale, SPICE-R2 Student Perceptions of Interprofessional Clinical Education, HSS Healthcare Stereotypes Scale, ISVS Interprofessional Socialization and Valuing Scale; results: M Mean, SD Standard deviation, vs versus, SEM standard error of the mean, IQR interquartile range, p p-value, 95%; CI confidence intervall
Fig. 2Bar chart: Outcome and duration of IPE interventions in selected articles, according to early (first half) or late (second half) time of medical school. White bars: statistically significant positive change of attitudes; Grey bars: Non-significant positive change of attitudes; full line: continuous IPE intervention; dotted line: intermittent IPE intervention