Literature DB >> 32811213

The COVID-19 crisis silver lining: interprofessional education to guide future innovation.

Sylvia Langlois1,2, Andreas Xyrichis3, Brittany J Daulton4, John Gilbert5, Kelly Lackie6,7,8,9, Dean Lising10, Kathleen MacMillan11,12, Ghaidaa Najjar13, Andrea L Pfeifle14, Hossein Khalili15,16,17.   

Abstract

Globally, the advent and rapid spread of the COVID-19 virus has created significant disruption to health professions education and practice, and consequently interprofessional education, leading to a model of learning and practicing where much is unknown. Key questions for this ongoing evolution emerge for the global context leading to reflections on future directions for the interprofessional education field and its role in shaping future practice models. Health professions programs around the world have made a dramatic shift to virtual learning platforms in response to closures of academic institutions and restrictions imposed on learners accessing practice settings. Telemedicine, slow to become established in many countries to date, has also revolutionized practice in the current environment. Within the state of disruption and rapid change is the awareness of a silver lining that provides an opportunity for future growth. Key topics explored in this commentary include reflection on the application of existing competency frameworks, consideration of typology of team structures, reconsideration of theoretical underpinnings, revisiting of core dimensions of education, adaptation of interprofessional education activities, and the role in the future pandemic planning. As an international community of educators and researchers, the authors consider current observations relevant to interprofessional education and practice contexts and suggest a response from scholarship voices across the globe. The current pandemic offers a unique opportunity for educators, practitioners, and researchers to retain what has served interprofessional education and practice well in the past, break from what has not worked as well, and begin to imagine the new.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Interprofessional education; evolving pedagogic approaches; future innovation; impact of virtual IPE

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32811213     DOI: 10.1080/13561820.2020.1800606

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Interprof Care        ISSN: 1356-1820            Impact factor:   2.338


  8 in total

1.  Toward Sustainable Consumption Behavior in Online Education Industry: The Role of Consumer Value and Social Identity.

Authors:  Songyu Jiang; Nuttapong Jotikasthira; Ruihui Pu
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-04-07

2.  Development and implementation of a COVID-19 Vaccine and Pandemic Planning course: An interprofessional education approach.

Authors:  Robin R Austin; Ann M Philbrick; Craig Roth; Keith A Mays
Journal:  J Interprof Educ Pract       Date:  2022-08-01

3.  Medical and pharmacy students' perspectives of remote synchronous interprofessional education sessions.

Authors:  Hend E Abdelhakim; Louise Brown; Lizzie Mills; Anika Ahmad; James Hammell; Douglas G J McKechnie; Tin Wai Terry Ng; Rebecca Lever; Cate Whittlesea; Joe Rosenthal; Mine Orlu
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2022-08-10       Impact factor: 3.263

4.  Interprofessional education faculty development survey: Perspectives on IPE and collaborative practice and COVID-19.

Authors:  Amy M Yorke; Diane C Hoelscher; Caren M Stalburg; Tazin Daniels; Michelle Aebersold; Vani Patterson; Karen L Keune; Emily C Capellari; Elizabeth A Duffy; Meghan Thiel
Journal:  J Interprof Educ Pract       Date:  2022-07-04

5.  Teaching resources for the European Open Platform for Prescribing Education (EurOP2E)-a nominal group technique study.

Authors:  Michiel A van Agtmael; Jelle Tichelaar; Michiel J Bakkum; Bryan J Loobeek; Milan C Richir; Paraskevi Papaioannidou; Robert Likic; Emilio J Sanz; Thierry Christiaens; João N Costa; Lorena Dima; Fabrizio de Ponti; Cornelis Kramers; Jeroen van Smeden
Journal:  NPJ Sci Learn       Date:  2022-09-30

6.  COVID-19 Pandemic Impact on Academic Global Health Programs: Results of a Large International Survey.

Authors:  Elizabeth S Rose; Tracy L Rabin; Jenny Samaan; James C Hudspeth; Layan Ibrahim; Maria Catalina Padilla Azain; Jessica Evert; Quentin Eichbaum
Journal:  Ann Glob Health       Date:  2022-09-29       Impact factor: 3.640

7.  The impact of a didactic and experiential learning model on health profession students' knowledge, perceptions, and confidence in the use of telehealth.

Authors:  Karene Boos; Kerri Murphy; Thomas St George; James Brandes; Jane Hopp
Journal:  J Educ Health Promot       Date:  2022-07-29

8.  'You just really have to assert yourself:' social work, nursing, and rehabilitation counseling student experiences of providing integrated behavioral health services before and after the immediate start of COVID-19.

Authors:  Edward J Alessi; Barbara Caldwell; Anthony S Zazzarino; Brett Greenfield; Patricia A Findley
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-01-18       Impact factor: 2.655

  8 in total

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