| Literature DB >> 35237047 |
Rohini R Roopnarine1, Ellen Boeren2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The collaboration of health professionals across the interface of human, animal and environmental health, as embodied by the One Health concept (OH), is increasingly recognised as crucial for tackling diseases such as Ebola and COVID-19. This study was conducted prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, but in light of the current pandemic, the outcomes of this study highlight the need for educating Medical (MD) and Veterinary (DVM) students on the principles of OH. The purpose of this study was to determine the need for Interprofessional Education (IPE) initiatives that would familiarise MD and DVM students with the principles of OH, crucial to dissolving the siloes that have historically deterred collaboration.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Interprofessional Education; Mixed Methods; One Health; medical; veterinary
Year: 2022 PMID: 35237047 PMCID: PMC8883371 DOI: 10.1177/11786302221080826
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Insights ISSN: 1178-6302
Originality of the research in closing existing gaps.
| What is known | Originality of the study: closing gaps in the literature |
|---|---|
| MD students are the least ready to engage in IPE amongst the health disciplines. | The readiness of DVM and dual degree students for IPE. |
| • MD students are unaware of the impact of zoonoses on human health. consistent with the literature that MDs fail to consider zoonoses on their differential patient list.
| Use of theory to explain why MD students have low IPE readiness |
| Suggestions by educators for incorporating OH in medical curricula and including DVM students alongside MDs to enhance MD students knowledge about the impact of diseases of animal origin on human health.
| Few studies on how MDs perceive the relevance of OH. |
| Challenges to implement IPE and get administrative support in the absence of accreditation mandates. | • No studies that provide insight into whether the dual degree programme provides methods as to how known challenges to developing IPE /OH can be overcome. |
Implementation matrix.
| Strategy | Sample | Goal/Aim | Analysis | Point of integration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RIPLS SURVEY | Students | Determine Readiness for IPE | ANOVA, | Analysis concurrent with that of the qualitative data for informing the focus group and interview discussions |
| OPEN QUESTIONS | Students | Assess OH knowledge | Thematic analysis | Analysis concurrent with that of the quantitative data for informing the focus group and interview discussions |
| FOCUS GROUPS | Faculty | Faculty evaluation of RIPLS scores and opportunities and barriers for developing IPE that incudes OH | Thematic analysis | Qualitative faculty interpretation of Quantitative student responses and use to create a vision based on identified needs |
Plan for integration of the data.
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Joint Display relating the findings of the RIPLS to the Focus groups data.
| Programme | QUAN | QUAL | Integration | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RIPLS Open Q | FG/Interview | MMR analysis | ||
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| DVM MPH | 71.12 | DVM MPH recognised the importance of human, animal and environmental health; Zoonoses; Policy; key human health issues missed by other groups. | DVM promotes OH. MPH incorporates gaps of MD and DVM programmes and is IPE. MD students the least ready for IPE and lack understanding of OH | The overall RIPLS scores [QUAN] were highest for the DVM MPH students indicating the highest level of readiness for IPE. Most accurate understanding of all components relevant to OH. This was supported by the [QUAL] findings where Faculty discussed programme of enrolment impacted student attitudes to IPE and OH |
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| DVM MPH | 17.29 | DVM MPH, MD MPH perceived the importance of collaboration and other sectors to their practice | Lack of accreditation mandate for IPE and OH in MD. Lack of importance placed by interviewee on IPE with DVM. MD MPH higher scores than MD for Positive Identity and Teamwork demonstrating the importance of IPE as the MPH in their greater readiness for IPE | Focus group/interview results [QUAL] on the negative attitude of MD students to OH and lack of involvement in OH clinics support lowest Teamwork and Positive Identity scores for MD [QUAN] |
| For the MD students, human health was a significant theme identified for them regarding their roles. These items (17-19), previously located within the Roles subscale, may indicate the students lack awareness of their roles as they have little clinical experience which will be offered in their final years of the programme. | Faculty observed MD students were open to IPE and OH | The overall RIPLS scores for the MDs demonstrated their willingness for IPE and OH but the insights provided by faculty showed this was not realised in practice as it was not an indicator for accreditation of their programme | ||
| All groups supported the idea of collaboration, but the MD students were the most focussed on the aspect of human health within the concept of OH | Faculty observed MD students were open to IPE and OH but were not positive in practice as reflected in their aversion to the OH lecture conducted by the DPHPM faculty | The overall RIPLS scores for the MDs demonstrated the were the least ready to engage in IPE and OH which was supported by the insights provided by faculty. The rationale provided for this was the lack of accreditation requirements for OH and IPE in the MD programme. A significant reason of the MD students’ resistance to engage in IPE and OH is that it is not an examinable component of their qualifying exams. Thus, they view time spend on this as a distractant from more important things | ||
Roopnarine and Boeren.