RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Evidence is growing that interprofessional team-based models benefit providers, trainees, and patients, but less is understood about the experiences of staff who work beside trainees learning these models. OBJECTIVE: To understand the experiences of staff in five VA training clinics participating in an interprofessional team-based learning initiative. DESIGN: Individual semi-structured interviews with staff were conducted during site visits, qualitatively coded, and analyzed for themes across sites and participant groups. PARTICIPANTS: Patient-centered medical home (PCMH) staff members (n = 32; RNs, Clinical and Clerical Associates) in non-primary care provider (PCP) roles working on teams with trainees from medicine, nursing, pharmacy, and psychology. APPROACH: Benefits and challenges of working in an interprofessional, academic clinic were coded by the primary author using a hybrid inductive/directed thematic analytic approach, with review and iterative theme development by the interprofessional author team. KEY RESULTS: Efforts to improve interprofessional collaboration among trainees and providers, such as increased shared leadership, have positive spillover effects for PCMH staff members. These staff members perceive themselves playing an educational role for trainees that is not always acknowledged. Playing this role, learning from the "fresh" knowledge imparted by trainees, and contributing to the future of health care all bring satisfaction to staff members. Some constraints exist for full participation in the educational efforts of the clinic. CONCLUSIONS: Increased recognition of and expanded support for PCMH staff members to participate in educational endeavors is essential as interprofessional training clinics grow.
Assuntos
Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente , Assistência Centrada no Paciente , Instituições de Assistência Ambulatorial , Atenção à Saúde , Humanos , LiderançaRESUMO
Interprofessional case conferences (ICCs) offer an interactive, practical way to engage members of two or more health professions in discussions that involve learning and working together to improve patient care. Well-orchestrated ICCs provide opportunities to integrate interprofessional (IP) education into routine clinical practice. The authors provide 12 tips to support the conceptualization, planning, implementation, facilitation, evaluation, and sustainability of ICCs. They draw from extensive experience as IP educators and facilitators of ICCs and from literature on IP education, case-based learning, small-group facilitation, peer-assisted learning, and learner engagement - all of which offer insights into ICCs but have not been integrated and applied to this context.
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Pessoal de Saúde/educação , Relações Interprofissionais , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente/organização & administração , Comportamento Cooperativo , Objetivos , Processos Grupais , Humanos , Aprendizagem , Saúde Mental , Segurança do Paciente , Papel ProfissionalRESUMO
A strength-based nursing approach to recommendations for interpersonal collaboration and communication is used when caring for Veteran women in health care settings. Four areas are emphasized: (1) using trauma-informed health care practices; (2) acknowledging and affirming the intersectional identities of Veteran women to individualize care and counteract health disparities; (3) engaging strategies to enhance a sense of belonging for Veteran women in health care settings; and (4) encouraging Veteran women to participate in potential research studies to better understand and improve care for this population.
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Veteranos , Comunicação , Feminino , HumanosRESUMO
Introduction: Health professionals must demonstrate competencies in quality improvement (QI) and interprofessional (IP) practice. Yet few curricula are designed to address these competencies in an integrated, longitudinal way. Our experiential IP QI curriculum addresses this gap. Methods: The IP QI curriculum was part of a San Francisco VA Health Care System training program for second-year internal medicine residents and adult gerontology primary care nurse practitioner students, pharmacy residents, and postdoctoral psychology fellows. Trainees worked in mentored IP teams to select, design, implement, evaluate, and present a project as part of a 9-month curriculum. Teaching methodologies included didactics and project-based skills application. Curriculum evaluation included trainees' QI knowledge and skills self-assessments, trainee satisfaction, mentor appraisals, and project results and impact assessments. Results: From 2011-2012 to 2017-2018, 242 trainees completed the curriculum and 41 QI projects. Trainees reported high satisfaction with the introductory sessions (M = 4.4, SD = 0.7). They also reported improvement in comfort with QI knowledge and skills by the curriculum's completion. QI mentors (n = 23) observed growth in trainees' QI knowledge and skills, felt confident in trainees' ability to orchestrate a QI initiative, and believed their mentored QI projects added value to the organization. Thirty-eight projects resulted in system modifications. Discussion: This IP QI curriculum offers team-based, workplace experiences for trainees to learn and apply QI knowledge and skills. Leading factors for successful implementation included attention to team-building and faculty development. Challenges included reliably collecting evaluation data, accurately measuring ongoing systems changes, and variable trainee engagement.
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Internato e Residência , Melhoria de Qualidade , Adulto , Currículo , Educação de Pós-Graduação em Medicina , Humanos , Atenção Primária à Saúde , São FranciscoRESUMO
In short team huddles, trainees and PACT teamlets meet to coordinate care and identify ways to improve team processes under the guidance of faculty members who reinforce collaborative practice and continuous improvement.