Lindsay Van Dam, Sheri L Price, Hossein Khalili, John H V Gilbert
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Collaboration During Crisis: New Graduates' Experiences of Interprofessional Practice During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
The COVID-19 pandemic presented unprecedented challenges for health and social care practice worldwide. Ensuring effective collaboration between health and social care is essential to meet population health needs- especially during crisis. Interprofessional education for collaborative practice (IPECP) during students' pre-licensure education is an important primer for collaboration in practice. Within IPECP, students are provided opportunities to learn about, with, and from each other, lending to professional and interprofessional socialization and processes of developing an interprofessional identity. Few studies have followed health professions graduates longitudinally from pre-licensure into professional practice to understand how IPECP supports new professionals' readiness for collaborative practice. The COVID-19 pandemic coincided with the timing of this longitudinal study of students' experiences of IPECP and collaboration upon entry to practice. This interpretive, narrative analysis provides novel insights to how collaboration was experienced during the pandemic and implications for interprofessional identity development. The participant narratives provide insight into the contexts, settings, and experiences that were critical catalysts for connection and collaboration between professionals. Findings support a need for IPECP throughout pre-licensure and into practice and provides important direction for innovative curricula, policy and practice development to prepare future collaborative practitioners and interprofessional teams.
期刊介绍:
Health Care Analysis is a journal that promotes dialogue and debate about conceptual and normative issues related to health and health care, including health systems, healthcare provision, health law, public policy and health, professional health practice, health services organization and decision-making, and health-related education at all levels of clinical medicine, public health and global health. Health Care Analysis seeks to support the conversation between philosophy and policy, in particular illustrating the importance of conceptual and normative analysis to health policy, practice and research. As such, papers accepted for publication are likely to analyse philosophical questions related to health, health care or health policy that focus on one or more of the following: aims or ends, theories, frameworks, concepts, principles, values or ideology. All styles of theoretical analysis are welcome providing that they illuminate conceptual or normative issues and encourage debate between those interested in health, philosophy and policy. Papers must be rigorous, but should strive for accessibility – with care being taken to ensure that their arguments and implications are plain to a broad academic and international audience. In addition to purely theoretical papers, papers grounded in empirical research or case-studies are very welcome so long as they explore the conceptual or normative implications of such work. Authors are encouraged, where possible, to have regard to the social contexts of the issues they are discussing, and all authors should ensure that they indicate the ‘real world’ implications of their work. Health Care Analysis publishes contributions from philosophers, lawyers, social scientists, healthcare educators, healthcare professionals and administrators, and other health-related academics and policy analysts.