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Attitudes and Behavior towards Interprofessional Collaboration among Healthcare Professionals in a Large Academic Medical Center

The increasing rates of comorbidities among patients and the complexity of care have warranted interprofessional collaboration (IPC) as an important component of the healthcare structure. An initial step towards assessing the effectiveness of collaboration requires the exploration of the attitudes a...

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Published in:Healthcare (Basel) 2020-09, Vol.8 (3), p.323
Main Authors: Ansa, Benjamin E., Zechariah, Sunitha, Gates, Amy M., Johnson, Stephanie W., Heboyan, Vahé, De Leo, Gianluca
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description The increasing rates of comorbidities among patients and the complexity of care have warranted interprofessional collaboration (IPC) as an important component of the healthcare structure. An initial step towards assessing the effectiveness of collaboration requires the exploration of the attitudes and experience of healthcare professionals towards IPC. This online survey aimed to examine the attitudes of healthcare professionals working in a large public academic medical center toward IPC in patient care and the healthcare team, and their behavior and experience regarding IPC. The rankings, according to the perceived importance among the respondents, of the four Interprofessional Education Collaborative (IPEC) core competencies (values/ethics, roles/responsibilities, interprofessional communication, teams/teamwork) were assessed. There were strong but varying levels of consensus among healthcare professionals (N = 551) that IPC facilitates efficient patient care, improves patient problem-solving ability, and increases better clinical outcomes for patients. They acknowledged that IPC promotes mutual respect within the healthcare team and providers’ ability to make optimal patient care decisions. However, overall more than 35% of the respondents did not attend multidisciplinary education sessions (grand rounds, seminars, etc.), and about 23% did not participate in bedside patient care rounds. Interprofessional communication was ranked as the most important IPEC core competence. Although the attitude towards IPC among healthcare professionals is strongly positive, many healthcare professionals face challenges in participating in IPC. Institutional policies that facilitate interprofessional learning and interactions for this group of healthcare professionals should be formulated. Online distance learning and interactions, and simulation-enhanced interprofessional education, are options for addressing this barrier. Hospital administrators should facilitate conducive work environments that promote IPC, based on IPEC core competencies, and promote programs that address the challenges of IPC.
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source Publicly Available Content Database; PubMed Central; Sociological Abstracts
subjects academic medical center
Attitudes
behavior
Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
Collaboration
Communication
Core competencies
Dietitians
Distance learning
Employees
Health services
healthcare professionals
Intensive care
interprofessional collaboration
Interprofessional education
Likert scale
Medical personnel
Medicine
Moral education
Nurse practitioners
Nurses
Patients
Physical therapists
Physicians
Primary care
Professional ethics
Seminars
Social workers
Teams
Teamwork
Treatment outcomes
Work environment
title Attitudes and Behavior towards Interprofessional Collaboration among Healthcare Professionals in a Large Academic Medical Center
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