Poster Presentations
Please visit the Grand Central Foyer on May 29, 2025, 11:00 am - 12:30 pm CDT to view the Poster Session and hear from Poster presenters about their work! The Poster Session at CAB IX includes more than 40 posters representing interprofessional initiatives from presenters representing the 9 countries engaged at CAB IX. Poster presenters will be available by their posters to share more details about their work.
The North Dakota University System health science programs offer a wide variety of experiences for IPE. Although there is momentum to incentivize IPE activities through micro-credentialing in a couple of programs, further efforts are needed to embed IPE in all training programs. Innovative and pioneering IPE projects will likely mechanize ongoing development of IPE across the nation when faculty integrate more teaching and learning strategies to prepare the healthcare workforce. This comprehensive profile of IPE can serve as a model to expand IPE in universities across the nation.
Integrating ecological systems theory and trauma-informed care into training offers a novel approach to prepare health professions students to address the complexities of health inequity. A 3-hour training was developed that incorporates these two frameworks and convenes students across nine professions to collaboratively address issues involved with access to care.
This abstract describes a simulation that provided student pharmacists with a practice-based perspective to improve communication skills through interaction with physicians. It demonstrated a statistically significant increase in communication and teams and teamwork competencies. This experience shares an engaging opportunity to teach collaborative communication skills when navigating challenging conversations.
Professional identity and confidence among health professions students play a critical role in student engagement, influencing participation in academic activities.Goals, objectives, and purpose: This study aims to measure and compare professional identity and confidence levels among health…
This project developed culturally and linguistically tailored diabetes self-management materials in Karen to address healthcare disparities. Through audiovisual content and community collaboration, the materials aimed to improve understanding and engagement. Positive feedback from Karen-speaking patients highlighted better diabetes comprehension, with future implementation planned for broader use and evaluation.
This session highlights how international students and community stakeholders were integrated into a community-engaged research project aimed at improving healthcare access for rural families with children diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. It also discusses securing multiple funding sources and fostering professional growth of the students through collaborative leadership.
The findings from this qualitative case study offer an in-depth understanding of an organizational partnership, from its inception to implementation, that has contributed to formation of a high-quality interprofessional primary care clinic model within a larger academic health system. The findings resulted in a solution for scalable IPECP training.
The University of North Dakota (UND) has developed a strong and varied competency based interprofessional education (IPE) and collaboration curriculum in response to curricular needs across several health science programs to include the School of Medicine and Health Sciences, College of Nursing and Professional Disciplines, and the College of Arts and Sciences.
This pilot study involved health profession students delivering opioid education and naloxone training to their peers and to undergraduate resident advisors, leading to increased knowledge, reduced stigma, and enhanced advocacy. The program's success highlights a scalable model for expanding community efforts to address the opioid crisis.
This oral presentation will allow for dialogue surrounding the premise of competence as an asymptote, allowing presenters and participants to safely share their points of view with regard to the need for a shift from strictly competency-based interprofessional education to the notion of developing reflective learners as a priority.