Sessions
Displaying 1 - 10 of 22
During this session, we will describe our experience in building and training a diverse facilitator cohort for IPE workshops that includes both teaching faculty and clinicians from different professions, disciplines and settings. The assessment of the impact of participation in IPE facilitator training and workshops on facilitators will be presented.
Mitchell Heflin
—
Jody Feld
—
Erin Leiman
—
Janelle Bludorn
—
Christina Leonard
—
Julie Thompson
—
Zakyya Kenny
—
Monserrat Godinez-Nepliouev
—
Michael Iwama
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— Washington City
An IPE center created a data-driven, tiered recognition system for faculty and staff facilitators to formally recognize and reward their contributions to IPE, provide extrinsic motivation for participation, and maintain a pipeline of skilled IPE facilitators. Evaluation will include facilitator retention, satisfaction, and effectiveness.
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— Washington City
This workshop explores the use of the think-aloud method in interprofessional education (IPE) simulations to enhance clinical decision-making and team collaboration. Participants will review research, engage in an active simulation exercise, and discuss best practices for integrating think-aloud into IPE scenarios, with a focus on improving health outcomes.
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— St. Nicholas A
Are low-resource approaches as effective as live simulation for improving knowledge and attitudes about interprofessional quality improvement and patient safety among pre-licensure students ? We compared three approaches to help us decide how to spend our resources. Find out what we learned!
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— Herndon
This analysis compared the effectiveness of three IPE/CP delivery methods: in-person with and without Standardized Patients (SPs), and virtual. Results showed significant improvements in student learning across all methods, with the greatest gains in the in-person method without SPs. Virtual methods enhance participation and diversity, offering cost-effective alternatives.
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— Herndon
In a foundation interprofessional education course, 275 students from nursing, pharmacy, medicine, and social work collaborated in a community hackathon to address operational challenges faced by a student-run healthcare clinic. The event generated 187 innovative solutions, fostering interprofessional teamwork, community awareness, and real-world problem-solving, aligning with course values.
Fatima Khan
—
Sumin Choi
—
Krishna Hariprasad
—
Katie Se
—
Jensen Gary
—
Saniya Gayake
—
Sahana Prabhu
—
John Luk
—
Veronica Young
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— Paxton
This session will review the development of the updated IPEC Core Competencies, highlight key changes, and demonstrate their alignment with select accreditation standards. Real examples of implementation will be shared, and participants will engage in activities and discussions to explore practical strategies for integrating the competencies into their local programs.
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— St. Nicholas B
Interprofessional education through service learning and global health experiences for health profession students will be described including tools and examples. Participants will learn how students can become transformed practitioners through these experiences and use tools to apply to their own institutions.
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— Cozzens
IPE-ACTS is Emory’s interprofessional education program for students in the schools of nursing, medicine, and public health. IPE-ACTS allows students to focus on an issue impacting the health of Atlanta and work together using IPEC Core Competencies to create a novel approach to improve the health of vulnerable Atlanta communities.
Jodie Guest
—
Laura Gaydos
—
Sarah Blake
—
Rebecca Baggett
—
Douglas Ander
—
Beth Davis
—
Laika Steiger
—
Susan Detrie
—
Beth Ann Swan
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— Paxton
Mastering Interprofessional Facilitation, Essential Knowledge, and Skills for Effective Facilitation
Interprofessional collaboration is crucial in healthcare. The World Health Organization (WHO) emphasizes the need for interprofessional education (IPE) to address healthcare gaps. The Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education offers an Interprofessional Core Curriculum, completed by over 4,000 students from eight university campuses. The Nursing School at XX University is a major contributor.
The IP Core curriculum, based on the IPEC Core Competencies (2023), equips learners with essential collaboration skills. It includes online modules and team learning experiences. Facilitators from diverse disciplines support the curriculum, but many lack effective facilitation skills.
To address this, an online IP Facilitation course was developed, providing necessary training. The course uses interactive content and assessments to ensure learning outcomes. Learners receive a digital badge upon completion, indicating mastery of IP Facilitation. The study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of this online IP Facilitation Course.
Wednesday, May 28, 3:15 pm CDT
— Mercer