Interprofessional education: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes.

@article{Reeves2008InterprofessionalEE,
  title={Interprofessional education: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes.},
  author={Scott Reeves and Merrick Zwarenstein and Joanne Goldman and Hugh Barr and Della Freeth and Marilyn Hammick and Ivan Koppel},
  journal={The Cochrane database of systematic reviews},
  year={2008},
  volume={1},
  pages={
          CD002213
        }
}
BACKGROUND Patient care is a complex activity which demands that health and social care professionals work together in an effective manner. The evidence suggests, however, that these professionals do not collaborate well together. Interprofessional education (IPE) offers a possible way to improve collaboration and patient care. OBJECTIVES To assess the effectiveness of IPE interventions compared to education interventions in which the same health and social care professionals learn separately… 
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Patients perceived a higher grade of quality of care as compared to controls with no signs of disadvantages when treated and informed by supervised interprofessional student teams.
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TLDR
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TLDR
This White Paper from the American College of Clinical Pharmacy addresses terminology, levels of evidence, environment‐specific models, assessment methods, funding sources, and other important implications and barriers as they apply to IPE and clinical pharmacy.
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TLDR
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The Institute of Medicine (IOM) report entitled Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century recommended a realignment of the health care system to enhance quality, safety,
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References

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Interprofessional education: Effects on professional practice and health care outcomes (Cochrane review)
TLDR
This systematic review found that despite finding a large body of literature on the evaluation of IPE, these studies lacked the methodological rigour needed to begin to convincingly understand the impact of IPe on professional practice and/or health care outcomes.
A best evidence systematic review of interprofessional education: BEME Guide no. 9
TLDR
This review identified, collated, analysed and synthesised the best available contemporary evidence from 21 of the strongest evaluations of IPE to inform the above proposition that learning together will help practitioners and agencies work better together.
Effectiveness of pre-licensure interprofessional education and post-licensure collaborative interventions
TLDR
The empirical research evidence is scanned and summarized and found that the effects of pre-licensure interprofessional education on patient/client care are unknown and there is a growing body of evidence suggesting positive effects on the delivery of care.
Beginning the process of teamwork: Design, implementation and evaluation of an inter-professional education intervention for first year undergraduate students
TLDR
The findings support the need to start IPE early in students' training before professional doctrines have been built into their learning and include trained service users/carers as co-facilitators of the workshops.
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TLDR
The results of an evaluative study of a practitioner-led, interprofessional programme for preregistration health care students, the Trust-Based Education and Training Programme, developed by South West London and St George's Mental Health NHS Trust in collaboration with several local universities are analyzed.
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TLDR
A survey designed to assess the student and faculty perceptions of the experience has been conducted and found that the experience had a positive impact on the students' professional performances, patient interactions, understanding of the health care delivery system, and health career preparation.
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TLDR
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