Title: Interprofessional Care: Building on Collaborative Teams
1Interprofessional CareBuilding on Collaborative
Teams
- Mandy Lowe
- Faculty Lead, IPE Preceptorship Facilitation
- Office of Interprofessional Education
- University of Toronto
- Interprofessional Education Leader
- Toronto Rehabilitation Institute
- Lowe.mandy_at_torontorehab.on.ca
2Objectives
- Define teams and collaboration
- Recognize the importance of team collaboration
- Consider individual and team-based strategies to
enhance collaboration
3What is team?
- A collection of individuals who
- are interdependent in their tasks
- share responsibilities for outcomes
- are seen by others as an intact social entity
embedded in one or more larger social system - manage their relationships across organizational
borders - Oandasan et al. (2006)
Ehpic course, June 2009
4What is interprofessional collaboration (IPC)?
- an interprofessional process of communication
and decision-making that enables the separate and
shared knowledge and skills to synergistically
influence the care provided - Way , Jones Busing (2000)
5What does Interprofessional Education (IPE) Mean?
- Members (or students) of two or more professions
associated with health or social care, engaged in
learning with, from and about each other - (Geissler, 2002)
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7Capacity to Collaborate
It is believed by many that if we train
competent collaborative practitioners, more
collaborative practice settings will be
developed over time Hence practice is linked
with education. p. 12, DAmour Oandasan
(2005)
Ehpic course, June 2009
8Drivers for IPE and IPC
- International
- Research and programs e.g. UK, USA
- National
- Health Canada Romanow, 2002
- Provincial/Local
- Health Force Ontarios Interprofessional Health
Education Innovation Funds 2007 and 2008 - Regulation of Health Professions in Ontario New
Directions (HPRAC, 2006 and 2008) - U of T Office of IPE - research, practice,
curricula - Enhance care
- Collaborative Practice improves outcomes in
specific populations
9 Teamwork Positively Impacts Outcomes
- Improved Outcomes in specific populations
- Neonatal ICU, STD screening, geriatrics,
fractured hips (Zwarenstein et al., 2005) - Stroke Functional Outcome (Strasser et al., 2008)
- Improved Patient Safety
- SBAR Communication Tool (Velji et al., 2008)
- Fewer deaths when in true team (West, 2006)
10Teamwork Positively Impacts Outcomes
- Improved Cost Efficiency (DAmour, 2005)
- Improved Health Professional Satisfaction (Cohen
Bailey, 1997) - Leads to a Healthy Workplace(Shamian
El-Jaradali, 2007) - www.cihc.ca
- www.chsrf.ca Promoting effective teamwork
in healthcare in Canada
11Discussion
- Think about a time when you were part of or
observed a highly collaborative team. - What do you think made such successful
collaboration possible?
127 Essential Elements for Collaboration Way ,
Jones Busing (2000)
Power Hierarchy
Conflict Resolution
Ehpic course, June 2009
13What elements define team collaboration in
pediatric rehabilitation?
- Communication open, clear, regular, jargon free
- Decision making shared, effective problem
solving strategies - Goal setting shared, clear, prioritized,
regularly evaluated - Organization coordination of planning (e.g.
single plan of care), structure, resources - Team process evaluation, mutual respect and
role understanding - Parent involvement critical team members
- Nijhuis et al, 2007
14How can team collaboration be fostered?
15Three Key Questions for Collaborative Teams
- What is the goal of our team?
- How will our team communicate? How will our
teamwork be coordinated? - How will our team repeatedly review what we are
trying to achieve and how effective we are? - Balance of task/content (the what) and process
(the how) - Adapted from Aston West OD
- Schmidt, 2006
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181. What is the goal of our team?
- Shared goal and vision
- All team members are clear about roles
- Roles reviewed regularly to ensure satisfaction
and optimal use - Opportunities for team members to get to know
each other to find out what contributions team
members can make - Government of Ontario, Family Health Team Guide
to Collaborative Team Practice (2005)
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212. How will our team communicate and coordinate?
- Strategies may include
- Team members meet regularly
- Members involved in planning for activities in
which they will be involved - There is an effective decision-making method
- Issues are confronted and problems resolved as
they arise - There is a process for identifying/clarifying
role overlap - Role of leader is understood by team members
- Leader encourages active participation of all
team members - Government of Ontario, Family Health Team Guide
to Collaborative Team Practice (2005)
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233. How will our team repeatedly review what we
are trying to achieve and how effective we are?
- Accomplishments and achievements are celebrated
- There is an evaluation process for follow-up, to
ensure goals are being met - Team process is reviewed
- Government of Ontario, Family Health Team Guide
to Collaborative Team Practice (2005)
24Team Function
- High performance requires BALANCE
PROCESS
TASK
Process- How the team functions how the task is
accomplished, what happens between the members,
the way decisions are made
Task what is done and the problems associated
with completion
PROCESS affects OUTCOME
Ehpic course, June 2009
25Health Professional Collaborator Competencies
- KNOWLEDGE
- roles of other health professionals
- SKILLS
- communicating with others
- reflecting upon my role and others
- ATTITUDES
- mutual respect
- willingness to collaborate
- openness to trust
Oandasan Reeves (2005)
Ehpic course, June 2009
26Collaboration What can you do?
- Knowledge of Roles
- Provide opportunities for clarifying your role
(e.g. interview, education, shadow opportunities) - Request opportunities to clarify team members
roles - Orientation for new team members? Or changes in
roles over time?
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28Collaboration What can you do?
- Communicate and reflect
- Enhance your own collaborative communication e.g.
giving and receiving feedback, conflict
resolution, monitor for jargon, etc. - Invite feedback re specific collaborative
competencies
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30Collaboration What can you do?
- We may look in the same direction, even at the
same lines, and not see what our colleague
sees. - McKee (2003)
- Reflect on your own ways of knowing, e.g.
- What assumptions am I making?
- Where did I learn these values?
- What values orient me?
- How might someone whose role is different than
mine look at this? - McKee (2003)
31Collaborative Attitudes An IDEA
- Interact with others whose role differs from my
own - Collect Data about others roles
- e.g. how others are educated competencies others
possess the many settings in which they may work - Expertise - open to the views and approaches
of their colleagues (and) altering perceptions
via the discussion when appropriate - Attention to ones own professional and personal
background, biases, stereotypes and assumptions -
including skills in exploring and appreciating
others approaches - Pecukonis (2008)
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3333
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36Objectives
- Define teams and collaboration
- Recognize the importance of team collaboration
- Consider individual and team-based strategies to
enhance collaboration
37Learning from Teams Displays
- What has enabled your team to collaborate so
effectively? - How did your team successfully address challenges
to collaboration? - What was your shared goal as a team? How did you
arrive at this goal? - What approaches/strategies did you find most
successful for coordinating and communicating as
a team? - How did you learn and benefit from your
collective experience? How did you repeatedly
review your work and experiences?
38To talk well and eloquently is a very great art,
but that an equally great one is to know the
right moment to stop.
39Thank you!
40References
- Aston West, OD. The Aston team performance
toolkit (2007). In Jelphs, K Dickinson, H
(2008) Better Partnership Working Working in
Teams. The Policy Press UK. - Cohen, SG Bailey, DE (1997). What makes teams
work Group effectiveness research from the shop
floor to the executive suite. Journal of
Management, 23(3)239-290. - DAmour, D Oandasan, I (2005).
Interprofessionality as the field of
interprofessional practice and interprofessional
education An emerging concept. Journal of
Interprofessinal C are, 19(Suppl 1)8-20. - Government of Ontario (2005). Family Health Teams
- Advancing Primary Health Care Guide to
Collaborative Team Practice. Available at
http//www.health.gov.on.ca/transformation/fht/gui
des/fht_collab_team.pdf
41References
- Lemieux-Charles, L., McGuire, W. L. (2006).
What do we know about health care team
effectiveness? A review of the literature.
Medical Care Research and Review, 63(3), 263-300.
- McKee, M. (2003). Excavating our frames of mind
The key to dialogue and collaboration. Social
Work, 48(3)401-8. - Nijhuis, BJG et al. (2007). A review of salient
elements defining team collaboration in
paediatric rehabilitation. Clinical
Rehabilitation, 21195-211. - Oandasan et al. (2006) Teamwork in Healthcare
Promoting Effective Teamwork in Healthcare in
Canada Policy Synthesis and Recommendations,
CHSRF. Available from www.chsrf.ca - Oandasan, I Reeves, S (2005). Key elements for
interprofessional education. Part 1 The learner,
the educator and the learning context. Journal of
Interprofessional Education, 19(Suppl 1)21-38.
42References
- Pecukonis E Doyle O, Bliss, D.L. (2008).
Reducing barriers to interprofessional training
Promoting interprofessional cultural competence.
Journal of Interprofessional Care, 22(4)
417428. - Pew-Fetzer Task Force on Advancing Psychosocial
Health Education (2000). Health professions
education and relationship-centred care. San
Francisco, USA Pew Health Professions Commission
and the Fetzer Institute. - Schmidt, M et al (2006). Outcomes study of a
customer relations educational program in
dialysis practice. Advances in Chronic Kidney
Disease, 13(1)86-92. - Shamian, J., El-Jardali, F. (2007). Healthy
workplaces for health workers in Canada
knowledge transfer and uptake in policy and
practice. Healthcare Papers, 7, 625. - Strasser et al. (2008). Team training and stroke
rehabilitation outcomes A cluster randomized
trial. Archives of Physical Medicine in
Rehabilitation, 89.
43References
- Velji, K et al. (2008). Effectiveness of an
adapted SBAR communication tool for a
rehabilitation setting. Health Care Quarterly,
1172-9. - Way, D., Jones, L., and Busing N. Implementation
strategies "Collaboration in primary care
-family doctors nurse practitioners delivering
shared care" Discussion paper for the Ontario
College of Family Physicians. 1-10. 2000 - West, MA et al. (2006). Reducing patient
mortality in hospitals The role of human
resources management. Journal of Organizational
Behavior, 27983-100. - Zwarenstein M. Reeves S. Perrier L. (2005).
Effectiveness of pre-licensure interprofessonal
education and post-licensure collaborative
interventions Journal of Interprofessional Care.
19 Supl 1148-65
44Websites
- www.cihc.ca Canadian Interprofessional Health
Collaborative - www.ipe.utoronto.ca Office of IPE, University
of Toronto - www.chsrf.ca Canadian Health Services Research
Foundation