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Interprofessional education and practice guide: interprofessional team writing to promote dissemination of interprofessional education scholarship and products.

Mia T VogelErin Abu-Rish BlakeneyMayumi A WillgerodtPeggy Soule OdegardEric L JohnsonSarah ShraderDebra LinerCarla A DyerLeslie W HallBrenda Zierler
Published in: Journal of interprofessional care (2018)
Collaborations to develop, implement, evaluate, replicate, and write about interprofessional education (IPE) activities within and across institutions are wonderful opportunities to experience teamwork, team communication, ethics and values, and the roles and responsibilities of interprofessional team writing. Just as effective communication in interprofessional team-based care is essential for providing safe, high-quality health care, similar communication strategies are necessary to produce high-quality scholarship of IPE curricula and activities. Relationship and communication issues that affect health care teams' abilities to work together effectively (e.g., hierarchy, exclusion, assumptions, non-responsiveness, biases, stereotypes and poor hand-offs of information) can also occur in interprofessional team writing. Between 1970 and 2010, interprofessional practice research publications increased by 2293%. Although there has been tremendous growth in the IPE literature, especially of articles that require collaborative writing, there have not been any papers addressing the challenges of interprofessional team writing. As more teams collaborate to develop IPE, there is a need to establish principles and strategies for effective interprofessional team writing. In this education and practice guide, a cross-institutional team of faculty, staff, and graduate students who have collaborated on externally funded IPE grants, conferences, products, and workshops will share lessons learned for successfully collaborating in interprofessional team writing.
Keyphrases
  • quality improvement
  • patient safety
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • nursing students
  • primary care
  • systematic review
  • health information
  • medical education