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  3. Sharpening the lens to evaluate interprofessional education and interprofessional collaboration by improving the conceptual framework: a critical discussion.
 

Sharpening the lens to evaluate interprofessional education and interprofessional collaboration by improving the conceptual framework: a critical discussion.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/197563
Date of Publication
June 4, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Medizini...

Institut für Medizini...

Author
Neubauer, Florianorcid-logo
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation, Schriftliches Assessment
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation (AAE)
Institut für Medizinische Lehre (IML)
Wagner, Felicitas Lony
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation (AAE)
Lörwald, Andrea Carolin
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation (AAE)
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation, Forschung / Evaluation
Huwendiek, Sören
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation (AAE)
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation (AAE)
Subject(s)

300 - Social sciences...

600 - Technology::610...

Series
BMC medical education
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1472-6920
Publisher
BioMed Central
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1186/s12909-024-05590-0
PubMed ID
38835006
Uncontrolled Keywords

Causal model Conceptu...

Description
It has been difficult to demonstrate that interprofessional education (IPE) and interprofessional collaboration (IPC) have positive effects on patient care quality, cost effectiveness of patient care, and healthcare provider satisfaction. Here we propose a detailed explanation for this difficulty based on an adjusted theory about cause and effect in the field of IPE and IPC by asking: 1) What are the critical weaknesses of the causal models predominantly used which link IPE with IPC, and IPE and IPC with final outcomes? 2) What would a more precise causal model look like? 3) Can the proposed novel model help us better understand the challenges of IPE and IPC outcome evaluations? In the format of a critical theoretical discussion, based on a critical appraisal of the literature, we first reason that a monocausal, IPE-biased view on IPC and IPC outcomes does not form a sufficient foundation for proper IPE and IPC outcome evaluations; rather, interprofessional organization (IPO) has to be considered an additional necessary cause for IPC; and factors outside of IPC additional causes for final outcomes. Second, we present an adjusted model representing the "multi-stage multi-causality" of patient, healthcare provider, and system outcomes. Third, we demonstrate the model's explanatory power by employing it to deduce why misuse of the modified Kirkpatrick classification as a causal model in IPE and IPC outcome evaluations might have led to inconclusive results in the past. We conclude by applying the derived theoretical clarification to formulate recommendations for enhancing future evaluations of IPE, IPO, and IPC. Our main recommendations: 1) Focus should be placed on a comprehensive evaluation of factual IPC as the fundamental metric and 2) A step-by-step approach should be used that separates the outcome evaluation of IPE from that of IPC in the overarching quest for proving the benefits of IPE, IPO and IPC for patients, healthcare providers, and health systems. With this critical discussion we hope to enable more effective evaluations of IPE, IPO and IPC in the future.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/177946
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s12909-024-05590-0.pdftextAdobe PDF2.97 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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