
pmid: 28931485
Although interprofessional collaborative activities for health professions students have demonstrated increased knowledge of professional roles, interprofessional attitudes and confidence, and team skills; traditional professional role patterns and lack of professional role understanding are still prevalent among health professions students and may continue into professional practice. Between 1 and 10years after they completed their undergraduate studies, practicing community/public health education professionals and registered nurses who participated in an interprofessional patient home-visiting curriculum as undergraduates were surveyed. Most reported current positive attitudes and perceived collaborative abilities regarding interprofessional collaboration. On their perceived interprofessional collaborative abilities, however, community/public health education participants scored significantly higher (t(143)=-2.53, p=0.01) than registered nurse participants. Although it is difficult to generalize the findings from this study to other interprofessional curriculum models, it seems that this curriculum that concentrated on teamwork behaviors and abilities may have contributed to participants' positive translation of interprofessional theory to interprofessional practice.
Students, Health Occupations, Interprofessional Relations, Professional Practice, Community Health Nursing, Surveys and Questionnaires, Humans, Curriculum, Cooperative Behavior
Students, Health Occupations, Interprofessional Relations, Professional Practice, Community Health Nursing, Surveys and Questionnaires, Humans, Curriculum, Cooperative Behavior
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
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