What is IPP?
Interprofessional practice - multiple different professions
What is Collaborative practice?
Working together
What is
... [Show More] Interprofessional collaborative patient-centred practice
multiple different professions working together, always patient centred
Interprofessional practice is designed to?
Helps promote the active participation of each discipline in health care
What does inter professional practice enhance?
patient and family-centred goals and values, as well as staff participation
What is a collaborative practice used for?
process for communication and decision making that enables the knowledge and skills of care providers
When does collaborative practice occur?
when multiple health workers from different backgrounds work together with patients and their families to deliver a high quality of care
What is Interprofessional Collaboration?
partnership between a team of HCPs and a client
What is Interprofessional Collaborative Patient-centred practice designed for?
to promote the active participation of each discipline to solve a common issue
What does Interprofessional Collaborative Patient-centred practice promote?
active participation, continuous communication, staff participation and enhances patient and family centred goals
interprofessional collaboration practice (ICP) is guided by?
shared values, common purpose, mutual respect, and effective communication
ICP evolves over time based on?
client needs
ICP must be supported through?
policy, protocols, and procedures
What are the 5 common characteristics in IPP?
Collaboration
Teamwork
Communication
Decision-making
Person-centred care
What is Collaboration?
Two or more persons coming together around a common foal or objective
Underlying concept of collaboration
sharing, partnership, power, interdependency, process
What does collaboration require?
relationships and interactions, and is voluntary
What is teamwork?
interaction of two or more health professionals who work interdependently to provide care for patients
Which of the 5 common characteristics is goal-oriented and relationally-based?
teamwork
Teamwork relies on?
cooperation and collaboration
Teamwork requires what?
information sharing, understanding team functioning
What is communication?
process of acting on information
what does communication involve?
content and relational aspects
which of the 5 common characteristics requires timely and important information as well as the promotion of relationships among and between each other?
communication
What is a communication style?
how individuals use verbal-and non-verbal communication to interpret messages
What can become a barrier to communication?
communication style
What is decision making?
selecting an alternative from an existing set of options, related to problem solving
Decision making occurs at what levels?
individual and collective levels
How do we move from decision making to share decision-making?
patient involvement in decision making
Patient centred care is?
central to IPP, when the patient is at the centre of care
Patient centred care features 3 things, they are?
-respect the clients autonomy
-listen to the needs of the patient and their family
-engage with the patient as members of the team
What are the values of the Canadian health care system?
-health is a right
-health care as a tie that binds
What are the 5 principles of medicare as explained in the Canada Health Act?
public administration
comprehensiveness
universality
accessibility
portability
explain the 1st principle of medicare?
public admin: administered on a non-profit basis
2nd principle of medicare?
comprehensiveness: all medically necessary services are ensured
3rd principle of medicare?
universality: uniform service coverage for all
4th principle of medicare?
accessibility: reasonable access
5th principle of medicare?
portability: coverage even if you move to another province or territory within Canada
What are these a result of?
1. increased healthcare system efficiency
2. imported access to healthcare services
3. enhanced coordination of health care workers
Positive system outcomes of IPP
What is the centre of the organizing framework?
Task, relationship, process
Define task from the organizing framework
role clarification, division or labour, assignment of responsibilities
Define relationship from the organizing framework
maintain key function, forms the foundation where process-driven tasks are completed
Define process from the organizing framework
actions occurring in the progression towards a goal, within a given period of time
what are the contextual factors around the three important dimensions?
1. practice environment
2. individual factors
3. socio-political/environmental
4. organizational factors
5. unknown factors
Why do the frameworks make sense?
they are observation-driven and they have a bottom-up approach
What does it mean to observation-driven?
how nurses think and operate, recognize the inductive and deductive and develop an approach
inductive?
bottom up reasoning
deductive?
Top-down reasoning that works from the more general to the more specific.
A framework is based on 4 key observations, how we develop the framework, what are they?
1. involves a number of complexes and interrelated processes
2. relationship-driven, depends on collaboration
3. practice task-oriented
4. many unique contextual factors can be involved
What is the "how" of IPP? (how we get things done)
Process dimension [Show Less]