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Short Report

Student reflections following exposure to a case-based interprofessional learning experience: Preliminary findings

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Pages 380-382 | Received 06 Feb 2014, Accepted 23 Sep 2014, Published online: 10 Oct 2014
 

Abstract

This study analyzed students’ written reflections following their initial exposure to interprofessional teamwork in case-based problem-solving. A three-hour seminar featuring three sequenced scenarios was developed and offered 12-times over two semesters. A total of 305 students from a variety of healthcare programs worked together with standardized patients in an on-campus laboratory simulating hospital ward and rehabilitation settings. A thematic analysis of students’ reflections showed that they valued the shared learning and realistic case study. However, they felt the experience would be strengthened by working in smaller, more representative teams that included students from medicine, psychology, and social work to enable more effective communication and comprehensive case discussion. While useful for future planning, the identified themes did not enable a comparative statistical analysis of what students found helpful and difficult and a re-coding of students’ responses now is underway. Implications for measuring the effectiveness of future interprofessional case-based learning center on addressing the identified weaknesses, and establishing a research design that enables a comparison of pre- and post-seminar data, and the effectiveness of the IPE experience compared to profession-specific experiences.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the reviewers for their guidance.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone were responsible for the writing and content of this paper.

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