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Original Article

Teaching interprofessional teamwork skills to health professional students: A scoping review

ORCID Icon, , , , , & show all
Pages 127-135 | Received 28 Oct 2016, Accepted 30 Oct 2017, Published online: 27 Nov 2017
 

ABSTRACT

An expanding body of literature is examining interprofessional teamwork and its effect in healthcare. To produce capable healthcare professionals prepared to participate in interprofessional roles, teamwork training must begin early in health professional students’ training. The focus of this scoping review was to explore interprofessional education (IPE) studies designed to teach and/or assess interprofessional teamwork skills to students from two or more different health professions, to find and describe effective pedagogy and assessment strategies. Using a scoping review methodology, 1,106 abstracts were reviewed by three teams of investigators. Eligibility criteria were inclusion of students in interprofessional teams, an intervention to improve interprofessional teamwork skills and assessment of outcomes related to teamwork. Thirty-three studies met the criteria for inclusion. The literature was varied in terms of study design, teaching methods and assessment measures for interprofessional teamwork. The lack of rigorous, comparable studies in this area makes recommending one teaching method or assessment measure over another difficult. Regardless of teaching method, it appears that most learning activities where interprofessional teams interact result in positive changes in student perceptions and attitudes towards IPE and practice. As health education programs seek to incorporate more interprofessional activities into their respective programs, it is important to review methods and measures that would best fit their individual program. This review highlights the importance of standardising the reporting of methods and outcomes for those who wish to incorporate the studied methods into their curricula.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Jenny Garcia and Dr Timothy Robinson for their help in the data extraction process and editorial contributions, as well as both author-solicited and editor-assigned reviewers whose comments and questions were invaluable.

Declaration of interest

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

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Supplemental data for this article can be access on the publisher’s website.

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