ABSTRACT
Interprofessional health-care models have been largely recognized as a critical component of effective and efficient health-care provision. While many health professions have established methods of exposing their students to interprofessional health models, social work has been slow to join in on this educational movement. In an effort to provide their students with increasingly important educational opportunities, one Southeastern university implemented the Geriatric Workforce Enhancement Program (GWEP), which promotes interprofessional collaboration within schools of nursing, medicine, and social work. This teaching note provides a detailed account of how one school of social work used GWEP to enhance interprofessional student learning. Preliminary findings illustrate the importance of integrating cutting-edge interprofessional education opportunities into social work curriculum.
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Notes on contributors
Megan Deichen Hansen
Megan Deichen Hansen is currently a postdoctoral fellow at Florida State University College of Medicine.
Margaret M. Holland
Margaret M. Holland, MSW, is a PhD candidate in the College of Social Work at Florida State University.
Jean Munn
Jean Munn, PhD, MSW, is co-PI for the Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Program (GWEP) at Florida State University, as well as for the independent assessment of Florida's Medicaid Long-Term Care Program.