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Expanding upon Leadership Development for Interprofessional
Education and Collaborative Practice and Leadership and
Collaboration, the third installment to this original and
innovative collection of books considers a variety of research
models and theories. Emphasizing research and evaluation in
leadership aspects, Leading Research and Evaluation in
Interprofessional Education and Collaborative Practice showcases
examples from around the globe in various multicultural contexts.
Crucial for academics and researchers in this field, the book
includes studies on traditionally under-represented countries and
aims to prompt new ideas for future research and policy structures
in Interprofessional education and practice.
This book is the fourth in the series on leadership,
interprofessional education and practice, following on from
Leadership Development for Interprofessional Education and
Collaborative Practice (2014), Leadership and Collaboration:
Further Developments for IPE and Collaborative Practice (2015) and
Leading Research and Evaluation in Interprofessional Education and
Collaborative Practice (2016). Along with policy changes around the
globe, these three books have stimulated experts in this area to
consider not only the ways in which they introduce and develop
interprofessional education and collaborative practice, but also
how they evaluate their impacts. In this 4th book, the focus is on
the sustainability of these initiatives, sharing insights into
factors that promote sustainability including leadership approaches
and organisationsal resilience, as well as frequently encountered
difficulties, and ways to overcome them.
Every health professional interacts with patients from different
cultures to their own, not just those from different countries,
ethnic or religious groups, but also those with cultural
differences due to sexual orientation, lifestyle, beliefs, age,
gender, social status or perceived economic worth. The potential
for confusions in communication and consequent problems are even
greater in primary care mental health than in other areas.This
guide for all health professionals provides a model for working in
mental health across cultures, and outlines practical ways of using
psychotherapy skills across cultures. It can be used as personal
preparation by individuals in any primary care setting at home or
abroad, or as a teaching tool for use with health professionals
travelling to another culture, including overseas aid workers and
those moving to a new country. It is also of great value to
everyone interested in transcultural medicine. 'Wherever we work,
whoever we are, we are working across cultures, often without
realising it. The first step is to become conscious of this fact.
The next step is to read this book' - Jill Benson and Jill
Thistlethwaite.
This book is the fourth in the series on leadership,
interprofessional education and practice, following on from
Leadership Development for Interprofessional Education and
Collaborative Practice (2014), Leadership and Collaboration:
Further Developments for IPE and Collaborative Practice (2015) and
Leading Research and Evaluation in Interprofessional Education and
Collaborative Practice (2016). Along with policy changes around the
globe, these three books have stimulated experts in this area to
consider not only the ways in which they introduce and develop
interprofessional education and collaborative practice, but also
how they evaluate their impacts. In this 4th book, the focus is on
the sustainability of these initiatives, sharing insights into
factors that promote sustainability including leadership approaches
and organisationsal resilience, as well as frequently encountered
difficulties, and ways to overcome them.
In recent years governments around the world have been bending
their will toward increasing collaborative practice amongst health
care professionals. Although inter-professional learning has been
on the agenda since the 1950s, to date there has been mixed success
in bringing the disparate range of health professionals in the
health care system together in a coherent and systematic way.
Surprisingly, there has been limited sociological analysis of this
phenomenon with no identifiable seminal text that critical analyses
the issues facing the development of successful inter-professional
practice in health. This edited collection to redress this by
providing the conditions for critical engagement with
inter-professional issues through developing a critical sociology
of inter-professional health care practice. The core strength of
the book is the meditations, case studies, evaluations and
theoretical reflections on the practice of inter-professional
collaboration in health by pre-eminent scholars from Australia,
Canada and the United Kingdom. The book provides a sophisticated
critical inquiry that uses a wide array of multi-disciplinary
conceptual tools to study the phenomenon of inter-professional
practice in a way that is easily understood by both instructors and
students in the fields of medicine, allied health and nursing.
This book examines medical professionalism, dissecting the concept
into various components while providing both an evidence-based and
personal approach. In recent years professionalism has come under
intense scrutiny and stimulated wide-ranging and far-reaching
debate. The big issues include teaching and learning
professionalism, the assessment of professional behaviour at all
levels of practice and the problem of what should happen when
professionals are deemed to be acting unprofessionally'.
Professionalism also encompasses self-care, lifelong learning,
teamwork and interaction within a culturally diverse society. This
book comprehensively examines all these aspects, to provide a
thorough overview of this important and evolving field. It has
significant implications for doctors' education and continuing
professional development, and is vital reading for medical
educators and everyone concerned with the future of the medical
profession.
This work includes a Foreword by Jonathan Silverman, Associate
Clinical Dean and Director of Communication Studies, School of
Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge. Emphasis is placed on
shared decision making, appraisal, and dealing with difficult
situations as well as the more common topics such as taking a
history and breaking bad news. Healthcare educators with an
interest in communication skills training and personal and
professional development will find this guide invaluable, as will
undergraduate and postgraduate teachers in university and workplace
settings. "As its central component, this manual of experiential
learning provides a bank of ready-made simulated patient scenarios
that will prove invaluable to anybody setting up a programme from
scratch - here is a collection of scenarios with information for
facilitators, participants and simulated patients and hints on how
to run sessions on specific topics and it is clearly not just for
beginners - those already running established programs will also
find it so useful to be able to turn to a resource of simulated
patient scenarios when planning a new session." "Now educators can
turn to a practical source of expert guidance in setting up
sessions utilising simulated patients. Experiential work with
simulated patients is the most effective way of improving learners'
communication skills. Practical, thoughtful and well considered
help such as this new book is worth its weight in gold and will
help so many educators as they strive to introduce this approach to
learning into medical curricula and assessments." - Jonathan
Silverman, in the Foreword.
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