Contact is not enough: a qualitative study of how space and place impact on interprofessional education.

Contact is not enough: a qualitative study of how space and place impact on interprofessional education. J Interprof Care. 2020 Sep 11;:1-8 Authors: Hawick L, Kitto S, Cleland J Abstract Interprofessional education (IPE) aims to prepare health-care students to provide patient care in a collaborative team environment. However, much health-care education is delivered in places and spaces which do not support interprofessional interaction. To examine the consequences of this, we explored how a relatively new health-care education center (the "space" and "place") impacted interprofessional learning. This qualitative study drew on two data sources. Documents (n = 50) related to building design and curricula plans, and focus groups with medical and physician associate students co-learning within the building to explore their experiences of the building in relation to IPE (17 participants). Data coding and analysis were inductive, using thematic analysis. A key objective for the building was to support IPE. This objective was not translated into operational detail in later documents or into practice, as indicated by student experiences. Students experienced tensions and isolation from each other and other health-care students because of the building's place (i.e. separate from other health-care programs), the learning space within the building, and the interplay between the space and timetables. This empirical study suggests that space an...
Source: Journal of Interprofessional Care - Category: Health Management Tags: J Interprof Care Source Type: research