Back to Search Start Over

Articulating the ideal: 50 years of interprofessional collaboration in Medical Education

Authors :
Cynthia Whitehead
Elise Paradis
Mandy Pipher
J. Cristian Rangel
Carrie Cartmill
Source :
Medical Education. 51:861-872
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Wiley, 2017.

Abstract

Context Health care delivery and the education of clinicians have changed immensely since the creation of the journal Medical Education. In this project, we seek to answer the following three questions: How has the concept of collaboration changed over the past 50 years in Medical Education? Have the participants involved in collaboration shifted over time? Has the idea of collaboration itself been transformed over the past 50 years? Methods Starting from a constructionist view of scientific discourse, we used directed content analysis to sample, code and analyse 144 collaboration-related articles over the 50-year life span of Medical Education. We developed an analytical framework to identify the key components of varying articulations of ‘collaboration’, with a focus on shifts in language and terminology over time. Our sample was drawn from an archive of 1221 articles developed to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Medical Education. Results Interprofessional collaboration is conceptualised in three primary ways throughout our sample: as a psychometric property; as tasks or activities, and, more recently, as ‘togetherness’. The first conceptualisation articulates collaboration as involving knowledge or skills that are teachable to individuals, the second as involving the education of teams to engage in structured meetings or task distribution, and the third as the building of networks of individuals who learn to form team identities. The ‘leader’ of collaboration is typically conceptualised as the doctor, who is consistently articulated by authors as the active agent of collaborative care. Other clinicians and students of other professions are, as the wording in this sentence suggests, usually positioned as ‘others’, and thus as more passive participants in, or even observers of, ‘collaboration’. Conclusions In order to meet goals of meaningful collaboration leading to higher-quality care, it behoves us as a community of educators and researchers to heed the ways in which we teach, think and write about interprofessional collaboration, interrogating our own language and assumptions that may be betraying and reproducing harmful care hierarchies.

Details

ISSN :
03080110
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medical Education
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8e7500f4e03a717ae22e5459ce000c5c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/medu.13331