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Qualitative Analysis of an Inter-Professional, In-Home, Community Geriatric Educational Training Program
Author(s) -
Jo Marie Reilly,
Ashley Halle,
Cheryl Resnik,
Jeremy YuenChun Teoh,
Brad Williams,
Patricia F. Harris,
Freddi SegalGidan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
gerontology and geriatric medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2333-7214
DOI - 10.1177/2333721421997203
Subject(s) - curriculum , geriatrics , experiential learning , medical education , pharmacy , medicine , scope of practice , qualitative research , health care , interprofessional education , scope (computer science) , nursing , psychology , pedagogy , sociology , social science , psychiatry , computer science , economics , programming language , economic growth
This study describes and provides qualitative analysis of an innovative, inter-professional (IP) geriatrics curriculum focused on team-based care with healthy older adults in a home-based community setting. The curriculum consisted of five, four-hour didactic and experiential sessions over one academic year. Dental, medical, occupational therapy, pharmacy, physical therapy, and physician assistant students were placed into teams led by IP faculty from each health professional school. Teams met with a community-dwelling older adult three times. At the program’s conclusion, students responded to the reflective question “What is the most important learning experience you expect to take away from the geriatric inter-professional training? A qualitative analysis of student responses revealed four common themes from all five professions aligning with curricular goals: (1) health professional roles/scope of practice, (2) geriatric care and health outcomes, (3) team communication/collaboration, and (4) advocating for one’s own profession. As sites for institutional clinical training become scarcer for health professions’ trainees, this study offers both a novel, IP, geriatrics curriculum with didactic/experiential learning through community partnerships in a home-based setting and a reflective evaluation.

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