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Related Concept Videos

Cardiomyopathy V: Interprofessional Care01:29

Cardiomyopathy V: Interprofessional Care

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Managing cardiomyopathy involves addressing underlying or precipitating causes, treating heart failure with medications, and implementing dietary changes and a balanced exercise and rest regimen.Lifestyle ModificationsCardiomyopathy patients should adopt a low-sodium diet to reduce fluid retention and manage heart failure. A personalized exercise and rest plan helps maintain physical fitness without overstraining the heart. Avoiding alcohol and tobacco is essential to prevent further damage to...
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Aneurysm III: Interprofessional Care01:26

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Aneurysm management involves either conservative medical therapy or surgical intervention, depending on the size and symptoms of the aneurysm. Conservative management is generally reserved for smaller, asymptomatic aneurysms, while larger or symptomatic aneurysms often necessitate surgical repair.Conservative Medical TherapyFor small, asymptomatic aneurysms, particularly abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) less than 5.5 centimeters in diameter, conservative medical therapy is recommended. This...
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Le Chatelier's Principle: Changing Temperature02:19

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Consistent with the law of mass action, an equilibrium stressed by a change in concentration will shift to re-establish equilibrium without any change in the value of the equilibrium constant, K. When an equilibrium shifts in response to a temperature change, however, it is re-established with a different relative composition that exhibits a different value for the equilibrium constant.
To understand this phenomenon, consider the elementary reaction:
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Venous Thrombosis III: Interprofessional Care01:29

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Venous thrombosis requires effective prevention and treatment strategies to improve patient outcomes and reduce potential complications.Prevention StrategiesHealthcare providers must prioritize preventing venous thromboembolism (VTE) for all adult patients upon admission. Interventions depend on bleeding and thrombosis risk, medical history, current medications, diagnoses, planned procedures, and patient preferences. Patients on bed rest should change positions every two hours and, if not...
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A system at equilibrium is in a state of dynamic balance, with forward and reverse reactions taking place at equal rates. If an equilibrium system is subjected to a change in conditions that affects these reaction rates differently (a stress), then the rates are no longer equal and the system is not at equilibrium. The system will subsequently experience a net reaction in the direction of a greater rate (a shift) that will re-establish the equilibrium. This phenomenon is summarized by Le...
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Coronary Artery Disease V: Interprofessional Care01:27

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Interprofessional care for coronary artery disease includes pharmacological therapy and revascularization procedures.Pharmacological therapy for Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) aims to manage symptoms, prevent complications, and improve patient outcomes through various classes of medications:Antiplatelet Agents:Aspirin and Clopidogrel: These medications inhibit platelet aggregation, preventing blood clots, which is crucial for avoiding heart attacks and strokes. Doctors often prescribe these...
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Setting Up a Stroke Team Algorithm and Conducting Simulation-based Training in the Emergency Department - A Practical Guide
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Interprofessional education and practice guide No. 9: Sustaining interprofessional simulation using change management

Arunaz Kumar1, Fiona Kent2, Euan M Wallace1

  • 1Faculty of Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.

Journal of Interprofessional Care
|August 31, 2018
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Implementing sustainable interprofessional education programs like the Women's Health Interprofessional Learning through Simulation (WHIPLS) requires strategic planning and institutional support. Lessons learned focus on curriculum alignment, leadership, and learner engagement for successful integration into healthcare training.

Keywords:
CurriculumKottermedicalmidwiferyobstetricundergraduate

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Area of Science:

  • Healthcare Education
  • Patient Safety
  • Interprofessional Collaboration

Background:

  • Effective teamwork is crucial for patient safety in dynamic healthcare settings.
  • Interprofessional training must begin before clinical registration to impact the future healthcare workforce.
  • Existing interprofessional programs face sustainability challenges due to logistical and institutional barriers.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To present a guide for implementing sustainable interprofessional training programs.
  • To share lessons learned from the 6-year experience of the Women's Health Interprofessional Learning through Simulation (WHIPLS) program.
  • To outline the application of Kotter's 8-step change management plan for program sustainability.

Main Methods:

  • Describing the implementation process of the WHIPLS program using Kotter's 8-step model.
  • Analyzing 6 years of experience in delivering interprofessional simulation-based learning.
  • Identifying key factors contributing to the program's sustainability and integration into the curriculum.

Main Results:

  • The WHIPLS program successfully transitioned from a pilot to a core component of the clinical curriculum.
  • Key lessons for sustainability include curriculum overlap identification, leadership planning, institutional buy-in, and alignment with national goals.
  • Focusing on the learner, translating learning into practice, program simplicity, innovation, and strategic evaluation are vital.

Conclusions:

  • Sustainable interprofessional education is achievable through strategic planning and adaptation.
  • The WHIPLS program demonstrates a successful model for integrating interprofessional learning into medical and midwifery curricula.
  • Adopting a structured change management approach facilitates the long-term success of interprofessional training initiatives.