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Achieving Collaborative Competence through Interprofessional Education

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Title: Achieving Collaborative Competence through Interprofessional Education


1
Achieving Collaborative Competence through
Interprofessional Education
  • Lessons learned from Joint Training in Learning
    Disability Nursing and Social Work

2
Why Interprofessional Education?
  • Complex practice making different professions
    mutually dependent
  • Holistic approaches
  • Failures in communication
  • Policies requiring integrated working
  • Singular disciplines, training and identities
  • Knowledge for collaborative practice

3
Jointly trained practitioners a different
professional perspective
  • Expected to integrate two discourses into their
    practice
  • Experienced the tensions and conflicts of a new
    hybrid worker
  • Occupying thirdspace (Beattie, 2003)
  • Experienced dual socialisation

4
Dual Socialisation in a Joint Training Programme
  • practice placements in both health and social
    services
  • practice supervision from both nurses and social
    workers
  • lecturers from both disciplines
  • learning the language of nursing and social
    work
  • shared learning with other nurses and/or social
    workers
  • two different codes of practice
  • assessed against integrated learning outcomes

5
Collaboration and Collaborative Competence
  • Collaboration
  • Involves different degrees of proximity in time
    or space and different levels of complexity eg.
  • May be concurrent and co-located people working
    physically together on the same task at the same
    time in the same place
  • May be sequential a series of steps to provide
    seamless care (eg. acute trust works with Social
    Services to discharge an older patient)
  • May be virtual (eg researchers working with
    practitioners/organisations to improve services)
  • (Meads and Ashcroft, 2005)

6
Professional Competence
  • Barr (1998) distinguishes between
  • Common Competencies those held in common
    between all professions part of the rationale
    for joint training
  • Complementary Competencies those that
    distinguish one profession from another also
    part of the rationale for joint training
  • Collaborative Competencies those necessary to
    work effectively with others the evidence
    suggests that joint training develops them

7
Collaborative Competencies
  • Communication
  • Understanding roles
  • Respecting /valuing other professions /networking
  • Managing change and conflict
  • Working together
  • Acceptance
  • Developing and supporting each other
  • Facilitating Teamwork
  • (Barr, 1998)

8
Boundary Talk Research with jointly trained
practitioners
  • Postal survey of ex students (n 47) from 5
    universities in England
  • Semi-structured interviews with 25 self selecting
    respondents
  • Information from Course Leaders
  • Ethical Approval through the Institute of
    Education
  • Grounded Theory methodology

9
Prepared for Interprofessional Practice?
10
How was Collaborative Competence expressed by
respondents?
  • we were looking at two cultures werent we?
    We were trying to assimilate two cultures into
    one person and we were being taught by two
    cultures and there were significant differences
    between mornings and afternoons in terms of the
    culture of the lesson and the content of the
    lesson. (Int 04)
  • respecting, valuing other professions
  • managing competing discourses (Barnet, 1997)

11
Transcultural Understanding

I think the placements also helped. I mean I
did two placements in hospitals, one in a mental
health residential home, one in a learning
disability day centre, and again, you experience
different cultures. (Int 04)
Understanding roles, networking Breadth of
Knowledge (Sims, 2008)
12
Cultural Competence
  • When they do a multi-agency assessment of a
    family of a child (in health) and they feed back
    to the family they call it a case conference, but
    obviously within social services a case
    conference is a child protection matter, so they
    have different language and different things mean
    different things within their role so working
    across the two you can put peoples minds at ease
    because you understand the language that they are
    on about and talk in terms that they are
    comfortable with (Int 20)
  • Communication
  • Cultural competence openness, respect and
    willingness to learn (OHagan, 2001)

13
Constructing practice differently
  • Valuing other professions
  • Learning how other professions construct
    understandings of problems (Barrett and Keeping,
    2005)

being able to recognise and see that different
people might look at (practice) slightly
differently and you need to take that into
account and work with that, not try to resist it
or defend against it or kick against it really.
(Int 23)
14
Confidence and Conflict
  • I think I feel relatively confident in getting
    a consensus on a care plan. I feel more able to
    identify and challenge members of the support
    network who may be trying to bluster their way
    into having their own say, when it does not
    appear to be what the consensus had identified as
    in the clients best interests. (Int 12)
  • Managing Conflict
  • Confidence in own role and skills (Barrett and
    Keeping 2005)

15
Challenging Boundaries
  • I have actually sometimes been told off for
    acting too much like a social worker thats a
    social workers role! Why did you make that
    referral? The social worker should have made it.
    And I say well, it is a piece of paper half a
    page long, it takes two and a half minutes and I
    have the link!. (Int 08)
  • Acceptance tolerating differences
  • Street Level Bureaucracy (Means Smith,1994)
  • Elegant challenging (Thompson, 2006)

16
Negotiating Boundaries

I was told by the social worker that I always
have to have nurse present and I thought I can
do this! Its no big deal. I can ask these
questions and I can make a referral to the
psychiatrist. No you cant do it, said the
social worker. (Int 06)
Managing conflict Role/boundary negotiation
(Barrett and Keeping 2005)
17
Facilitating Interprofessional Working
  • I got social services to come and sit in the
    meetings and that worked really well, so we were
    already joint working and integrated before we
    were told to integrate. I initiated that, and
    that was because of the joint training I think.
    (Int 25)
  • Developing/supporting one another

18
Managing Collaboration
  • All the time you are in your comfort zone you
    are less likely to learn, whereas if you are
    faced with those difficulties, you know, and
    quite often they are operational logistical
    difficulties, you have to try and manageonce
    you become qualified it is a real mistake to
    retreat into the comfy arms of those professional
    bodies. (Int 23)
  • Working Together
  • Professional Adulthood (Barrett and Keeping 2005)

19
Lessons which can be learned
  • Broadening the socialisation of social work
    students
  • Ensuring contrasting / diverse placements
  • Involving other professionals in the assessment
    of students
  • Drawing on different discourses and knowledge
    (eg. nursing, health)
  • Establishing contact opportunities with students
    from other disciplines joint tasks?
  • Placement contracts - IP learning opportunities
  • Key Role 517 Scrutinising the evidence of
    multidisciplinary working (in teams, networks,
    systems)

20
Final Thoughts
  • Workers are needed in the crucial space between
    disciplines (Bernstein, 2000)
  • They need a professional habitus which goes
    beyond a single discipline (Bourdieu,1998)
  • Collaboration involves celebrating definitional
    uncertainty (Beattie, 2003) rather than being
    overwhelmed by it
  • Social workers need the ability to tread lightly
    on shifting professional sands!

21
The Challenge
  • Do you think that interprofessional experiences
    can help social work students to develop
    collaborative practice?
  • If so, how can singular social work programmes
    best achieve this?

Dave Sims University of Greenwich
22
Sources
  • Barnett R. (1997). Higher Education A Critical
    Business. Buckingham Open University Press.
  • Barr H. (1998). Competent to Collaborate
    towards a competency-based model for
    inter-professional education. Journal of
    Interprofessional Care, 12 (2), 181-187.
  • Barrett G. and Keeping C. (2005). The Process
    Required for Effective Interprofessional
    Working, in Barrett G., Sellman D. and Thomas
    J. (eds.) Interprofessional Working in Health and
    Social Care. Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Beattie A. (2003). Journeys into thirdspace?
    Health Alliances and the challenges of border
    crossing, in Leathard A. (ed.) Interprofessional
    Collaboration. From Policy to Practice in Health
    and Social Care, Hove Brunner-Routledge

23
  • Bernstein B. (2000). Pedagogy, Symbolic Control
    and Identity. Theory, Research, Critique. Revised
    Edition. Lanham Rowman and Littlefield (USA).
    Bourdieu P. (1998). Practical Reason. On the
    Theory of Action. Cambridge Polity Press.
  • Department of Health. (2002). Requirements for
    Social Work Training. London, DH.
  • Means, R and Smith, R. (1994). Community Care
    Policy and Practice. Basingstoke. Macmillan.
  • OHagan, K. (2001). Cultural Competence in the
    Caring Professions. London Jessica Kingsley

24
  • Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education.
    2008. Social Work Subject Benchmark Statement.
    Gloucester, QAA.
  • Sims, D (2008) The Role of Joint Training in
    Practitioner Development for Learning Disability
    Services in the International Journal of the
    Interdisciplinary Social Sciences. Vol 2, Issue
    5. pp 207-214.
  • Thompson, N. 2006. People Problems. Basingstoke.
    Palgrave Macmillan.

25
Collaborative Competencies (Barr, 1998 for
information)
  • Describe ones roles and responsibilities clearly
    to other professions and discharge them to the
    satisfaction of those others
  • Recognise and observe the constraints of ones
    role, responsibilities and competence yet
    perceive needs in a wider context
  • Recognise and respect the roles, responsibilities
    and competence of other professions in relation
    to ones own, knowing when, where and how to
    involve those others through agreed channels
  • Work with other professions to review services,
    effect change, improve standards, solve problems,
    and resolve conflict in the provision of care and
    treatment

26
  • Work with other professions to assess, plan,
    provide and review care for individual patients
    and support carers
  • Tolerate differences, misunderstandings,
    ambiguities, shortcomings and unilateral change
    in another profession
  • Enter into interdependent relationships, teaching
    and sustaining other professions and learning
    from and being sustained by those other
    professions
  • Facilitate interprofessional case conferences,
    meetings, team working and networking
  • Barr (1998)
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