How satisfied are undergraduate students with interprofessional training? Meta-analysis of a pilot study - 08/07/17
Résumé |
Introduction |
Learning to work in an interprofessional team entails satisfaction in working with others.
Objective |
Contextual assessment of the degree of satisfaction of undergraduate healthcare students (doctors, nurses, occupational therapists and physiotherapists) during interprofessional education (IPE).
Aims |
Meta-analysis of degree of satisfaction contextually assessed during major interprofessional learning moments.
Methods |
Thirty-six undergraduate health care students (medical students, nursing students, occupational therapy students) answered questions on a 5-point Likert scale (from “Very satisfied” to “Very dissatisfied”). A meta-analysis with Tau2 (t2), Cochrane's Q, and I2 analyzed IPE activities: self-reflection after daily training, interactions with teachers, discussion of clinical cases during ward rounds and patient care as a team.
Results |
Meta-analysis reported significant heterogeneity in the degrees of satisfaction (Fig. 1): 47.2% being “satisfied” with reflection after IPE, {t2=.011; Q (5df)=30.03; I2=83%, P<.0001}; 45% being “satisfied” during interactions with their teachers {t2=.01; Q (5df)=25.74; I2=80%, P<.001}; 31.4% being “satisfied” about the discussion of a clinical case during ward rounds {t2=.009; Q (5df)=22.61; I2=77.89%, P<.001}; and 44.4% being “satisfied” about patient care with the interprofessional team {t2=.009; Q (5df)=22.99; I2=78.25%, P<.001}.
Conclusions |
Undergraduate students show satisfaction with IPE activities. This helps improve the quality of care and teamwork in the busiest wards.
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Vol 41 - N° S
P. S299 - avril 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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