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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Routine And Adaptive Expert Strategies For Resolving Ict Mediated Communication Problems In The Team Setting, Lara Varpio, Catherine F Schryer, Lorelei Lingard
Routine And Adaptive Expert Strategies For Resolving Ict Mediated Communication Problems In The Team Setting, Lara Varpio, Catherine F Schryer, Lorelei Lingard
Lorelei Lingard
CONTEXT: The use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) for supporting interprofessional communication is becoming increasingly common in health care. However, little research has explored how ICTs affect interprofessional communication, or how novices are trained to be effective interprofessional ICT users. This study explores the interprofessional communication strategies of nurses and doctors (trainees and experts) when their communications were mediated by a specific ICT: an electronic patient record (EPR).
METHODS: A total of 72 doctors and nurses participated in this 8-month study on a paediatric in-patient ward. Eighty hours of non-participant observations and 20 semi-structured interviews were conducted. All data …
What's So Great About Rehabilitation Teams? An Ethnographic Study Of Interprofessional Collaboration In A Rehabilitation Unit, Lynne Sinclair, Lorelei Lingard, Ravindra Mohabeer
What's So Great About Rehabilitation Teams? An Ethnographic Study Of Interprofessional Collaboration In A Rehabilitation Unit, Lynne Sinclair, Lorelei Lingard, Ravindra Mohabeer
Lorelei Lingard
OBJECTIVE: To explore team structures, team relationships, and organizational culture constituting interprofessional collaboration (IPC) in a particular rehabilitation setting; to develop a description of IPC practice that may be translated, adapted, and operationalized in other clinical environments.
DESIGN: An ethnographic study involving: Field observations: 40 hours, over 4 weeks, daily activities, 7 interprofessional meetings, 3 care planning meetings, 1 business meeting, and 3 family meetings; Individual observations: a physiotherapist, an occupational therapist, and a social worker individually observed for 45 minutes to an hour; and Interviews: 19 participants, 11 professions, 27 informal, 5 formal interviews. Data analysis consisted of an …
Communication Channels In General Internal Medicine: A Description Of Baseline Patterns For Improved Interprofessional Collaboration, Lesley Gotlib Conn, Lorelei Lingard, Scott Reeves, Karen-Lee Miller, Ann Russell, Merrick Zwarenstein
Communication Channels In General Internal Medicine: A Description Of Baseline Patterns For Improved Interprofessional Collaboration, Lesley Gotlib Conn, Lorelei Lingard, Scott Reeves, Karen-Lee Miller, Ann Russell, Merrick Zwarenstein
Lorelei Lingard
General internal medicine (GIM) is a communicatively complex specialty because of its diverse patient population and the number and diversity of health care providers working on a medicine ward. Effective interprofessional communication in such information-intensive environments is critical to achieving optimal patient care. Few empirical studies have explored the ways in which health professionals exchange patient information and the implications of their chosen communication forms. In this article, we report on an ethnographic study of health professionals' communication in two GIM wards through the lens of communication genre theory. We categorize and explore communication in GIM into two genre sets-synchronous …
The Impact Of Space And Time On Interprofessional Teamwork In Canadian Primary Health Care Settings: Implications For Health Care Reform, Ivy Oandasan, Lesley Gotlib Conn, Lorelei Lingard, Allia Karim, Difat Jakubovicz, Cynthia Whitehead, Karen-Lee Miller, Natalie Kennie, Scott Reeves
The Impact Of Space And Time On Interprofessional Teamwork In Canadian Primary Health Care Settings: Implications For Health Care Reform, Ivy Oandasan, Lesley Gotlib Conn, Lorelei Lingard, Allia Karim, Difat Jakubovicz, Cynthia Whitehead, Karen-Lee Miller, Natalie Kennie, Scott Reeves
Lorelei Lingard
Aim: This paper explores the impact of space and time on interprofessional teamwork in three primary health care centres and the implications for Canadian and other primary health care reform.
Background: Primary health care reform in Canada has emphasized the creation of interprofessional teams for the delivery of collaborative patient-centred care. This involves the expansion and transformation of existing primary health care centres into interprofessional family health teams (FHT) promising to provide patients better access, more comprehensive care, and improved utilization of individual health professionals. Benefits for providers include improved workplace satisfaction and organizational efficiencies. Currently, there is little evidence …