Development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a Canadian Case Study

Abstract Background Academic institutions worldwide are embedding interprofessional education (IPE) into their health/social services education programs in response to global evidence that this leads to interprofessional collaborative practice (IPC). The World Health Organization (WHO) is holding it...

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Main Authors: Ruby E. Grymonpre, Lesley Bainbridge, Louise Nasmith, Cynthia Baker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:Human Resources for Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-020-00551-2
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spelling doaj-e0a46b5501c74742a8902108f23804bf2021-01-24T12:23:33ZengBMCHuman Resources for Health1478-44912021-01-0119111010.1186/s12960-020-00551-2Development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a Canadian Case StudyRuby E. Grymonpre0Lesley Bainbridge1Louise Nasmith2Cynthia Baker3College of Pharmacy, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of ManitobaDepartment of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Medicine, University of British ColumbiaDepartment of Family Practice, University of British ColumbiaCanadian Association of Schools of Nursing and Professor Emeritus, Queens UniversityAbstract Background Academic institutions worldwide are embedding interprofessional education (IPE) into their health/social services education programs in response to global evidence that this leads to interprofessional collaborative practice (IPC). The World Health Organization (WHO) is holding its 193 member countries accountable for Indicator 3–06 (‘IPE Accreditation’) through its National Health Workforce Accounts. Despite the major influence of accreditation on the quality of health and social services education programs, little has been written about accreditation of IPE. Case study Canada has been a global leader in IPE Accreditation. The Accreditation of Interprofessional Health Education (AIPHE) projects (2007–2011) involved a collaborative of eight Canadian organizations that accredit pre-licensure education for six health/social services professions. The AIPHE vision was for learners to develop the necessary knowledge, skills and attitudes to provide IPC through IPE. The aim of this paper is to share the Canadian Case Study including policy context, supporting theories, preconditions, logic model and evaluation findings to achieve the primary project deliverable, increased awareness of the need to embed IPE language into the accreditation standards for health and social services academic programs. Future research implications are also discussed. Conclusions As a result of AIPHE, Canada is the only country in the world in which, for over a decade, a collective of participating health/social services accrediting organizations have been looking for evidence of IPE in the programs they accredit. This puts Canada in the unique position to now examine the downstream impacts of IPE accreditation.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-020-00551-2AccreditationInterprofessional educationHealth professional education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ruby E. Grymonpre
Lesley Bainbridge
Louise Nasmith
Cynthia Baker
spellingShingle Ruby E. Grymonpre
Lesley Bainbridge
Louise Nasmith
Cynthia Baker
Development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a Canadian Case Study
Human Resources for Health
Accreditation
Interprofessional education
Health professional education
author_facet Ruby E. Grymonpre
Lesley Bainbridge
Louise Nasmith
Cynthia Baker
author_sort Ruby E. Grymonpre
title Development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a Canadian Case Study
title_short Development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a Canadian Case Study
title_full Development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a Canadian Case Study
title_fullStr Development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a Canadian Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a Canadian Case Study
title_sort development of accreditation standards for interprofessional education: a canadian case study
publisher BMC
series Human Resources for Health
issn 1478-4491
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Background Academic institutions worldwide are embedding interprofessional education (IPE) into their health/social services education programs in response to global evidence that this leads to interprofessional collaborative practice (IPC). The World Health Organization (WHO) is holding its 193 member countries accountable for Indicator 3–06 (‘IPE Accreditation’) through its National Health Workforce Accounts. Despite the major influence of accreditation on the quality of health and social services education programs, little has been written about accreditation of IPE. Case study Canada has been a global leader in IPE Accreditation. The Accreditation of Interprofessional Health Education (AIPHE) projects (2007–2011) involved a collaborative of eight Canadian organizations that accredit pre-licensure education for six health/social services professions. The AIPHE vision was for learners to develop the necessary knowledge, skills and attitudes to provide IPC through IPE. The aim of this paper is to share the Canadian Case Study including policy context, supporting theories, preconditions, logic model and evaluation findings to achieve the primary project deliverable, increased awareness of the need to embed IPE language into the accreditation standards for health and social services academic programs. Future research implications are also discussed. Conclusions As a result of AIPHE, Canada is the only country in the world in which, for over a decade, a collective of participating health/social services accrediting organizations have been looking for evidence of IPE in the programs they accredit. This puts Canada in the unique position to now examine the downstream impacts of IPE accreditation.
topic Accreditation
Interprofessional education
Health professional education
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-020-00551-2
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