Creating the Health Care Team of the Future: The Toronto Model for Interprofessional Education and Practice
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About this ebook
One way to significantly improve the delivery of health care is to teach the health professionals who provide care to work together, to communicate with each other across professional boundaries, and to start to think and act like a team that has the patient at its center. The team-based care movement is at the heart of major changes in medical education and will become an element in the new accreditation standards.
Through its Centre for Interprofessional Education, the pioneering approach in this area taken by the University of Toronto has attracted international attention. The role of the Centre for IPE, a formal partnership between the University of Toronto and the Toronto Academic Health Sciences Network, is to create a hub for the university and the many teaching hospitals where all core parties can be actively engaged in redesigning this new model of health care. In Creating the Health Care Team of the Future, Sioban Nelson, Maria Tassone, and Brian D. Hodges give a brief background of the Toronto Model and provide a step-by-step guide to developing an IPE program.
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Creating the Health Care Team of the Future - Sioban Nelson
Creating the Health Care Team of the Future
The Toronto Model for Interprofessional Education and Practice
SIOBAN NELSON, MARIA TASSONE, AND BRIAN D. HODGES
ILR Press
an imprint of
Cornell University Press
Ithaca and London
Contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
INTRODUCTION: WHY A TORONTO MODEL WORKBOOK?
1. GETTING STARTED
Reflection Questions
2. STRUCTURING FOR SUCCESS
Reflection Questions
3. BUILDING THE CURRICULUM
Reflection Questions
4. CREATING A STRONG EDUCATION–PRACTICE INTERFACE
Reflection Questions
5. THINKING ABOUT IMPACT AND SUSTAINABILITY FROM THE START
Reflection Questions
NOTES
FURTHER READING: SELECT TORONTO SCHOLARSHIP ON IPE/C
Acknowledgements
THE AUTHORS FOR THE WORKBOOK PERSONIFY THE UNIVERSITY–clinical partnership that is at the heart of the Toronto Model, the University of Toronto’s approach to inter-professional education and care (IPE/C); Sioban Nelson, Vice Provost Academic Programs, University of Toronto; Maria Tassone, Director of the Centre for Interprofessional Education and Assistant Professor, Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto; and Senior Director, Interprofessional Education & Care at the University Health Network; and Brian Hodges, Vice President Education at the University Health Network, professor, Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto, Scientist at the Wilson Centre for Research in Education. Each of the affiliated teaching hospitals and health professional faculties of the university–hospital partnership participated in the project by furnishing case studies of their IPE/C activities and linking the workbook team with educators, clinicians, students, and patients who could provide their perspectives and enrich the text with examples of creativity and innovation. The full list of those who were part of this collaborative project and the nature of their contribution is provided below.
The project was made possible through the support of the Deans of the Health Sciences at the University of Toronto (U of T) and the CEOs of the Toronto Academic Health Science Network (TAHSN). Their collective support, both financial and moral, was critical to garner the participation and enthusiasm of faculty, clinicians, patients, and students in the project.
Many of those who began the work that evolved into the Toronto Model from the 1990s have subsequently moved on, but the work has been carried forward by new generations of IPE/C focused teachers and practitioners. In this book we have tried to honour the many hands and multiple ideas that created both the opportunity for IPE/C at U of T and the eventual program. Writers Susan Pedwell and Dave Ross were engaged in interviewing stakeholders to get the background and context straight. Another writer, Sydney Goodfellow, interviewed student groups and visited the student-run Interprofessional Medical and Allied Groups for Improving Neighbourhood Environments Clinic, better known as the IMAGINE Clinic. The patient perspective was provided by individuals affiliated with the Health Mentor Program and the ehpic™ program at the U of T, and the Patient Educator Program at Holland Bloor-view Kids Rehabilitation Hospital. Interview materials have been integrated as narrative in each of the chapters, as well as in pull-out quotes that reflect the diversity of stakeholders and voices. Although the narrative has been woven together from individual interviews, the IPE/C program and its growth and success have been the result of thousands of people in Toronto, a true team effort.
We are deeply indebted to former and current Centre for IPE faculty and staff for all the assistance they have provided, and in particular for the valuable insights and thoughtful edits as the book evolved. We would like to thank Ivy Oandasan, the key leader in interprofessional education when we began on this road. Ivy has generously provided detailed feedback on the manuscript and offered suggestions that have enhanced it greatly. Dave Ross was the project officer, and he did a fantastic job holding the thousands of pieces together. Sofia Martimianakis and Alexandra Harris compiled the annotated bibliography, as well as assisted in pulling together the final manuscript. Gil Martinez was enormously helpful in assisting us to organize the material visually, adapting and developing figures, and transforming the text to a workbook. Liz Ross provided a careful edit of the manuscript prior to submission. Suzanne Gordon has been a champion of this project from the start. The book was entirely her idea. She read the draft manuscript thoroughly and provided helpful, detailed feedback.
Our greatest thanks go to all the hundred or so individuals who generously provided written material, personal recollections, and information for this project. So many people have worked tirelessly to develop a new way of practice and to support the next generation of health professionals to function as collaborative team members who can work effectively to meet the needs of patients and families. It has been a great privilege for the editors to tell their collective story.
Case studies were provided by partners from across the Toronto Academic Health Science Network. Ruth Barker of Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre contributed A Story of Energy and Enthusiasm—Interprofessional Education at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.
Faith Boutcher of Baycrest provided The Centre for Learning, Research and Innovation.
Dale Kuehl from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health provided Transforming the Lives of People with Mental Health Problems.
Paula Rowland of Toronto East General Hospital contributed information on partnership councils. Andrea Cameron wrote Teamwork—Your Future in Interprofessional Health Care
in the Faculty of Pharmacy. A study on the Dying and Death Seminar
from the Faculty of Social Work was provided by Michele Chaban. Bonnie Fleming-Carroll of the Hospital for Sick Children profiled the Partnered Learning Project: A Study in Interprofessional Collaboration and Learning.
Patricia Houston and Rob Fox from St. Michael’s Hospital wrote on the Student Experience Committee and its role in IPE education at the Li Ka Shing International Healthcare Education Centre. Karen Gold from Women’s College Hospital contributed information on the Intimate Partner Abuse learning activity, and worked with Mandy Lowe of the Centre for IPE and Patti McGillicuddy from the University Health Network to contribute Handle with Care: Do You Know How? – Using Reader’s Theatre to Surface Interprofessional Ethics, Values, and Care Relationships.
Darlene Hubley from Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital provided Exploring Patients and Families in IPE Teaching and Learning.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre and Elizabeth McLaney profiled their Interprofessional Skills Fair. Rick Penciner and Susan Woollard of North York General Hospital outlined their iPed faculty development programming. Donna Romano from Mount Sinai Hospital profiled Interprofessional Team Check-Ins on Inpatient Psychiatry. Jay Rosenfield from the Faculty of Medicine addressed IPE in the Transition to Clerkship and Residency learning activities. Dr. Gajanan Kulkarni from the Faculty of Dentistry provided Infant and Child Oral Health Promotion: A New Dentistry-Led Interprofessional Education Initiative.
Finally, Tracy Paulenko contributed information on the creation of IPE Structured Placements at Toronto Rehab, now part of the University Health Network.
Interviews were conducted with the following individuals: from Baycrest, Jennifer Reguindin and Karima Velji; from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Susan Morris, Ivan Silver, and Rani Srivastava; from the Centre for IPE, Maria Tassone, Mandy Lowe, Sylvia Langlois, Dante Morra, Ivy Oandasan, Lynne Sinclair, and Susan Wagner; from the Faculty of Dentistry, Daniel Haas; from Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, Golda Milo-Manson, Kathryn Parker, Darlene Hubley, and Crystal Chin; from the student-run IMAGINE clinic, Yick Kan Cheung, Enoch Ng, Michael Bonores, and Mahwesh Saddiqi; from the Interprofessional Healthcare Students’ Association IPHSA, Nikki Fischer, Kaspar Ng, and Elisa Simpson; from KPMG Global Centre of Excellence for Health, Mark Rochon; from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto, Catharine Whiteside, Sarita Verma, Salvatore Spadafora, and Jay Rosenfield; from Mount Sinai Hospital, Donna Romano and Virginia Fernandes; from the Faculty of Nursing at the University of Toronto, Maureen Barry, Sioban Nelson, Freida Chavez, and Judy Watt-Watson; from the Faculty of Pharmacy, Henry Mann, Andrea Cameron, and Wayne Hindmarsh; from the Faculty of Social Work, Faye Mishna and Michele Chaban; from Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Joshua Tepper; from the University Health Network, Brian Hodges, Mandy Lowe, Patti McGillicuddy, and Emily Lap Sum Musing; from St. Michael’s Hospital, Patricia Houston and Rob Fox; from the Hospital for Sick Children, Bonnie Fleming-Carroll; from St. Joseph’s Health Centre, Elizabeth McLaney; and from Women’s College Hospital, Karen Gold. We are also grateful for the interviews held with our Patient Mentors, who have chosen to remain anonymous.
INTRODUCTION
Why a Toronto Model Workbook?
IN THE SPRING OF 2012, WHEN A GROUP OF UNIVERSITY OF TORONto Centre for Interprofessional Education faculty finished up a workshop at Indiana University, they got a big surprise: the forty participants simultaneously rose to their feet and applauded. The senior academic leaders in medicine and nursing present at the workshop were clapping excitedly about the interprofessional education (IPE) training program they had just completed.
What evoked a standing ovation from an audience that day in Indiana? A small group of dedicated IPE proponents had successfully convinced the University of Toronto’s health faculties and teaching hospitals that to best serve the needs of complex patients, better promote health, improve quality, and increase patient safety, they needed to adopt a new model of education and practice—interprofessional education and care (IPE/C). The audience response was also inspired by the willingness of the Toronto team to share not only their successes but their frustrations, mistakes, wrong turns, and solutions to the vexing problems that many of those struggling to establish IPE programs share. This response also reflected the audience’s desire to respond to the problems of patient safety, job stress and caregiver burnout, and escalating health care costs that have been highlighted in countless reports over the past two decades.
In 2000, the Institute of Medicine’s landmark report To Err Is Human¹ launched the contemporary patient safety movement with its clarion call to the health care systems all over the globe to act to prevent the errors that kill over 100,000 patients a year and harm many thousands more in the United States alone. Ten years later, in 2010, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Framework for Action on Interprofessional Education and Collaborative Practice
² was released, as was the Lancet Commission report Health Professionals for a New Century: Transforming Education to Strengthen Health Systems in an Interdependent World.
³ In fact, over the past decade or more, studies have documented that, far from improving, in countries such as the United States and Canada, there has been little progress in preventing patient deaths and harm. Original calculations such as those done by the Institute of Medicine in 2000 are now considered to have been dramatic underestimations of the harm done to patients in health care institutions around the world.
Although the complexity of today’s high-tech health care systems is often used as a rationalization for the maintenance of the status quo, all these groundbreaking reports argue that team-based, or interprofessional, care is a key strategy to move our current underperforming health care systems toward a more safe, efficient, integrated, and cost-effective model. Contemporary health care institutions do indeed have a bewildering number of players. Despite this, the responsibility for ensuring that patients receive the right care at the right time from the right providers relies on a few basic principles:
Practitioners need to understand they are part of a diverse team.
Practitioners must communicate effectively with the patient and family, as well as with other members of their team.
Practitioners need to know what other team members do to limit duplication and prevent gaps in care.
Practitioners need to know how to work together to optimize care so that the patient journey from inpatient care to home care, or from primary care to the specialist clinic is experienced as seamless.
None of this can happen if there is no education in team-work from the very beginning of the health care professional’s educational journey—in a health professional school—and if that education is not continued throughout their entire career in whatever practice setting they work in. Since the traditional education of the health care professional has most often taken place in siloed programs that have little connection to one another, and traditional care tends to involve parallel play in the practice setting, it has become clear to those concerned with patient safety and health care education that a profound culture change is required to produce interprofessional care and optimal teamwork.⁴ Patient safety will improve only when we change the way health professionals relate to each other, the way they see themselves in relation to members of their own profession and to colleagues from other disciplines. This kind of change cannot be an abstract classroom exercise. It must be learned, modeled, and reinforced. There must be organizational commitment and professional willingness to go down this path of partnership between education and practice. But first there must be an education program that starts learners on this road and brings them together with mentors who are committed to new ways of delivering care and working together.
All over the world, educators and practitioners are beginning to recognize this and have embarked on efforts to set up interprofessional education and practice programs. In response to these influential calls for a new way of practice and new models of education, health professional programs across North America have begun to pilot programs that introduced collaborative learning opportunities into their curricula. The Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation has been a major supporter of this movement, seeding educational initiatives across the United States through their funding program and supporting faculty development through their fellowship program. Accreditation and certification agencies have likewise supported this shift. In 2012, the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) adopted a new accreditation standard (ED-19-A) that will come into effect in 2015 for medical schools in North America.⁵ This standard will require all medical education programs in the United States to prepare students to function collaboratively on health care teams that include other health professionals. For their part, hospitals and other health care settings are being similarly challenged to fulfill their mandate to begin to practice in a more interprofessional way and to conduct in-house education to teach clinicians and other health care workers how to do so.
This transition of IPE from nice to do
to must do
has, not surprisingly, been accompanied by an enormous upsurge in interest in models of IPE/C from the many health professional schools struggling to respond to the new mandate to include interprofessional education in their curricula, often with little guidance or support. That is why we have written this workbook.
Since 2000, the eleven health professional programs at the University of Toronto and the forty-nine teaching hospitals associated with them have developed an Interprofessional Education and Care (IPE/C) program that begins in the first year of a health professional student’s entry into his or her program, continues through various educational activities throughout their studies, and straddles the education/practice divide. Over the past decade, the university and teaching hospital partners have been engaged in the co-development and support of the IPE curriculum for learners. They are also investing in the development of faculty and the ongoing training of staff to support and model collaborative practice and team-based care. What we have come to think of as the Toronto Model
is integrated across all sites and professions and includes classroom, simulation, and practice education.
The Toronto Model has been developed through trial and error over the past decade. But how did we move from a series of abstract principles to an impressive array of concrete programs that span educational and practice institutions? This is the question Maria Tassone, the director of the Centre for Interprofessional Education, is always asked when she speaks about the activities at Toronto in North America and around the world (see Figure 2). This and other frequently asked questions (FAQs) that educators and practitioners all over the world ask Tassone and others at the university are what inspired this book and form its core. Everyone, it seems, wants to know:
How did you start?
How did you get everyone to participate?
How did you find common curriculum time?
How did you make it mandatory?
How did you find placements? How did you find faculty?
How do you continue to grow and sustain this work in education and practice?
We decided to focus this book on these practical questions. This is not to say our approach has been atheoretical or unscientific. However, we have found that presenting a lot of theory does not help people struggling to figure out what to teach, how to teach it, and how to begin to travel down the challenging and meaningful road of changing both