The road to collaboration: The transformative effects of interprofessional education on students' interprofessional attitudes and readiness, socialisation and valuing in medical and nursing students

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Wydane w:Nurse Education in Practice vol. 82 (Jan 2025), p. 104230
1. autor: Tanrıverdi, Esra Çınar
Kolejni autorzy: Akpınar, Reva Balcı, Yurttaş, Afife, Çiftçi, Bahar
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Elsevier Limited
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024 7 |a 10.1016/j.nepr.2024.104230  |2 doi 
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045 2 |b d20250101  |b d20250131 
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100 1 |a Tanrıverdi, Esra Çınar  |u Department of Medical Education, Ataturk University, Erzurum 25000, Turkey 
245 1 |a The road to collaboration: The transformative effects of interprofessional education on students' interprofessional attitudes and readiness, socialisation and valuing in medical and nursing students 
260 |b Elsevier Limited  |c Jan 2025 
513 |a Journal Article 
520 3 |a Aim This study aims to evaluate the impact of interprofessional education on first-year medical and nursing students' attitudes, readiness to learn and interprofessional socialization using a randomized controlled trial. Background Interprofessional collaboration is crucial in healthcare to enhance patient safety and outcomes. Interprofessional education (IPE) promotes teamwork, communication and understanding of professional roles among healthcare professionals. Design The study was conducted using a randomized controlled pretest-posttest experimental design. Methods The randomized controlled trial was conducted from January to June 2024 at Atatürk University’s Faculties of Medicine and Nursing. The sample consisted of 120 first-year students, randomly assigned to experimental and control groups. Data were collected using the "Sociodemographic Information Form,” "Interprofessional Attitude Scale," "Interprofessional Learning Readiness Scale," and "Interprofessional Socialisation and Valuing Scale." The experimental group participated in 16 hours of interprofessional education over four weeks, including simulated patient applications, role-play and group work. The control group continued with standard education without interprofessional training. Results Interprofessional education resulted in significant improvement in students' interprofessional attitudes, particularly among nursing students, whose scores changed positively compared with the control group. Additionally, interprofessional socialization and valuing levels improved significantly in the experimental group. However, no substantial change was observed in the readiness for interprofessional learning in the experimental or control groups. Conclusions Interprofessional education had a positive impact on the attitudes and socialization of medical and nursing students, highlighting the importance of incorporating IPE into healthcare curricula to foster collaboration and improve patient care. 
610 4 |a World Health Organization 
651 4 |a Turkey 
653 |a Students 
653 |a Collaboration 
653 |a Communication 
653 |a Patients 
653 |a Questionnaires 
653 |a University faculty 
653 |a Teamwork 
653 |a Likert scale 
653 |a Medical education 
653 |a Role playing 
653 |a Occupational roles 
653 |a Simulation 
653 |a Data integrity 
653 |a Learning 
653 |a Cooperation 
653 |a Interagency collaboration 
653 |a Workplace control 
653 |a Socialization 
653 |a Professionals 
653 |a Curricula 
653 |a Sociodemographics 
653 |a Attitude measures 
653 |a Personal information 
653 |a Nursing education 
653 |a Control groups 
653 |a Group work 
653 |a Medical personnel 
653 |a Nursing 
653 |a Clinical trials 
653 |a Professional ethics 
653 |a Interdisciplinary education 
653 |a Professions 
653 |a Skills 
653 |a Health care 
653 |a Academic readiness 
653 |a Cronbach's alpha 
653 |a Data collection 
653 |a Interprofessional education 
653 |a Interdisciplinary aspects 
653 |a Attitudes 
653 |a Medical students 
653 |a Roles 
653 |a Student attitudes 
653 |a Medical schools 
653 |a Nurses 
653 |a Research design 
653 |a Cooperative learning 
653 |a Education 
653 |a Measures 
653 |a Health services 
653 |a Medicine 
653 |a Learning Activities 
653 |a Pretesting 
653 |a College Faculty 
653 |a Likert Scales 
653 |a Health Personnel 
653 |a Job Satisfaction 
653 |a Professional Education 
653 |a National Standards 
653 |a Positive Attitudes 
653 |a Integrated Curriculum 
653 |a Outcomes of Treatment 
653 |a Pretests Posttests 
653 |a Nursing Students 
653 |a Communication Skills 
653 |a Educational Change 
653 |a Computer Mediated Communication 
653 |a Ethics 
653 |a Program Implementation 
653 |a Beliefs 
653 |a Learning Readiness 
700 1 |a Akpınar, Reva Balcı  |u Department of Fundamentals of Nursing, Ataturk University, Erzurum 25000, Turkey 
700 1 |a Yurttaş, Afife  |u Department of Fundamentals of Nursing, Ataturk University, Erzurum 25000, Turkey 
700 1 |a Çiftçi, Bahar  |u Department of Fundamentals of Nursing, Ataturk University, Erzurum 25000, Turkey 
773 0 |t Nurse Education in Practice  |g vol. 82 (Jan 2025), p. 104230 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t Sociology Database 
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