1st Edition

Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice A Workbook for Health Professionals

    Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice: A Workbook for Health Professionals promotes active, team learning of interprofessional evidence-based practice (EBP). This book is distinctive in that it departs from the tradition of evidence-based practice occurring from a single disciplinary perspective.  Interprofessional evidence-based practice is described in terms of a dynamic team process that blends the patient’s preferences and values, the expertise of practitioners from multiple disciplines, and incorporates multidisciplinary evidence. Teams learn to use the nine phases in the interprofessional process to challenge current disciplinary paradigms and biases to create an integrated approach to patient care, healthcare delivery, or population health.
     
    Drs. Penelope Moyers and Patricia Finch Guthrie focus on developing and fostering collaboration between academic institutions and healthcare organizations so that students and faculty participate on interprofessional teams with mentors and staff from a healthcare organization. Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice: A Workbook for Health Professionals also addresses the communication and cross-organizational factors important for supporting the work of the team. Common team and mentoring issues encountered in EBP are clearly articulated, along with the iterative problem-solving approaches necessary to mitigate temporary “stumbling blocks.”
     
    The book provides detail for developing and launching an Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice program that goes beyond the evidence process to include implementation science to support practice change. Approaches for developing partnerships for supporting this type of program between universities and health care institutions are contained within, including sample partnership agreements and resource-sharing strategies.
     
    Inside Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice: A Workbook for Health Professionals, each chapter includes performance objectives, key words, checklists, and materials and resources that an interprofessional team can use. PowerPoint lectures, mentor newsletters, forms, tools, and other resources are included on a companion website to guide team learning about key EBP topics, as well as to support the program coordinators and team mentors in their work with the interprofessional teams.
     
    Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice: A Workbook for Health Professionals is the go-to resource for those who want to engage in interprofessional evidence-based practice, and for leaders who want to develop and implement an interprofessional evidence-based practice program.

    Dedication

    Acknowledgments

    About the Authors

    Contributing Authors

    Foreword by Mary Fran Tracy, PhD, RN, APRN, CNS, FAANIntroduction

    Section I Preparation for an Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice Program

    Chapter 1 Getting StartedPenelope A. Moyers, EdD, OT/L, FAOTA

    Chapter 2 Establishing

    Partnerships and Organizational ReadinessPatricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN

    Chapter 3 Developing Deliberative and Reflective MentoringPenelope A. Moyers, EdD, OT/L, FAOTA and Patricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN

    Chapter 4 Forming Interprofessional Teams and Clarifying RolesJanet Benz, DNP, RN and Patricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN

    Chapter 5 Facilitating Effective Interprofessional Team CommunicationTherese Whalen Dlugosch, MA, OTR/L and Penelope A. Moyers, EdD, OT/L, FAOTA

    Section II Immersion Into the Evidence

    Chapter 6 Orienting the Interprofessional Team and Addressing Program LogisticsSue E. Sendelbach, PhD, APRN CNS, FAHA, FAAN and Patricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN

    Chapter 7 Figuring Out the Problem and Getting FocusedJohn D. Fleming, EdD, OTR/L

    Chapter 8 Settling Into the Rhythm of the Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice ProcessJohn D. Fleming, EdD, OTR/L

    Chapter 9 Transitioning Into Interprofessional Evidence-Based PractitionersVaLinda I. Pearson, PhD, RN, CRRN and Patricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN

    Section III Completion and Dissemination of the Interprofessional Evidence-Based Project

    Chapter 10 Designing the Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice ProjectDavid D. Chapman, PhD, PT/L and Vicky J. Larson, PhD, RN, CNE

    Chapter 11 Linking the Design to the Ethics of Evidence-Based Practice and Grant FundingDavid D. Chapman, PhD, PT,/L; Vicky J. Larson, PhD, RN, CNE; and Patricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN

    Chapter 12 Planning and Implementing the Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice ProjectPatricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN

    Chapter 13 Evaluating and Analyzing the Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice ProjectMark Blegen, PhD, FACSM and Penelope A. Moyers, EdD, OT/L, FAOTA

    Chapter 14 Wrapping Up the Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice ProjectPenelope A. Moyers, EdD, OT/L, FAOTA

    Chapter 15 Disseminating the Interprofessional Evidence-Based Practice ProjectSusan M. Hageness, DNP, RN, AHN-BC, CNE and Patricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN Appendix A: Material on WebsiteFinancial Disclosures

    Index

    Biography

    Penelope A. Moyers, EdD, OT/L, FAOTA, more often called "Penny," is the Dean of the Henrietta Schmoll School of Health and the Graduate College at St. Catherine University in St. Paul, Minnesota, and is a Professor of Occupational Therapy. The School of Health has over 35 programs in a variety of health professions and has provided Dr. Moyers an opportunity to observe how different professions learn and work together. She was the Department Chair for Occupational Therapy at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and was a Dean of the School of Occupational Therapy at the University of Indianapolis in Indiana. Penny is a Fellow and a past president of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA), received the association’s Award of Merit, and is board certified by AOTA in Mental Health.

    Penny received her BS degree in occupational therapy from the University of Missouri in Columbia and has over 30 years of experience in the field. She went on to the University of Louisville in Kentucky, where she received an MS degree in community development. Her EdD is from Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana, in adult education. Her clinical expertise is in the areas of mental health, substance use disorders, HIV/AIDS, and upper extremity rehabilitation. She has published extensively on the occupational therapy interventions for persons with substance use disorders and those with co-occurring disorders. She also has expertise in the continuing competence of health care professionals and has authored many articles and book chapters on this topic.

    In her role as Dean at St. Catherine University, she co-founded the Interprofessional Clinical Scholar Program with North Memorial Medical Center in Robbinsdale, Minnesota and then was invited to work with Abbott Northwestern Hospital, Minneapolis, Minnesota in their existing Evidence-Based Practice Fellows Program. Her desire was to bring groups of faculty, students, and staff together from multiple disciplines to solve problems in practice in a manner that places the patient and family at the center while considering the talents, expertise, and knowledge of professionals from multiple health care professions.
     
    Patricia L. Finch-Guthrie, PhD, RN is the Director of Interprofessional Education, Practice and Research in the Henrietta Schmoll School of Health and is Assistant Professor in the Department of Nutrition and Exercise Science at St. Catherine University. In her role, Patricia has developed and taught interprofessional courses for baccalaureate students from multiple disciplines on teamwork, team roles and responsibilities, health care teams and quality, and research and evidence-based practice. Patricia has practiced as a Clinical Nurse Specialist in Gerontology and served as the Director of Education and Nursing Research at North Memorial Medical Center in Robbinsdale, Minnesota, overseeing many interprofessional evidence-based practice initiatives. Patricia co-founded the Interprofessional Clinical Scholar Program at North Memorial Medical Center and is now working with Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis, Minnesota as part of their Evidence-Based Practice Fellows Program, bringing an interprofessional focus to the program.

    Patricia received her BSN from the University of Iowa in Iowa City, a MS degree in nursing from the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis as a Clinical Nurse Specialist, and a PhD in nursing with a minor in gerontology from the University of Minnesota. Patricia has practiced as a bedside nurse in acute care for 14 years and in nursing administration for 21 years, with clinical and practice expertise in cardiovascular nursing care, the acute care of older adults, and advanced nursing practice. Patricia has published about the care of older adults regarding assessment, care planning, prevention of delirium, and decreasing pressure ulcer rates in critical care, and has served as a dissertation chair for PhD nursing students and as an advisor for master’s level nursing projects as an educator.
     

    “This is a remarkable resource for interprofessional, evidence-based practice with both theoretical and practical resources. The significance of training health professionals to engage in interprofessional collaboration cannot be overlooked in this changing healthcare arena.”

    - Yolanda Griffiths, OTD, OTR/L, FAOTA, College of Saint Mary, Doody’s Review Service