2013
DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-500
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How health professionals conceive and construct interprofessional practice in rural settings: a qualitative study

Abstract: BackgroundAlthough interprofessional practice (IPP) offers the potential to enhance rural health services and provide support to rural clinicians, IPP may itself be problematic due to workforce limitations and service fragmentation. Differing socioeconomic and geographic characteristics of rural communities means that the way that IPP occurs in rural contexts will necessarily differ from that occurring in metropolitan contexts. The aim of this study was to investigate the factors contributing to effective IPP … Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…8 In rural Australia with its relative workforce shortage, sustainable, practice-based IPL can be particularly challenging. 9 In this paper, we describe a model of IPL -the Health 'Hubs and Spokes' (HHS) Project -which was based in rural towns and organised around locally-relevant priorities. HHS involved small teams of students from different disciplines, working together on a project identified by the host organisation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…8 In rural Australia with its relative workforce shortage, sustainable, practice-based IPL can be particularly challenging. 9 In this paper, we describe a model of IPL -the Health 'Hubs and Spokes' (HHS) Project -which was based in rural towns and organised around locally-relevant priorities. HHS involved small teams of students from different disciplines, working together on a project identified by the host organisation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As may have been expected, CPs talked at length and in detail about how they wished to promote rural medicine to students with the hope that they would base their future practice in such locations. They also wished to educate students about the distinctive features of rural medicine(Theme 4) such as the importance of generalism and interprofessionalism, topics which align well with studies about rural practice (Hogenbirk et al, 2004;Pashen et al, 2007;Mariolis et al, 2008;Parker et al, 2013;Donato, 2015). Our major finding, however, was the rather divergent views of the participant groups regarding a range of topics falling under broad thematic areas such as social accountability (Theme 1) and living in place (Theme 5).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…27 It is important to tackle some organizational barriers, including the burden of daily practice, the isolated practice of each health professional, and a hierarchical culture that limits communication within the healthcare team and with other levels, as has been reported in similar environments. 28 Breaking these barriers requires the incorporation of actions to foster an atmosphere of respect and collaboration, build the commitment of all participants, and strengthen shared experiences for the benefit of the population they serve, as well as to achieve job satisfaction. In this regard, the pertinence of incentives to acknowledge the performance of the healthcare staff in order to promote dignified, professional working conditions is still under debate and deserves further exploration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%