Title: Organisational
1(No Transcript)
2Organisational Financial Barriers to IPLD
cultural lag
- Hazel Colyer, Director of IPE
- November 2006
3Aims
- to demonstrate how IPLD has been embedded within
the organisation since 2001 - to discuss the organisational financial context
- to highlight the phenomenon of cultural lag and
evaluate its effects.
4The Professions
- Adult Nursing
- Mental Health Nursing
- Diagnostic Radiography
- Occupational Therapy
- Social Work
- Midwifery
- Child Nursing
- Operating Department Practice
- Speech Language Therapy (2007)
5The Pre-registration IPL Programme
- A pre-registration programme providing
professional education to registration for 8
groups - Single programme management structure within
Faculty of HSC - Project-managed development 2002 -2004, alongside
DH funded project. - NOW THE ONLY SHOW IN TOWN!
6Postgraduate Programmes
- PgDip/MA Social Work
- PgDip Speech Language Therapy
- Within a postgraduate framework and sharing 2
modules with all other programmes
7Structure of Pre-reg IPL
- Whole Programme approach - one programme, eight
pathways, - Two academic levels aligned Diploma and Degree
students studying together - Two intakes a year for some professions
September and February - Delivered on 2 sites Canterbury and Chatham
- Practice fully integrated accredited learning
also takes place in the workplace
8Programme Philosophy
- to produce unique professionals who are
collaborative practitioners, able to work
interprofessionally - to embrace a single curriculum framework that
includes common, interprofessional and profession
specific content - to provide an interprofessional perspective on
all aspects of the curriculum where possible - to embed practice learning in all awards
9The Interprofessional Curriculum
- Is the spine ribs of the programme
- Defined and agreed by all professions following a
content analysis of QAA Subject/Academic
Benchmarks (2001) - An integral part of all pathway curricula, NOT an
add on.
10Common IP Learning
- Skills for Professional Learning (Yr 1)
- Psychosocial Perspectives on Health Human
Interaction Communication (Yr 1) - Person Centred Care Interprofessional Practice
(Yr 1) - Evidence Based Practice (Yr 2)
- The Impact of Policy on Practice (Yr 2)
- Collaborative Practice (Yr 3)
- Independent Study (Yr 3)
11Organisational Financial Barriers
- Ostensibly none
- Director of IPE at FMT level with organisational
development role a budget - All programmes are within IP Frameworks pre-,
post-registration postgraduate
12Organisational Financial Barriers
- Faculty has a departmental structure but
programmes are cross-faculty, creating
constructive tension between Heads of Departments
programme directors ( me!) - In the process of moving towards DRAM of funding,
but at faculty level - Professions involved are (those that are)
commissioned
13Cultural Lag the battle for hearts and minds
- Enthusiasts have been joined by many of those who
were positively disposed but waiting to see - Negatively disposed and resistant remain so
- - large, complex programme is harder to engage
with
- constant change, staff are unconvinced
that IPE is permanent
- heavy workloads in HE
14Characteristics
- Use of language and behaviours that reveal
- anxiety and disaffection
- defensiveness
- anger and hostility
- retreat into comfort zone
15Evidence
- E-survey of staff attitudes to the IPL programme
during 2005/06, sent out 3 times at different
points in the year - 63/178 responses (35), representative of the
professional profile - 56/62 agreed or strongly agreed that the IPL
programme is of benefit to health social care - 46/61 agreed or strongly agreed that the IPL
Programme is of benefit to their specific area of
professional practice - BIT OF A POINTLESS EXERCISE?
16Until you read the free text responses!
- More than 90 of staff elaborated
- Much useful information about structures and
resources plus - Evidence of cultural lag
- Quotations from respondents, mainly in
agree/strongly agree categories. - Demonstrate beliefs and opinions about self and
others
17Cultural lag?(benefit health social care)
- The IPL programme will only be successful if
those involved in the provision of education also
adopt the underlying philosophies of IPL - Students I come into contact with are deeply
unimpressed and do not see the benefits of
forced integration - Why should the HSC professions fall into line
with an economic/rational model that offers very
limited evidence of efficacy?
18Cultural lag?(benefit health social care)
- Benefit to health and social care could just as
easily arise from individual professions pursuing
profession-specific programmes - There isnt a box that says not sure
- Have not been persuaded so far
- It is a fallacy that people who learn together
will work together
19Cultural lag?(benefit specific prof practice)
- There still seems to be quite a lot of staff who
are firmly ensconced in their professional silos - Some non-nurse academics say very disparaging
things about student nurses e.g. they are not as
intelligent as AHPs. - We should not try too hard to force IPL where
it genuinely does not fit
20Cultural lag?(additional comments)
- Many staff members do not really subscribe to the
ethos of IPL - It feels as though the pathway that shouts
loudest is accommodated in procedures - IPL requires a change in culture in the practice
setting (and in the university to some extent) - I have been concerned about elements of
disrespectfulness from colleagues
21Cultural lag?(additional comments)
- Not everyone is committed to interprofessional
training - We demonstrate some of the same territorial
behaviour that is seen in practice as
detrimental to the patient. Perhaps our behaviour
is detrimental to the student - The mantra of IPL takes precedence over specific
parts of the programme - Staff in the faculty need to understand it (IPL)
I know they dont all.
22Some tentative conclusions
- Even when organisational and financial barriers
are minimised it is hard to implement IPL
programmes successfully - Professional identity is embedded in the psyche
of the groups and makes inter-group relations
problematic. Loyalty to ones own group seems
paramount - The psycho-social transition to belonging in the
new world of IPLD needs to be recognised and
accounted for