Successful implementation of new extended practice roles which transcend conventional boundaries of practice entails strong collaboration with other healthcare providers. This study describes interprofessional collaborative behaviour perceived by advanced clinician practitioner in arthritis care (ACPAC) graduates at 1 year beyond training, and relevant stakeholders, across urban, community and remote clinical settings in Canada. A mixed-method approach involved a quantitative (survey) and qualitative (focus group/interview) evaluation issued across a 4-month period. ACPAC graduates work across heterogeneous settings and are on teams of diverse size and composition. Seventy per cent perceived their team as actively working in an interprofessional care model. Mean scores on the Bruyère Clinical Team Self-Assessment on Interprofessional Practice subjective subscales were high (range: 3.66-4.26, scale: 1-5 = better perception of team's interprofessional practice), whereas the objective scale was lower (mean: 4.6, scale: 0-9 = more interprofessional team practices). Data from focus groups (ACPAC graduates) and interviews (stakeholders) provided further illumination of these results at individual, group and system levels. Issues relating to ACPAC graduate role recognition, as well as their deployment, integration and institutional support, including access to medical directives, limitation of scope of practice, remuneration conflicts and tenuous funding arrangements were barriers perceived to affect role implementation and interprofessional working. This study offers the opportunity to reflect on newly introduced roles for health professionals with expectations of collaboration that will challenge traditional healthcare delivery.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/13561820.2013.783559 | DOI Listing |
Open Access Rheumatol
February 2017
The Arthritis Society (Ontario Division), Toronto, ON, Canada.
Objective: Telemedicine-based approaches to health care service delivery improve access to care. It was recognized that adults with inflammatory arthritis (IA) living in remote areas had limited access to patient education and could benefit from the 1-day Prescription for Education (RxEd) program. The program was delivered by extended role practitioners with advanced training in arthritis care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpen Access Rheumatol
August 2015
Division of Rheumatology, Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Objective: To assess patient satisfaction with the arthritis care services provided by graduates of the Advanced Clinician Practitioner in Arthritis Care (ACPAC) program.
Materials And Methods: This was a cross-sectional evaluation using a self-report questionnaire for data collection. Participants completed the Patient-Doctor Interaction Scale, modified to capture patient-practitioner interactions.
Healthc Policy
May 2013
Physiotherapist Practitioner, Toronto Western Hospital, Lecturer, Department of Physical Therapy, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON.
Background: The Advanced Clinician Practitioner in Arthritis Care (ACPAC) program was developed in 2005 to prepare experienced physical and occupational therapists to function as extended role practitioners (ERPs) within models of arthritis care across Ontario, Canada.
Purpose: To examine the system-level integration and clinical utilization of the ACPAC program-trained ERP.
Method: A longitudinal survey was administered to all ACPAC graduates over a two-year period (n=30).
J Interprof Care
September 2013
Department of Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON M5B 1W8, Canada.
Successful implementation of new extended practice roles which transcend conventional boundaries of practice entails strong collaboration with other healthcare providers. This study describes interprofessional collaborative behaviour perceived by advanced clinician practitioner in arthritis care (ACPAC) graduates at 1 year beyond training, and relevant stakeholders, across urban, community and remote clinical settings in Canada. A mixed-method approach involved a quantitative (survey) and qualitative (focus group/interview) evaluation issued across a 4-month period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysiother Can
April 2016
Katie Lundon, BScPT, MSc, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto; ACPAC Program Coordinator, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario.
Purpose: The Advanced Clinician Practitioner in Arthritis Care (ACPAC) Program was developed to train experienced physical and occupational therapists within extended practice roles with the aim of facilitating optimal, timely, and appropriate delivery of health care to patients with arthritis. This paper presents (1) the development of the ACPAC Program and (2) performance across the programme, as well as early quantitative and qualitative changes in clinical practice roles for the 2006 through 2008 cohorts of ACPAC Program graduates (n=19).
Methods: Measurement of change in skills and knowledge involved standardized baseline and end-of-programme examinations as well as self-evaluation of a number of areas of clinical competence.
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