A Power Experience: A Phenomenological Study of Interprofessional Education.

J Prof Nurs

Assistant Professor, Department of Nrusing, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario, L2S 3A1. Electronic address:

Published: August 2017

The purpose of this supplementary analysis of a hermeneutic phenomenological study of the experience of interprofessional collaboration for nursing and medical students was to explore the experience of power that was threaded throughout the original study. Seventeen students participated in guided, face-to-face conversations in the original study (Prentice, Engel, Taplay, & Stobbe, 2014). Through the processes of deductive analysis and inductive reasoning, 2 themes of power emerged from these research conversations: (a) complicated knowledge is power and (b) the power and silence of intimidation. These themes suggest that power and power differentials are significant factors in student interactions in interprofessional learning and have the potential to adversely affect these interactions. Students' perceptions of power need to be taken into account and addressed when planning and implementing interprofessional education events.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.profnurs.2016.08.012DOI Listing

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