INNOVATING AND IMPLEMENTING INTERPROFESSIONAL EDUCATION
to Improve the Quadruple Aims of Health
MICHIGAN CENTER FOR INTERPROFESSIONAL EDUCATION
Why do great teams matter?
This question is at the center of our work at the Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education (C-IPE). I find myself thinking about the answer every day, and have realized this simple question actually has a simple answer. Great teams matter because great teams can improve health. Period.
Many saw this on display at Health Professions Education Day through the story of a patient who had a stroke and the strides he’d made through collaborative teamwork with the HEART program at UM-Flint. I was touched by their story, but unaware of how much it would affect me personally.
Ten days later, I suffered a stroke of my own.
I felt panic, anxiety, anger and fear as I was taken to the hospital emergency room and later admitted to the University of Michigan stroke unit and rehabilitation hospital. But through this personal journey, my emotions changed as I met the 125 members of my different care teams, each of whom treated me with respect, courtesy and love. I felt included in all decisions and was a true partner on their teams. Together, they came from 24 different professions and each contributed immensely to the care I received. I was so moved and inspired by my experience that I kept track of each and every one of their names. I want to remember and recognize every one of them.
The care and love I felt from my teams may be the most inspiring part of this chapter of my life. And it reflects what I experience from the teams who work on this mission at C-IPE. Everyone is so dedicated and caring in the work they do to advance interprofessional teamwork to improve health.
Throughout this report, you will read about five interconnected strategies that support a single goal: innovating and implementing IPE at U-M to improve the Quadruple Aims of Health. Collaboration and teamwork are at the heart of this goal, and everything we do. I know that by training our students to work together from day one with the goal of improving health, we are setting them up for success.
I now deeply and personally understand the potential impact of our mission.
With gratitude for all of our teams and for your interest,
Rajesh S. Mangrulkar, M.D. Director, Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education (C-IPE)COLLABORATING U-M SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
School of Dentistry
College of Education, Health & Human Services (UM-Dearborn)
College of Health Sciences (UM-Flint)
School of Kinesiology
Medical School
School of Nursing
School of Nursing (UM-Flint)
College of Pharmacy
School of Public Health
School of Social Work
MISSION
Innovating and transforming interprofessional education, collaborative practice and research to achieve the Quadruple Aims of Health.
VISION
The University of Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education and its partners bring faculty, staff and students together to design and implement innovative interprofessional education experiences in didactic and experiential settings so that learners are effective team members and can lead the development of new models of collaboration. The Center partners with university and community units in developing and educating learners in these new models of interprofessional collaboration in the practice and community settings. Collectively, we strive to measure the impact of IPE on learning, practice and the Quadruple Aims of Health.
OUR PARTNERS
We are grateful for our collaborating partners who help support our mission.
University of Michigan
Center for Academic Innovation (CAI)
Center for Educational Outreach (CEO)
Center for Research on Learning and Teaching (CRLT)
Department of Learning Health Sciences (DLHS)
Edward Ginsberg Center for Community Service and Learning
Health Equity. Action. Research. Teaching. (HEART) at UM-Flint
Information and Technology Services (ITS)
Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation (IHPI)
Taubman Health Sciences Library (THSL)
University of Michigan Student-Run Free Clinic (UMSRFC)
Michigan Medicine
Office for Health Equity and Inclusion (OHEI)
Office of Patient Experience (OPE)
Health Information and Technology Services (HITS)
Quality Department
Research. Innovation. Scholarship. Education. (RISE)
University of Michigan Medical Group (UMMG)
Wellness Office
Community
Cranbrook Tower
Detroit Public Schools
Community District
Hamilton Community Health Network
Parkway Meadows
National and International
“I really, truly believe that the University of Michigan is the right place to move forward this incredibly important initiative. It has an incredible history and an incredible group of deans that are leading the different schools that can really make us a world leader in interprofessional education.”
~ U-M President Santa J. Ono, Ph.D., opening remarks at 2023 Health Professions Education Day
American Interprofessional Health Collaborative (AIHC)
Big Ten IPE Academic Alliance
Canadian Interprofessional Health Collaborative (CIHC)
Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)
The Marteney Group
National Academies of Practice (NAP)
National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education
University of Toronto Centre for Advancing Collaborative Healthcare & Education (CACHE)
STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE
(SAC)
SAC works collaboratively with C-IPE to ensure students are part of the driving force towards the future of interprofessional education and collaborative care at the University of Michigan. Co-chairs act as liaisons between health science students, health science school faculty and leaders, and C-IPE.
Highlights from this past year include:
• SAC co-chair, Nikki Trupiano, received the AIHC Student Award for Interprofessional Collaborative Practice, the highest national IPE award for a student.
• Participating on the Health Professions Education (HPE) Day planning committee and organizing a student-led panel featuring UM-Flint’s HEART program.
• Developing the Longitudinal Interprofessional Family-Based Experience (LIFE) offering and collaborating on the revamping of the Introduction to IPE module.
• Working with the Interprofessional Community Health Collaborative and organizing IPE events for students.
• Presenting scholarly work at conferences and events including Nexus, Collaborating Across Borders and HPE Day.
• Organizing an in-person trivia social for members of Team-Based Clinical Decision Making to reinforce relationships between students from multiple disciplines.
• Published Trupiano N, Lau T, Gururaj A Restructuring interprofessional education: a student-driven strategic plan. Acad Med. 2022;97(8):1106-1107.
AIMS OF HEALTH
STRATEGY 1: THE CORE CURRICULUM
GOAL:
Strategically review, enhance and scale the IPE “Core” for students at the University of Michigan.
WHY:
To prepare a broad base of students with consistent, foundational knowledge of and attitudes toward IPE so they can engage effectively in interprofessional learning and practice in experiential settings.
The Core Curriculum: By the Numbers
LIFE: 237 students 25 faculty
students
41 faculty
28 patient advisors
Teams and Teamwork:
884 students
14 faculty
Team-Based Clinical Decision Making:
518 students
10 faculty
Partner Highlight: Center for Research on Learning and Teaching (CRLT)
C-IPE partners with CRLT to utilize their expertise in teaching and learning to support the work being done as part of the core curriculum, intentional measurement and research, and educator development strategy areas.
“This experience taught me to appreciate working in interprofessional teams and groups with diverse backgrounds and perspectives.”
~ Blake Hardin, medical student and participant in LIFE
BUILDING MOMENTUM
Longitudinal Interprofessional Family-Based Experience (LIFE)
In partnership with the Office of Patient Experience, LIFE partners interprofessional teams of students with a patient to support students in learning about the experiences and challenges that patients face when navigating the healthcare system. Students also learn from and collaborate with students across the health sciences. For the first time in its three years, LIFE was embedded into health professional programs. It was added to the Bachelor of Science in Nursing and the Doctor of Physical Therapy programs, leading to a final enrollment of 237 students. Next year, the team is hoping to double participation by embedding it into the curriculum for even more health professional students. Additionally, the online modality — a course innovation arising out of the pandemic — has helped reduce barriers to participation and offers greater diversity of perspectives than would be available by meeting in person.
Awards for IPE Innovation and Excellence
For the fifth year, C-IPE recognized those who have made outstanding contributions in advancing interprofessional education and practice with the Awards for IPE Innovation and Excellence. This year’s recipients included both an individual and team honoree.
• Nikki Trupiano, Student Award for IPE Innovation and Excellence
This award encompasses the breadth and depth of IPE work that Trupiano (Medical School) participated in while a student at U-M. Notable contributions included helping create and implement LIFE, working with staff and faculty on two IPE introductory modules, and participating in numerous conferences, presentations, posters and publications.
• Health and Disabilities Team, Faculty/Staff Award for IPE Innovation and Excellence
This team designed and created a new set of innovative and experiential interprofessional (IP) activities within the elective course Health and Disabilities, with the goal of creating an IP healthcare workforce capable of providing a person-centered approach to patients with disabilities. Team members included: Steven Erickson (College of Pharmacy), Jillian Woodworth (College of Health Sciences, UM-Flint), Laura Smith (College of Health Sciences, UM-Flint) and Jeanne Andreoli (Center for Research on Learning and Teaching).
STRATEGY 2: EXPERIENTIAL INNOVATION
GOAL:
Launch a suite of experiential IPE pilots that can scale and, as a whole, will address key needs for learning in the practice and community setting for students of the health professional schools and colleges.
WHY:
To prepare learners to be “team-ready,” which requires education that moves from theory to practice. Students must be able to function effectively in collaborative teams to serve patients and populations.
“These events allow students to meet people in the communities where they live, which helps them to understand how social determinants of health act as facilitators and barriers to good health.”
~ Sarah Vordenberg, Pharm.D., M.P.H., clinical associate professor of pharmacy
Partner Highlight: Edward Ginsberg Center for Community Service and Learning
C-IPE collaborated with the Ginsberg Center to support the Interprofessional Community Health Collaborative, a team dedicated to expanding interprofessional education in community health settings.
Experiential Innovations: By the Numbers
11 students
TEAMS
5 preceptors
15 students
22 students
34 community residents
3 faculty 4 faculty
BUILDING MOMENTUM
Interprofessional Community Health Collaborative (ICHC)
The ICHC is dedicated to expanding IPE to community health settings to mutually benefit both students and the local community. Their first event at Cranbrook Tower included students from medicine, pharmacy and nursing, who worked together to educate residents about nutrition, exercise and healthy blood pressure. The events are intentionally designed to be flexible so that participants from other disciplines can be included in the future. The team plans to expand to more community sites over the next year, including an upcoming event with residents of Parkway Meadows.
Teams Engaging to Acquire Meaningful Skills (TEAMS)
Adapted from the Flexible Activities created by the Centre for Advancing Collaborative Healthcare & Education (CACHE) at the University of Toronto, TEAMS activities provide experiential learning opportunities for students in early, mid and advanced learning stages following a scaffolded learning continuum of 1) Observe, 2) Analyze and 3) Collaborate. The School of Nursing integrated the first two TEAMS activities into their winter 2023 B.S.N. rotations, with more programs hoping to integrate them moving into 2023-24.
Supporting the Design of Experiential IPE
This year, C-IPE updated the criteria for experiential interactions to support the design of experiential IPE and to reduce the barriers to capturing IPE that is happening in real time. To be considered “experiential,” participants must include a balanced mix of individuals (students, practitioners and faculty) from two or more disciplines who are engaged in learning about, from and with each other. Content should include intentional teaching of one or more of the five IPE core competencies with a specific IPE learning focus or discussion. The activities may include a variety of interaction types, determined by learning objectives and learner competencies.
STRATEGY 3: INTENTIONAL MEASUREMENT & RESEARCH
GOAL:
Implement a portfolio of valid assessment tools in our IPE experiences that measure outcomes reliably and consistently.
WHY:
Learners need to be given information from measurements that will help them develop into effective real-world teammates in the healthcare practice and community settings.
• We need to generate evidence that IPE impacts learning, practice and health outcomes (aligned with the Quadruple Aims of Health).
• The scholarship should inform how IPE is implemented both at U-M and nationally.
Scholarship: By the Numbers
CAB VIII: 9 presentations
Nexus Summit 2022: 19 presentations
Peerreviewed publications: 49
• Led member-wide leadership sessions on experiential IPE at American Interprofessional Health Collaborative (AIHC).
• Led seminar on “Leading Change in IPE” at National Academies of Practice (NAP).
• Presented poster on “Identifying Opportunities to Enhance Team-Based Care with Systems Data” at Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI).
Partner Highlight: Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation (IHPI)
C-IPE is building a partnership with IHPI to develop a program that measures the impact of IPE and team-based care on the Quadruple Aims of Health, bringing together researchers, clinicians and educators on this mission.
BUILDING MOMENTUM
Conference Highlights
University of Michigan faculty, staff and students shared their presentations and research with national and international audiences.
Nexus Summit 2022 sample presentations:
• Student-led seminar series geared toward increasing interprofessional education.
• Interprofessional pharmacy experiences in dental clinics.
• Developing awareness of the social determinants of health by engaging early health professions students with real patients.
CAB VIII sample presentations:
• Data exploring relationships between workforce well-being, patient experience and teamwork.
• Advancing anti-racism through IPE practices.
• Innovations in IPE faculty recruitment, engagement and retention.
Peer-Reviewed Publications from U-M Faculty, Staff and Students
The following is a sample of publications from the past year:
• Hollenbeck J, Smith L, Muralidhar S. Exploring interprofessional roles and responsibilities of physical therapists and radiation therapists during the care of patients with breast cancer using IPE. Journal of Interprofessional Education & Practice. 2023 Sep 1;32:100640.
• Pandian V, Atkins JH, Freeman-Sanderson A, Prush N, Feller-Kopman DJ, McGrath BA, Brenner MJ. Improving airway management and tracheostomy care through interprofessional collaboration: aligning timing, technique and teamwork. J Thorac Dis. 2023 May 30;15(5):2363-2370.
• Yorke AM, Smith LM, Mostrom E The impact of COVID-19 on interprofessional collaborative
practice through the lens of acute care physical therapists: a case series. J Acute Care Phys Ther. 2023 Apr;14(2):93-103.
• Allen BB, Schiller JH, Roberts SJ, Allen SG, Morgan HK, Malone A. Collaboration in interprofessional teams: A needs assessment of factors that impact new resident physicians [published online ahead of print, 2022 Jul 26]. J Interprof Care. 2022;1-8.
• Waldron-Perrine B, Mudar R, Mashima P, Seagly K, et al. Interprofessional collaboration and communication to facilitate implementation of cognitive rehabilitation in persons with brain injury. J Interprof Care 2022;36(4):529-537.
For a more thorough list of publications, please visit interprofessional.umich.edu
STRATEGY 4: EDUCATOR DEVELOPMENT
GOAL:
Implement a development and training program drawn from the identified needs for faculty and practitioner IPE educators in both teaching and assessment.
WHY:
We must develop a community of collaborative practitioners, educators and scholars to prepare future healthcare providers to be team ready.
• The education and assessment of team-based behaviors in students from multiple disciplines raises new challenges for educators.
“I think emphasizing teambased care is important. In the Quality Department, we want to model respect for interdisciplinary expertise. I recognize that physicians do not carry expertise for all aspects of a patient’s care, and we care for patients in teams. One of the things we can do as leaders is help support the voices of those who are advocating for the patients or may have expertise for a patient. This could be a nurse, medical assistant, pharmacist or a family member.”
~ Brook Watts, M.D., M.S., chief quality officer in Michigan Medicine’s Quality Department
• An educated and trained IPE community is required to sustain and expand IPE across the university.
Partner Highlights: Office of Patient Experience (OPE)
C-IPE partners with OPE to support educator development, core curriculum and experiential innovation. Highlights this year include analyzing patient data to provide insight on enhancing team-based care and providing access to patient advisors to work with interprofessional teams of students participating in the LIFE course.
Wellness Office
C-IPE is partnering with the Wellness Office to analyze workforce data as it relates to teamwork, which will be used to implement team-based interventions.
Educator Development: By the Numbers
HPE Day registered attendees: 214
HPE Day poster presentations: 49
HPE Day IP facilitation workshop: 13
BOOST! workshop: 24
The Marteney Group leadership training: 15
BUILDING MOMENTUM
Health Professions Education (HPE) Day 2023
The 8th annual HPE Day brought faculty, staff and student attendees from all three U-M campuses together for a day that highlighted interprofessional education, collaborative care and the scholarship of learning and teaching. Notable presentations included opening remarks from U-M President Santa J. Ono, a moving student-led panel featuring participants from UM-Flint’s HEART program and lightning talks and poster displays. After the formal event, a small group participated in an IP facilitation workshop, adding a skill-building component to the day for the first time.
Giving a BOOST! to Team-Based Collaborative Care
C-IPE partnered with facilitators from CACHE at the University of Toronto to participate in the virtual BOOST! workshop (Building Optimal Outcomes from Successful Teamwork). Those involved in educator development and experiential innovation participated in this workshop that focused on how to optimize teamwork in the clinical space. The team is now planning to repackage this information for broader implementation at Michigan Medicine.
Enhancing Team-Based Care with Systems Data
C-IPE dedicated time and energy to exploring ways in which we could add value to the clinical enterprise. We partnered with Michigan Medicine’s Office of Patient Experience and the Wellness Office to understand what types of team-based interventions could have the greatest impact on both patient and healthcare professional experiences.
Leadership Team Coaching with The Marteney Group
The C-IPE Leadership Team, made up of the co-chairs of all the committees and workgroups, participated in leadership development and professional coaching, facilitated by The Marteney Group. Leadership team members will utilize the skills they’ve developed as leaders of each strategic workgroup.
STRATEGY 5: SYSTEMS-BASED PROBLEM SOLVING
GOAL:
Establish a workgroup that will address the most pressing challenges to our Goal and Strategies.
WHY:
Progress on strategic initiatives depends on addressing systemic, structural and organizational challenges to interdisciplinary teaching and learning. Maturation of the Center requires us to directly address our organizational challenges as initiatives continue and grow.
Partner highlights: Information and Technology Services (ITS)
C-IPE collaborated with ITS to leverage Canvas in tracking student competency attainment in IPE offerings.
School of Dentistry
The School of Dentistry led the infrastructure development for the IPE data visualization system, leveraging enterprise data systems like Canvas and student records and connecting them to the IPE database.
Big Ten IPE Academic Alliance
The Big Ten IPE Academic Alliance aims to facilitate sustainable interprofessional practice and education through
multi-institutional collaboration, innovation, scholarship and resourcesharing that leads to improved education, better care, added value and healthier communities. C-IPE is collaborating with the alliance to expand the IPE data visualization infrastructure and system across institutions, supporting them in their IPE strategic efforts but also creating opportunities for cross-institutional research.
Center for Academic Innovation (CAI)
C-IPE is partnering with CAI to develop a student-facing version of the IPE data visualization system, which will allow students to track their IPE competency development throughout their programs.
BUILDING MOMENTUM
Competency-Based Tracking for Interprofessional Education Leveraging Institutional Data
After working with ITS to bring IPE data together from across the institution, the focus is now on creating a model that can be piloted for feedback among stakeholders. The team has focused on showcasing IPE efforts and experiences for educators and students across all collaborating units by 1) making them visible and 2) through deliberate tracking. The first step has been making the teaching efforts of faculty visible through the DataViz platform.
“It is a big step forward in being able to track IPE competencies that students achieve through diverse learning experiences from our different health science schools.”
~ Gundy Sweet, Pharm.D., assistant dean for curriculum and assessment in the College of Pharmacy and the team lead for the IPE data visualization project
CONNECT WITH US
Do you have an interest in learning more about interprofessional education? We invite you to connect with us on social media, join our mailing list or reach out for more opportunities. Learn more by visiting our website.
Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education 5100 THSL, 1135 Catherine Street • Ann Arbor, MI 48109
IPEcenter@umich.edu
interprofessional.umich.edu
@umichHealthIPE
facebook.com/IPEcenterUM
Executive Officers of Michigan Medicine
Marschall S. Runge, M.D., Ph.D., Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs and Dean, Medical School, CEO, Michigan Medicine (chair); Steven L. Kunkel, Ph.D., Executive Vice Dean for Research, Chief Scientific Officer, Michigan Medicine, and Professor, Departments of Molecular and Integrative Physiology and Internal Medicine; David C. Miller, M.D., MPH, Executive Vice Dean for Clinical Affairs and President, U-M Health System (ex officio); Debra F. Weinstein, M.D., Executive Vice Dean for Academic Affairs and Interim Chief Academic Officer, Michigan Medicine
Regents of the University of Michigan
Jordan B. Acker, Michael J. Behm, Mark J. Bernstein, Paul W. Brown, Sarah Hubbard, Denise Ilitch, Ron Weiser, Katherine E. White, Santa J. Ono, ex officio
© 2023 Regents of the University of Michigan
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The Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education is supported by the Provost and the Health Sciences Council of Deans. Cover photo: University of Michigan-Flint faculty and students work with patients as part of the HEART (Health Equity. Action. Research. Teaching.) free rehabilitation clinic. (Photo Credit: Michigan Photography/Eric Bronson)