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Journal of Interprofessional Care | 2013

One site fits all? A student ward as a learning practice for interprofessional development

Annika Lindh Falk; Håkan Hult; Mats Hammar; Nick Hopwood; Madeleine Abrandt Dahlgren

Abstract Interprofessional training wards (IPTWs), aiming to enhance interprofessional collaboration, have been implemented in medical education and evaluated over the last decade. The Faculty of Health Sciences, Linköping University has, in collaboration with the local health provider, arranged such training wards since 1996, involving students from the medical, nursing, physiotherapy, and occupational therapy programs. Working together across professional boundaries is seen as a necessity in the future to achieve sustainable and safe healthcare. Therefore, educators need to arrange learning contexts which enhance students’ interprofessional learning. This article shows aspects of how the arrangement of an IPTW can influence the students’ collaboration and learning. Data from open-ended questions from a questionnaire survey, during autumn term 2010 and spring term 2011 at an IPTW, was analyzed qualitatively using a theoretical framework of practice theory. The theoretical lens gave a picture of how architectures of the IPTW create a clash between the “expected” professional responsibilities and the “unexpected” responsibilities of caring work. Also revealed was how the proximity between students opens up contexts for negotiations and boundary work. The value of using a theoretical framework of professional learning in practice within the frames of healthcare education is discussed.


Journal of Interprofessional Care | 2015

Does gender matter? Differences between students at an interprofessional training ward.

Annika Lindh Falk; Mats Hammar; Sofia Nyström

Abstract Studies on graduates’ transitions from education into clinical work highlight inequalities concerning how women and men experience their professional learning and development. This study explores how female and male students from different programs within the health care education system (i.e. medicine, nursing, occupational therapy, and physiotherapy programmes) experience an interprofessional training ward (IPTW) as a part of their professional identity formation. Students from the medicine, nursing, physiotherapy, and occupational therapy programmes collaborate in teams during two weeks at one of three IPTWs at the medical school, Linköping University. They together take the responsibility for diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of the patients, albeit with professional supervisors as support. During 2010 to 2011, 454 (93%) of the 488 students who practiced at the IPTWs answered a questionnaire on their experiences of the IPTW. The students stated that the IPTW had positively influenced their professional development. The female and male medical students were significantly less positive than other female and male students, respectively, concerning the value of IPTW. The male students from all programmes were slightly, but significantly, less positive than all the female students. These findings show that students “do gender” as an integral part of the educational practice. It is important to scrutinise the IPTW as an educational practice, influencing students’ preparation for future work. Gender should be discussed not only during the IPTW rotation but also in general during the curriculum for all healthcare programmes.


Work-a Journal of Prevention Assessment & Rehabilitation | 2012

Euro-Education: Employability for all (EEE4all) Design and implementation of an international course for future health-care professionals

Annika Lindh Falk; Jan Sandqvist; Gunilla Liedberg

BACKGROUND Employment is a priority in the European Union, and it is essential to address the needs of individuals disadvantaged at the labour market on grounds such as ethnicity, age, gender or disability, to increase the opportunities for these groups to gain employment. The Council of the European Union recognize the important role of national organisations in increasing gender equality and the need to integrate a gender perspective in all policies. Gender equality perspectives should also, according to the EU Plan of Action and Gender Equality be integrated in education. OBJECTIVES To equip students in higher education with knowledge, about gender, age, disability and ethnicity in relation to employability, a European group initiated a project; Euro-Education: Employability for all (EEE4all). APPROACH The project, funded by the European Lifelong Learning Programme, was aimed to develop and implement four course modules, each relating to employability with different focus: gender, age, disability or ethnicity. In this paper design, implementation, and evaluation of the course focused on gender, provided by the Occupational Therapy Programme at Linkoping University, is described. CONCLUSIONS The students highlighted the importance of awareness and knowledge about gender theory and its application in relation to employability and client-centred approach.


Education and Health | 2009

Pedagogical processes in healthcare: an exploratory study of pedagogic work with patients and next of kin.

Håkan Hult; Marianne Lindblad Fridh; Annika Lindh Falk; Karin Thörne


Nursing Inquiry | 2018

Nursing assistants matters-An ethnographic study of knowledge sharing in interprofessional practice

Annika Lindh Falk; Håkan Hult; Mats Hammar; Nick Hopwood; Madeleine Abrandt Dahlgren


Archive | 2015

Creating spaces for interprofessional learning: Strategic revision of a common IPL curriculum in undergraduate programs

Annika Lindh Falk; Johanna Dahlberg; Mattias Ekstedt; Annika Heslyk; Per A Whiss; Madeleine Abrandt Dahlgren


THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL ProPEL CONFERENCE 2012 | 2012

Professional Responsibility as conflict: Practices that 'matter' : Socio-material enactments of health care students’ professional responsibilities in an interprofessional training ward

Annika Lindh Falk; Madeleine Abrandt Dahlgren


AT-Forum, 6-8 april 2011, Göteborg | 2011

Implementering av ett genusperspektiv på ett arbetsterapeutprogram

Gunilla Liedberg; Annika Lindh Falk


Genus och medicin - ett växande kunskapsområde | 2010

Arbetsterapi och genus i utbildning och yrkesliv

Gunilla Liedberg; Annika Lindh Falk


15th World Congress of Occupational Therapists, Santiago, Chile | 2010

Implementation of a gender perspective at an occupational therapy programme

Gunilla Liedberg; Annika Lindh Falk

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