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Dive into the research topics where Joy Doll is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Joy Doll.


Journal of Interprofessional Care | 2013

Reflections from an interprofessional education experience: evidence for the core competencies for interprofessional collaborative practice.

Joy Doll; Kathleen A. Packard; Jennifer Furze; Kathryn N. Huggett; Gail M. Jensen; Diane Jorgensen; Marlene Wilken; Hardeep Chelal; Anna Maio

The Core Competencies for Collaborative Practice identify the skills needed by every health care provider to be successful in implementing interprofessional practice. Health professions students need to build skills for interprofessional practice as emerging professionals. Reflection is a core skill needed for successful interprofessional practices. This study identifies themes from an interprofessional education research project and discusses their congruency with the Competencies.


Occupational Therapy in Health Care | 2010

Fostering cultural competency, clinical reasoning, and leadership through international outreach

Keli Mu; Brenda M. Coppard; Alfred Bracciano; Joy Doll; Amy Matthews

ABSTRACT The Centennial Vision of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) has called for occupational therapy to be globally connected. Students can gain cultural competency, clinical reasoning, and leadership from attending didactic coursework and participating in discussions and clinical simulations. Immersing oneself in international settings, however, tends to have a greater impact on learning. The authors describe the outcomes of two international outreach programs: China Honors Immersion Program (CHIP) and Institute for Latin American Concern (ILAC). The outcomes of these programs indicate that students believe that such international experiences greatly affect their development, both professionally and personally. Implications of the program outcomes to current professional education are discussed. Future research directions are also proposed.


Occupational Therapy in Health Care | 2016

The Knowledge of Rehabilitation Professionals Concerning Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders

Stephanie M. Birch; Heidi A. Carpenter; Anna M. Marsh; Kimberly A. McClung; Joy Doll

ABSTRACT The purpose of this study was to explore rehabilitation professionals’ knowledge regarding signs and symptoms, prevention, and intervention of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). Participants were 111 rehabilitation practitioners (e.g., occupational therapy, physical therapy, and speech-language pathology practitioners) recruited through email using a quantitative online survey design with purposive, snowball sampling. Results showed the majority of participants’ demonstrated accurate knowledge of the signs and symptoms of FASD. Since professionals who received formal education on FASD reported significantly higher feelings of preparedness to identify children with FASD and manage/coordinate intervention plans, this study suggests rehabilitation professionals may be better prepared to treat individuals with FASD if they participate in formal training.


Journal of Interprofessional Care | 2018

The development of an instrument to evaluate interprofessional student team competency

Lindsay Iverson; Martha Todd; Ann Ryan Haddad; Katie Packard; Kimberley Begley; Joy Doll; Kim Hawkins; Ann Laughlin; Julie Manz; Christopher S. Wichman

ABSTRACT Healthcare institutions, accreditation agencies for higher learning, and organizations such as the National Academy of Medicine in the United States, support interprofessional education (IPE) opportunities. However, incorporating IPE opportunities into academic settings remains difficult. One challenge is assessing IPE learning and practice outcomes, especially at the level of student performance to ensure graduates are “collaboration-ready”. The Creighton-Interprofessional Collaborative Evaluation (C-ICE) instrument was developed to address the need for a measurement tool for interprofessional student team performance. Four interprofessional competency domains provide the framework for the C-ICE instrument. Twenty-six items were identified as essential to include in the C-ICE instrument. This instrument was found to be both a reliable and a valid instrument to measure interprofessional interactions of student teams. Inter-rater reliability as measured by Krippendorff’s nominal alpha (nKALPHA) ranged from .558 to .887; with four of the five independent assessments achieving nKALPHA greater than or equal to 0.796. The findings indicated that the instrument is understandable (Gwet’s alpha coefficient (gAC) 0.63), comprehensive (gAC = 0.62), useful and applicable (gAC = 0.54) in a variety of educational settings. The C-ICE instrument provides educators a comprehensive evaluation tool for assessing student team behaviors, skills, and performance.


Health and Interprofessional Practice | 2015

Preparing Students for Team-Based Care for Vulnerable Populations

Ann Laughlin; Ann M. Ryan-Haddad; Joy Doll; Katie Packard; Kimberley Begley; Martha Todd; Barbara Harris; Jennifer Yee

Health professionals have an obligation to improve both the health of the individual and the public in a time of scarce resources. The Institute of Medicine (IOM), Healthy People Curriculum Task Force and professional education accreditation standards indicate the need for health care professionals to demonstrate competencies related to community engagement, basic health promotion skills and the ability to work effectively in interprofessional teams. An Interprofessional Course, IPE 413: Developing Care for a Vulnerable Population provides students the opportunity to collaborate to address health needs in cooperation with a community partner. Students work in teams to address the complex health care needs of an individual community member. The one hour elective course is open to students from nursing, occupational therapy, pharmacy, social work, and exercise science. Efforts are underway to explore the possibility of offering this course to medical students. Students are assessed on the knowledge and experience gained through this interprofessional experience using the Team Skills Scale and student reflections. Faculties from each of the disciplines utilize a collaborative model in the instructional design of the course. The content is co-taught and faculty not only role model interprofessional care, but also serve as mentors and resource personnel for the students as they work with their clients. Received: 07/10/2015 Accepted: 08/28/2015


Journal of research in interprofessional practice and education | 2012

Interprofessional Team Reasoning Framework as a Tool for Case Study Analysis with Health Professions Students: A Randomized Study

Kathleen A. Packard; Hardeep Chelal; Anna Maio; Joy Doll; Jennifer Furze; Kathryn N. Huggett; Gail M. Jensen; Diane Jorgensen; Marlene Wilken; Yongyue Qi


Archive | 2009

Cross-Cultural Service Learning: An Introduction and Best Practices

Joy Doll


Journal of Interprofessional Education and Practice | 2016

Application of validated instruments to assess university-wide interprofessional service-learning experiences

Kathleen A. Packard; Ann M. Ryan-Haddad; Michael S. Monaghan; Joy Doll; Yongyue Qi


International public health journal | 2015

Building interprofessional cultural competence: Reflections of faculty engaged in training students to care for the vulnerable

Joy Doll; Ann Ryan Haddad; Ann Laughlin; Martha Todd; Katie Packard; Jennifer Yee; Barbara Harris; Kimberley Begley


Currents in Pharmacy Teaching and Learning | 2012

Service-learning incorporated into early practice experience

Jennifer A. Tilleman; Kelli Coover; Elaine Blythe; Joy Doll; Karen K. O'Brien; Ann Ryan Haddad

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