A Rapid Review of the Factors That Influence Service User Involvement in Interprofessional Education, Practice, and Research
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Review Aims
1.2. Review Questions
- What is the current status of service user involvement in interprofessional education, practice, and research?
- What are the enablers of and barriers to service user involvement in interprofessional education, practice, and research?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Needs Assessment
2.2. Protocol Development
2.3. Literature Search
2.3.1. Database Selection
2.3.2. Search Strategy
2.4. Screening and Study Selection
2.5. Data Extraction
2.6. Risk of Bias (Quality) Assessment
2.7. Knowledge Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Methodological Quality
3.2. Service User Involvement in IPECP Education, Practice, and Research
3.2.1. Nature of Service User Involvement
3.2.2. Enablers
3.2.3. Barriers
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria | |
---|---|---|
Population | Patients or service users who have received a healthcare service from a healthcare worker and/or their carer/s who have participated in an IPECP initiative with a healthcare worker | Patients or service users who were not involved in an IPECP initiative with a healthcare worker |
Intervention or investigated phenomena | IPECP initiatives for entry-level and practicing professionals that involve healthcare workers from at least two professions working together with service user/s | Education, research, and practice activities that are labelled as multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, or transdisciplinary |
Comparator | No comparator | No comparator |
Outcome | Description of the involvement of service users in the IPECP initiatives | Outcomes that are not attributed to the involvement of service users |
Research designs | Primary research: quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods designs | Secondary research (i.e., reviews), conference abstracts/posters, study protocols, editorials/commentaries, position papers |
Other | English-language literature published from 2006 onwards | Unpublished literature (e.g., grey literature, theses, and dissertation manuscripts) |
No. | Author/s and Year | Design | Country | Participants | Measures | Setting | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Professionals | Service Users | ||||||
1 | Bolin, 2014 [44] | Qualitative | Sweden | Social workers and professionals in child psychiatry | Children receiving social services (n = 28) | Attendance in collaborative meetings | Practice |
2 | Carr et al., 2012 [40] | Qualitative | United Kingdom | General practitioners, nurses, physiotherapists, and managers (n = 44) | Clients with back pain (n = 11) | Participation in workshops for quality | Education |
3 | Koerner et al., 2014 [39] | Quantitative | Germany | Physicians, nursing staff, physical therapists, sport teachers, masseurs, psychologists and other psychosocial therapists, dietitians, and social workers | Clients with chronic disease | Participation on a survey for a training program evaluation | Practice |
4 | Körner et al., 2013 [38] | Mixed methods | Germany | Physicians, nursing staff, physical therapists, sport teachers, masseurs, psychologists and other psychosocial therapists, dietitians, and social workers (n = 32) | Rehabilitation clients (n = 36) | Involvement in focus group discussions in developing a training program for health professionals | Practice |
5 | Metersky et al., 2021 [32] | Qualitative | Canada | Nurses, social workers, dietitians, pharmacists, a nurse practitioner, and a respiratory therapist (n = 10) | Clients with chronic disease diagnosis (n = 10) | Participation in group interviews for designing interprofessional teams | Practice/research |
6 | Molenaar et al., 2018 [37] | Qualitative | Netherlands | Primary care midwives, hospital-based midwives, obstetricians, obstetric nurses, and maternity care assistants | Pregnant women and their partners (n = 71) | Involvement in co-creating a shared decision-making model | Practice |
7 | Phillips et al., 2015 [42] | Qualitative | Australia | Nurses, physiotherapists, exercise physiologists, fitness instructors, social workers, and general practitioners (n = 14) | Clients with chronic disease and their carers (n = 55) | Participation in interviews to describe ‘patient as professional’ role | Practice |
8 | Reeves et al., 2015 [47] | Qualitative | USA and Canada | Nurses, doctors, pharmacists, and social workers | Clients from the intensive care unit | Involvement of family members in co-designing the treatment plan | Practice/education |
9 | Sæbjørnsen & Willumsen, 2015 [43] | Qualitative | Norway | Social workers, childcare specialists, and therapists | Children receiving social welfare services | Participation in children conferences | Practice |
10 | Schoeb et al., 2019 [45] | Qualitative | Switzerland | Doctors, nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, social workers, psychologists, speech therapists, dieticians, and work rehabilitation staff | Clients with various conditions (n = 25) | Participation in interprofessional meetings for discharge planning | Practice |
11 | Sitzia et al., 2006 [41] | Qualitative | United Kingdom | Nurses, doctors, administrators, and managers | Clients with cancer (n = 59) | Involvement in project evaluation through interviews | Practice |
12 | Tjia et al., 2021 [46] | Qualitative | USA | Hospice administrator, nurses, physicians, pharmacists (n = 8) | Former family caregivers (n = 10) | Involvement in stakeholder panel meetings | Practice |
13 | Valaitis et al., 2019 [33] | Qualitative | Canada | Healthcare providers/community care providers (n = 29), community service providers (n = 12), volunteers (n = 14) | Clients with complex and chronic conditions (n = 70) | Involvement in designing a primary care service | Practice |
14 | van Dongen et al., 2017 [36] | Qualitative | Netherlands | Healthcare professionals (n = 8) | Clients with chronic conditions and their relatives (n = 11) | Participation in interprofessional meetings | Practice |
15 | Van Dongen et al., 2017 [35] | Qualitative | Netherlands | Family medicine and occupational therapist | Clients with chronic conditions (n = 7) | Participation in interprofessional team meetings | Practice/research |
16 | Worswick et al., 2015 [34] | Qualitative | Canada | Primary healthcare professionals | Clients with back pain (n = 11) | Participation in workshops | Practice/education |
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Sy, M.P.; Panotes, A.; Cho, D.; Pineda, R.C.; Martin, P. A Rapid Review of the Factors That Influence Service User Involvement in Interprofessional Education, Practice, and Research. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 16826. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192416826
Sy MP, Panotes A, Cho D, Pineda RC, Martin P. A Rapid Review of the Factors That Influence Service User Involvement in Interprofessional Education, Practice, and Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(24):16826. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192416826
Chicago/Turabian StyleSy, Michael Palapal, Arden Panotes, Daniella Cho, Roi Charles Pineda, and Priya Martin. 2022. "A Rapid Review of the Factors That Influence Service User Involvement in Interprofessional Education, Practice, and Research" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 24: 16826. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192416826
APA StyleSy, M. P., Panotes, A., Cho, D., Pineda, R. C., & Martin, P. (2022). A Rapid Review of the Factors That Influence Service User Involvement in Interprofessional Education, Practice, and Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(24), 16826. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192416826