This guideline is intended to foster healthy work environments, identifying attributes of interprofessional care that will optimize quality outcomes. This guideline identifies best practices to enable, enhance and sustain teamwork and interprofessional collaboration, and to enhance positive outcomes for patients/clients, systems and organizations.
This guideline is intended to foster healthy work environments, identifying attributes of interprofessional care that will optimize quality outcomes. This guideline identifies best practices to enable, enhance and sustain teamwork and interprofessional collaboration, and to enhance positive outcomes for patients/clients, systems and organizations.
As an introduction, we’ve provided summaries of the practice recommendations from the BPG document — but we strongly encourage downloading RNAO’s official PDF.
Leaders of key agencies (governments, academic institutions, regulatory bodies, professional associations, and practice-based organizations) collaborate to make interprofessional care a collective strategic priority.
Agencies in the health-care system strategically align interprofessional care with their other initiatives for healthy work environments.
Interprofessional care partnerships across organizations agree on an evidence-based approach to planning, implementation, and evaluation for joint activities.
Show willingness to acknowledge and share power across organizational boundaries by:
Academic organizations build interprofessional care knowledge and competencies into their curricula.
Academic organizations prepare students to work in interprofessional teams by:
Researchers partner with decision makers to conduct research examining the impact of interprofessional care teams on both patient/client outcomes and on health-care teams.
Health research granting agencies develop and maintain a focus on Interprofessional research priority areas.
Researchers use knowledge translation strategies to encourage action on research findings by funders, government, professional associations and regulatory bodies, as well as by unions, health-care organizations, educational institutions, study participants and other stakeholders.
Professional associations, regulatory bodies and unions can support interprofessional care by:
Accrediting bodies for organizations and education programs develop standards and performance indicators for interprofessional care.
Governments can support the culture required for interprofessional care by:
Organizations must acknowledge the impact of power and hierarchy by: Identifying imbalances of power and making changes to equalize power and build mutually supportive, safe interprofessional workplaces.
Organizations need to engage and develop leaders at every level, including among their point-of-care health professionals, for successful interprofessional care. Strategies for doing that include:
Organizations promote interprofessional care by developing a culture that expects collaboration and creates the operational supports it will need to succeed by:
Organizations can support interprofessional care through enhanced communication by:
All health-care professionals, as well as volunteers and students, demonstrate their commitment to the principles of interprofessional care by:
Team members demonstrate their willingness to share power by:
Individuals develop skill and competency in precepting, mentoring, and facilitating interprofessional learning.