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Preparing Future Dietitians for Interprofessional Collaboration: Employing an Evidence-Based Instructional Design Approach to Solve the Wicked Problem of Interprofessional Education
Department: Org Learning & Performance
ResourceLengthWidthThickness
Paper000
Specimen Elements
Pocatello
Unknown to Unknown
Barbara J. Gordon
Idaho State University
Dissertation
Yes
12/9/2022
digital
City: Pocatello
Doctorate
In today’s health care arena, registered dietitian nutritionists (RDNs) must work collaboratively as members of interprofessional practice teams. The Accreditation Council for Education in Nutrition and Dietetics, therefore, mandates the inclusion of interprofessional education (IPE) experiences for nutrition and dietetic students. IPE is the exposure of students from disparate health professions to the types of cross-discipline collaborations, communication, and teamwork required for interprofessional practice. Despite the numerous proven benefits of IPE experiences, sustainability has been problematic. This resulted in IPE being labeled as a wicked problem. Several researchers suggest that a potential reason for the failures of IPE is the lack of evidence-based approaches employed to develop these student experiences. The literature contains no reports of evidence-based, instructional design-driven, IPE learning needs assessments for nutrition and dietetics students. Of note, the phenomenon of wicked problems parallels the ill-structured instructional design problem. This evaluation study employed an evidence-based, instructional design, complex needs assessment protocol to gather the IPE learning needs of nutrition and dietetic students. Based on those findings, the potential impact of the 2024 masters-preparation requirement to become an RDN on those learning needs was explored. The conceptual framework for the study was the Participatory Action Research and Systems Evaluation for Interprofessional Education (PARSE-IPE). PARSE-IPE marries concepts from three domains—participatory action xv research, instructional design, and interprofessional education. The findings provide program directors and faculty with actionable recommendations for developing sustainable IPE activities for dietetic students. Key words: interprofessional education, interprofessional collaboration, dietitian, dietetics, nutrition

Preparing Future Dietitians for Interprofessional Collaboration: Employing an Evidence-Based Instructional Design Approach to Solve the Wicked Problem of Interprofessional Education

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