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2021-2022 Progress Report from the University of Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education

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2021-2022 PROGRESS REPORT

INNOVATING AND IMPLEMENTING INTERPROFESSIONAL EDUCATION

NEXT PHASE

To Improve the Quadruple Aims of Health


MICHIGAN CENTER FOR INTERPROFESSIONAL EDUCATION As we learned as a health and university community how to meet our mission in the midst of a pandemic, we also learned how critically important teams are in supporting that effort. In Fall 2021, I was honored with the opportunity to build on Dr. Frank Ascione’s incredible legacy as our Center’s first director and carry forward the work to shed light on the importance of teams in education and practice. Our team dug deep into our planning for the “Next Phase” of interprofessional education at the University of Michigan, and began launching efforts toward the future. While the Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education’s “First Phase” has established a strong foundation during its first six years, implementing dozens of successful IPE experiences, investing in research and innovative teaching, producing scholarly publications and engaging a broad community of interested faculty, what has not yet been addressed is the following question that is at the core of the mission of the Center: “Does IPE improve the Quadruple Aims of Health (better health, better patient experience, lower cost and improved provider well-being)?”

While the 10 schools that participate in the Center have highly variable needs, resources and contexts, this singular goal and shared mission serves to unify the schools. Further, the schools share a determination to focus on building better teams as the key link to improving the Quadruple Aims of Health, supported by the research literature. The Center must now deliberately lead the development of initiatives toward this aim. Accomplishing this goal will require five interconnected strategies: 1.

The Core Curriculum

2. Experiential Innovation 3. Intentional Measurement and Research 4. Educator Development 5. Systems-Based Problem Solving The ecosystem of innovation, teamwork and education for better health that underpins these five strategies will motivate our work together, with a desire to grow our Community of Practice and Scholars across all three campuses at the University of Michigan. As with any transformative movement, this will take time; patience will be our greatest gift so that our work is enduring and impactful. The enthusiasm for this “Next Phase” is broad and deep, and it is my honor to be part of this journey.

To address this question, the Executive

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Committee of the Center determined that the “Next Phase” must be driven by a single goal: innovating and implementing IPE at U-M to improve the Quadruple Aims of Health.

Rajesh S. Mangrulkar, MD Director, Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education (C-IPE)


COLLABORATING U-M SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES School of Dentistry College of Education, Health, and Human Services (UM-Dearborn) College of Health Sciences (UM-Flint) School of Kinesiology Medical School School of Nursing School of Nursing (UM-Flint) College of Pharmacy School of Public Health School of Social Work

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MISSION Innovating and transforming interprofessional education, collaborative practice and research to achieve the Quadruple Aims of Health.

VISION The University of Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education and its partners bring faculty, staff and students together to design and implement innovative interprofessional education experiences in didactic and experiential settings so that learners are effective team members and can lead the development of new models of collaboration. The Center partners with university and community units in developing and educating learners in these new models of interprofessional collaboration in the practice and community settings. Collectively, we strive to measure the impact of IPE on learning, practice and the Quadruple Aims of Health.

VALUES The following visual depiction highlights the values that will define interprofessional education at the University of Michigan:

sustainability integration

learning

safety

realistic

justice

civility

foundational

teamwork

collaboration excellence

value-based

leadership educate innovate outcomes

integrity inclusion fun disrupt humility listening support respect team curiosity boundary-removers trust impact service

honest synergy

innovation

communication engagement relationships joy builders accountability

community creative

cross-pollinate quality holistic optimism

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visionary

compassion

dei belonging human

scholarship caring exemplar

transformational

equity practice

research

hope

data diversity

partnership

interdisciplinary

relevance experiential anti-racist society assessment mentorship supportive development patient-centered


Health Science Deans

Provost

Faculty Advisory Committee

Executive Committee* Chair: Director

Intentional Measurement Workgroup*

Curriculum Committee*

Core Curriculum Workgroup*

Student Advisory Committee*

Educator Development Workgroup

Systems-Based Problem Solving Workgroup*

Experiential Innovation Workgroup* *Indicates Student Participation

“IPE was not taught in school and if we do not see it during orientation and we do not understand the importance of it, we are failing our patients and families.” ~ Michigan Medicine nursing professional

THE PATH FORWARD Faculty, staff and learners from all three campuses are needed to join the workgroups being launched that will implement five key interconnected strategies that comprise the Center’s recently endorsed strategic blueprint.

GET INVOLVED! If you are interested in innovative health professions education, the scholarship of education and preparing students to be members of high-functioning teams, join us in this movement! Complete the survey via the QR code or this link: https://forms.gle/QparZ3dRHVFfD37a9.

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STRATEGY 1: THE CORE CURRICULUM GOAL:

WHY:

Strategically review, enhance and scale the IPE “Core” for students at the University of Michigan.

To prepare a broad base of students with consistent, foundational knowledge of and attitudes toward IPE so they can engage effectively in interprofessional learning and practice in experiential settings.

We must do the work to identify the relevant students for each school and determine requirements for the core so that all students have an appropriate foundation in IPE to perform in teams. Innovation should drive this strategy.

“Through working so closely with a small group and helping each other develop our strengths, I have become a better teammate and leader.” ~ Student participant in LIFE

Introduction to IPE Teams and Teamwork

Team-Based Decision Making

Didactic

INTRODUCE

REINFORCE

Experiential

INTRODUCE

REINFORCE

Longitudinal Interprofessional Family-based Experience (LIFE)

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Patient/Community Interaction

PRACTICE


BUILDING MOMENTUM IPE Awards for Innovation and Excellence The Center for IPE was proud to recognize two teams for advancing interprofessional education and practice. The Team-Based Decision Making (TBDM) Team Ten core faculty members teach in the course, as well as a team focused on A3 Problem Solving and another team focused on Effective Leadership. This collective of three teams was awarded for their outstanding work “to align education with the mission of the health system – being a high reliability organization where risks for patient harm are reduced by having a culture of safety and continuous improvement.” The awardees are: •

TBDM Team: Gundy Sweet (Pharmacy), Mark Fitzgerald (Dentistry), Amy Karpenko (Dentistry), Joe Hornyak (Medical School), Tom Bishop (Medical School), Michelle Pardee (Nursing), Cynthia Arslanian-Engoren (Nursing), Shawna Kraft (Pharmacy), Debbie Mattison (Social Work) and Anao Zhang (Social Work).

A3 Problem Solving Team: Jennifer Vredeveld (Medical School), Jamie Lindsay (Medical School), Rosalyn Maben-Feaster (Medical School) and Carrie Braun (Medical School).

Effective Leadership Team: Dana Tschannen (Nursing), Erin Khang (Social Work), Paul Walker (Pharmacy) and Dan Fischer (Social Work).

The Discharge Planning Team This team coordinated a virtual IPE hospital discharge planning simulation that spanned hundreds of students and dozens of facilitators via Zoom. This group has been persistent in expanding UM-Flint’s interprofessional collaboration for excellence in discharge planning. The awardees are: •

Leslie Smith (Health Sciences), Carman Turkelson (Nursing - Flint), Megan Keiser (Nursing - Flint), Stephanie Gilkey (Health Sciences), Sheryl Groden (Education and Human Services - Flint), Nicholas Prush (Health Sciences), Laura Macias-Brown (Education and Human Services - Flint) and Elizabeth Yost (Health Sciences).

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STRATEGY 2: EXPERIENTIAL INNOVATION GOAL:

WHY:

Launch a suite of experiential IPE pilots that can scale and, as a whole, will address key needs for learning in the practice and community setting for students of the health professional schools and colleges.

To prepare learners to be “team-ready,” which requires education that moves from theory to practice. Students must be able to function effectively in collaborative teams to serve patients and populations.

Each pilot will focus on teams in health care (in the practice setting) or health (in the community setting, working on social determinants).

“I am really grateful for being able to participate in the LIFE program. It gave me insight into how interprofessional health care works for patients, and just how much integrating fields can help a patient dealing with chronic illnesses.” ~ Student participant in LIFE

Longitudinal Interprofessional Family-based Experience (LIFE) Faculty Team

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BUILDING MOMENTUM Provost’s Teaching Innovation Prize Faculty leads for the Longitudinal Interprofessional Family-based Experience (LIFE) were awarded the prestigious Provost’s Teaching Innovation Prize. LIFE was an innovation born out of necessity during the COVID-19 pandemic. The program demonstrated a strong collaboration across our 10 health science schools, three campuses and health system partners to bring patients to the core of our health professions education. The faculty awardees are: •

Olivia Anderson (Public Health), Thomas Bishop (Medical School), Karen Farris (Pharmacy), Mark Fitzgerald (Dentistry), Debra Mattison (Social Work), Danielle Rulli (Dentistry), Laura Smith (Health Sciences - Flint) and Peggy Ursuy (Nursing). Additional faculty, staff and patient advisors from the Michigan Medicine Office of Patient Experience also contributed to LIFE’s success.

“The LIFE program has been a stellar example of creative interprofessional collaboration, and this recognition underscores the value of engaging patients and families as part of the team to improve care and experience.” ~ Kate Balzer, senior project manager at the Michigan Medicine Office of Patient Experience and LIFE team member 9


STRATEGY 3: INTENTIONAL MEASUREMENT & RESEARCH GOAL:

WHY:

Implement a portfolio of valid assessment tools in our IPE experiences that measures outcomes reliably and consistently.

Learners need to be given information from measurements that will help them develop into effective real-world teammates in the health care practice and community settings.

The data will inform learner development, program evaluation and research. The portfolio of tools and methods should be applicable in the didactic and experiential settings and ultimately be able to lead to an understanding of IPE’s impact on learning, health care practice, health outcomes and the Quadruple Aims of Health.

We need to generate evidence that IPE impacts learning, practice and health outcomes (aligned with the Quadruple Aims of Health). The scholarship should inform how IPE is implemented both at U-M and nationally.

“Strengthening the science is necessary for the scalable progress in demonstrating the impact of IPE/IPP for advancing the quadruple aim.” ~ Michigan Medicine physician

Improved Patient Experience

Better Health Outcomes

Quadruple Aim

Improved Staff Experience

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Lower Cost of Care


BUILDING MOMENTUM Selected 2021-22 Peer-Reviewed Publications from U-M Faculty, Staff and Students on Innovation and Impact from IPE Development of team behavior skills and clinical lactation competence among medical students engaging in telesimulations with standardized patients Anderson OS, Phillips J, Weirauch K, Chuisano SA, Sadovnikova A. Educating mental health nurse practitioners on interprofessional collaboration and preparing them for collaborative practice Haefner J, Filter M. Tracheostomy care and communication during COVID-19: Global interprofessional perspectives Moser CH, Freeman-Sanderson A, Keeven E, Higley KA, Ward E, Brenner MJ, Pandian V. Interprofessional teams are crucial to reduce transplantation hepatology burnout Winder GS. An interprofessional community-based program for diabetes education and exercise self-management Trojanowski S, Vos C, Smith LM, Sahli M, Yorke A, Turkelson C. Changes in student attitudes toward interprofessional education after online and in-person introductory learning activities Gross M, Phanudulkitti C, Bavireddy V, Anderson O, Daniels T, Fitzgerald M, Mattison D, Nagappan K, Patterson V, Smith L, Ursuy P, Farris K. Evaluating the effectiveness of an intensive faculty development program based on the community of practice model Ascione F, Daniels T, Najjar G, Patterson V, Stalburg C. Longitudinal Interprofessional Family-based Experience (LIFE): An authentic experiential interprofessional education learning framework Mattison D, Smith LJ, Balzer K, Bavireddy V, Bishop TW, Farris K, Fitzgerald M, Rulli D, Trupiano N, Anderson, OS. Restructuring interprofessional education Trupiano N, Lau T, Gururaj, A.

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STRATEGY 4: EDUCATOR DEVELOPMENT GOAL:

WHY:

Implement a development and training program drawn from the identified needs for faculty and practitioner IPE educators in both teaching and assessment.

We must develop a community of collaborative practitioners, educators and scholars to prepare future health care providers to be team ready.

Consider the newer context of experiential learning environments, the needs of the educators in those settings and the goals of IPE competency development in the students.

The education and assessment of team-based behaviors in students from multiple disciplines raises new challenges for educators.

The reach of these programs will lead to a sustained IPE Community of Practice and Scholars.

An educated and trained IPE community is required to sustain and expand IPE across the University.

“We choose to be here, but patients are not necessarily choosing to be here (out of necessity they had to be here), and we need to be sensitive to their needs.” ~ Michigan Medicine social work professional

Faculty and students disseminate educational innovations to local and national audiences.

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BUILDING MOMENTUM Health Professions Education Day 2022 Faculty, staff and students gathered in person for the first time in three years for Health Professions Education Day. Participants shared best practices in education and explored opportunities for collaboration and innovation. This annual event continues to spark interprofessional collaboration, networking and inspiration for the future educational innovations, research and practice across the health professions schools at the University of Michigan.

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STRATEGY 5: SYSTEMS-BASED PROBLEM SOLVING GOAL:

WHY:

Establish a workgroup that will address the most pressing challenges to our singular goal and interconnected strategies.

Progress on strategic initiatives depends on addressing systemic, structural and organizational challenges to interdisciplinary teaching and learning. Maturation of the Center requires us to directly address our organizational challenges as initiatives continue and grow.

“Administrative innovation” will be required to help enable the future state.

“Interprofessional Education can improve patient outcomes as well as staff experience.” ~ Student participant in LIFE

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BUILDING MOMENTUM Health Sciences Schools Unite to Take First Steps in Addressing Health Inequities Together •

2020: C-IPE is charged by Health Sciences Council of Deans (HSC) and IPE Executive Committee to develop ideas on collectively combating racism through the lens of patient and population health.

2021: First stage launched to:

Understand current state of anti-racist elements in the IPE curriculum

• •

Describe anti-racist initiatives at each of the schools/colleges Identify opportunities to develop and/or change policies and practices to address racism

2022: Recommendations provided based on intensive data collection/review and key discussions.

Result: HSC launches the Health Sciences Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee to:

• •

Implement recommendations Identify additional collaborations for DEI initiatives Bronze Awardee for IMS Global Learning Consortium’s Learning Impact Awards

The Competency-Based Tracking for Interprofessional Education Leveraging Institutional Data project is a partnership between IPE faculty leaders and Information & Technology Services that has leveraged learning outcomes in Canvas to allow for curricular mapping of IPE competencies and to assign and track IPE competencies for students. Team members include: Gundy Sweet (Pharmacy), Mark Fitzgerald (Dentistry), Melissa Gross (Kinesiology), Dan Fischer (Social Work), Vani Patterson (Center for IPE), Kate Weber (Dentistry), Pushyami Gundala (ITS), Jennifer Love (ITS) and Nargas Oskui-Tabrizi (ITS).

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GET INVOLVED! If you are interested in innovative health professions education, the scholarship of education and preparing students to be members of high-functioning teams, join us in this movement! Complete the survey via the QR code or this link: https://forms.gle/QparZ3dRHVFfD37a9.

Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education 428 Church Street • Ann Arbor, MI 48109 734-764-0696 • IPEcenter@umich.edu • interprofessional.umich.edu @umichHealthIPE • facebook.com/IPEcenterUM The Michigan Center for Interprofessional Education is supported by the Provost and the Health Sciences Council of Deans.

Executive Officers of Michigan Medicine Marschall S. Runge, M.D., Ph.D., executive vice president for medical affairs, dean, University of Michigan Medical School, CEO, Michigan Medicine; David C. Miller, M.D., M.P.H, president, UMHS, and executive vice dean for clinical affairs, University of Michigan Medical School; Patricia D. Hurn, Ph.D. RN, FAAN, dean, School of Nursing. Regents of the University of Michigan Jordan B. Acker, Michael J. Behm, Mark J. Bernstein, Paul W. Brown, Sarah Hubbard, Denise Ilitch, Ron Weiser, Katherine E. White, Mary Sue Coleman, ex officio. © 2022 Regents of the University of Michigan Nondiscrimination Policy Statement The University of Michigan, as an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer, complies with all applicable federal and state laws regarding nondiscrimination and affirmative action. The University of Michigan is committed to a policy of equal opportunity for all persons and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, marital status, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, disability, religion, height, weight, or veteran status in employment, educational programs and activities, and admissions. Inquiries or complaints may be addressed to the Senior Director for Institutional Equity, and Title IX/Section 504/ADA Coordinator, Office for Institutional Equity, 2072 Administrative Services Building, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1432, 734-763-0235, TTY 734-647-1388, institutional. equity@umich.edu. For other University of Michigan information call 734-764-1817


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