麻豆传媒

 

Less me and more we

Forum brings together students across health disciplines

- February 15, 2008

Forum participants Will Webster, dean of the Faculty of Health Professions, and Gaynor Watson-Creed, Halifax's medical officer of health,听continue discussions in the lobby. (Marla Cranston Photo)

Come together 鈥 right now 鈥 over me.

This famed Beatles song chorus could well be the rallying cry for patients, as a fresh approach to health care picks up steam in Canada and at 麻豆传媒 (though 鈥渨ith me鈥 would be even more apt).

There鈥檚 a growing movement toward better communication and coordination among the various health professions when treating a patient or client. On Tuesday, nearly 800 students jammed the Rebecca Cohn Auditorium to learn more at a forum titled 鈥淟ess Me and More We.鈥 They came from the Faculties of Health Professions, Medicine and Dentistry, and the clinical psychology program.

鈥淯nderstanding your own expertise is one thing, but realizing that there鈥檚 expertise beyond that is something entirely different,鈥 Gaynor Watson-Creed (MD 鈥99) told the crowd. 鈥淎s physicians, we鈥檙e trained to be autonomous decision-makers 鈥 the other professions, in any type of collaborative context, also bring expertise to the table. Respect it.鈥澨

As Halifax鈥檚 Medical Officer of Health, Dr. Watson-Creed brainstorms with everyone from early childhood development specialists to engineers, since potential public health threats run the gamut from new flu strains to noxious fume leaks. And during her residency at a community health centre, she learned as much from the RNs and social workers as she did from the doctors.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 amazing to me is we each bring entirely different, yet complementary, perspectives,鈥 she says.

This kind of collaboration adds up to better health care 鈥 鈥渏ust because it makes good sense,鈥 said Ivy Oandasan, director of the Office of Interprofessional Education at the University of Toronto. But making it the new standard in health care will require radical changes in 鈥渉ow we deliver health care and in how we think, learn and teach,鈥 she said.

Joanne Cumminger works as a 鈥減atient navigator鈥 in Pictou County, one of five across Nova Scotia who help guide cancer patients through the maze of options.

鈥淲e find out what their issues are, and we find the right people to take care of them,鈥 she explains. Sometimes this involves financial or language barriers, or helping people access services or information. They also help streamline the process 鈥 for patients and the health care system.听

麻豆传媒 has been working hard to incorporate interprofessional collaboration into its curriculum, to prepare students for the changing work environment, said Will Webster, dean of the Faculty of Health Professions.

Harold Cook, dean of the Faculty of Medicine, agreed: 鈥淵ou are the millennial generation and things will be different in the way that we practice medicine in this century 鈥 it鈥檚 not an easy pathway, but we鈥檒l get there by working together.鈥

Last year, 21 students in Medicine, Dentistry and Health Professions took part in the . Many other students have been involved in Seamless Care, a three-year pilot project designed to enhance teamwork among health professionals. And Dal鈥檚 classroom-based tri-Faculty (IPL) is growing all the time. The Health Sciences Students Association, which formed in 2005, is another way students can help explore interprofessional approaches.

A patient鈥檚 perspective

Carole Laurin

鈥淚magine if one day suddenly you woke up half-paralyzed.鈥

Thus began Carole Laurin鈥檚 frustrating journey into the health care system in 2004. The Winnipeg elementary school teacher was just 42 when a stroke left her hemiplegic, or paralyzed on the left side of her body.

Now walking without a wheelchair or cane, she attributes her progress to a combination of therapies and approaches. But recovery is a slow process 鈥 on her flight to Halifax to speak at Tuesday鈥檚 forum, she was able to blink her left eye for the first time since her stroke.

鈥淚 wonder if I鈥檇 be any better now if my health care providers had talked to each other about my treatment options,鈥 said Ms. Laurin, who has seen at least 50 of them since the stroke, from rehab specialists to medical acupuncturists.听

When she was discharged from the hospital, nobody told her about a local support group for young stroke victims. As an outpatient, she faced competitive turf-guarding and disapproval for trying various treatments. Her physiotherapist and occupational therapist, just down the hall from each other, wouldn鈥檛 collaborate on her case, explaining they weren鈥檛 funded to do so!

Ms. Laurin now has an excellent, coordinated health care team but it should have been that way from the start, she says.听听

鈥淵ou鈥檙e just starting your educational journey,鈥 she told students. 鈥淭ake the time now and in the future to learn about your colleagues, what they do and how you can work together. I鈥檇 also encourage you to never lose sight of the patient, and their perspective.鈥澨


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