Proposing an Interprofessional Competency Framework for Person-Centered Care Connecting Interprofessional Education and Collaborative Practice
De Weerdt, Claudia; Aerts, Ingrid; Lakke, Sandra; Paltamaa, Jaana; Reinders, Jan Jaap (2024)
De Weerdt, Claudia
Aerts, Ingrid
Lakke, Sandra
Paltamaa, Jaana
Reinders, Jan Jaap
Pacific University Libraries
2024
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025020610381
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025020610381
Tiivistelmä
Introduction: The number of complex healthcare problems is increasing, the workforce is
diminishing, and healthcare costs are rising. Interprofessional Education and Collaborative
Practice is a promising solution, necessitating the cultivation of skills and competencies
among health and social care professionals. The central question guiding this study
revolves around the possibility of merging interprofessional collaboration, lifelong
learning, the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), and
the Rehabilitation Competency Framework (RCF) into a unified competency framework
that can be used in both education and in the work field.
Method: In total, five modified Delphi rounds were executed during three phases
specifically comprising the design, relevance, and report stages. The first contains a
literature search, the second includes 11 pilots with surveys, and the last finalized the
INPRO Competency Framework (INPRO CF).
Results: The primary result is the INPRO CF that is readable, accurate, applicable, and
accepted. It contains five domains, 17 competencies, and 200 learning outcomes or
behaviors. It exists in four languages (Dutch, Finnish, English, German).
Discussion: The INPRO CF is a relevant interprofessional competency framework designed
to alleviate deficiencies between education and practice so it is suitable for a lifelong
learning process. It demonstrates adaptability across various contexts.
diminishing, and healthcare costs are rising. Interprofessional Education and Collaborative
Practice is a promising solution, necessitating the cultivation of skills and competencies
among health and social care professionals. The central question guiding this study
revolves around the possibility of merging interprofessional collaboration, lifelong
learning, the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), and
the Rehabilitation Competency Framework (RCF) into a unified competency framework
that can be used in both education and in the work field.
Method: In total, five modified Delphi rounds were executed during three phases
specifically comprising the design, relevance, and report stages. The first contains a
literature search, the second includes 11 pilots with surveys, and the last finalized the
INPRO Competency Framework (INPRO CF).
Results: The primary result is the INPRO CF that is readable, accurate, applicable, and
accepted. It contains five domains, 17 competencies, and 200 learning outcomes or
behaviors. It exists in four languages (Dutch, Finnish, English, German).
Discussion: The INPRO CF is a relevant interprofessional competency framework designed
to alleviate deficiencies between education and practice so it is suitable for a lifelong
learning process. It demonstrates adaptability across various contexts.