Logo image
Student perceptions of cultural immersion during an Interprofessional programme
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Student perceptions of cultural immersion during an Interprofessional programme

P. Gallagher, E. McKinlay, S. Pullon and P. McHugh
Journal of Interprofessional Care, Vol.33(2), pp.264-266
2019
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/14795

Abstract

focus groups interprofessional education diversity interprofessional outcomes
In New Zealand undergraduate health professional degrees focus on aspects of indigenous (Māori) health. Formal and informal feedback suggests that for individual students the impact of those components in respect of Māori health varies. Separate and sequential interprofessional groups of students from seven health professions participated in an innovative and immersive Interprofessional programme. All participating students had prior exposure during their respective degrees to theoretical perspectives of indigenous health. At the end of each and every 5-week long programme each cohort of student contributed to a focus group discussion. Analysis revealed that for these groups of students the real-life exposure to an indigenous community was positively regarded and, in some instances, transformative. The students also reported that the 'lived' experience in an indigenous community built upon and in many cases extended prior learning of indigenous health. Whilst the results are encouraging it must be noted that the students who were exposed to this experience represented less than 10% of the entire student population. It is clear that a key challenge for us is to enable more students to be exposed to this powerful learning experience.
url
Link to publisher's versionView

Metrics

5 File views/ downloads
37 Record Views

Details

Logo image