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Building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders

BACKGROUND: Clinical work-based internships form a key component of health professions education. Integral to these internships, academic health science partnerships (AHSPs) exist between universities and teaching hospitals. Our qualitative descriptive study explored the perspectives of hospital lea...

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Autores principales: DeBoer, Sarah, Dockx, Jamie, Lam, Chris, Shah, Shabdit, Young, Gillian, Quesnel, Martine, Ng, Stella, Mori, Brenda
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Canadian Medical Education Journal 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6445314/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30949261
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author DeBoer, Sarah
Dockx, Jamie
Lam, Chris
Shah, Shabdit
Young, Gillian
Quesnel, Martine
Ng, Stella
Mori, Brenda
author_facet DeBoer, Sarah
Dockx, Jamie
Lam, Chris
Shah, Shabdit
Young, Gillian
Quesnel, Martine
Ng, Stella
Mori, Brenda
author_sort DeBoer, Sarah
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Clinical work-based internships form a key component of health professions education. Integral to these internships, academic health science partnerships (AHSPs) exist between universities and teaching hospitals. Our qualitative descriptive study explored the perspectives of hospital leadership on AHSPs: what they are composed of, and the facilitators and barriers to establishing and sustaining these partnerships. METHODS: Fifteen individuals in a variety of hospital leadership positions were purposively sampled to participate in face-to-face interviews, after which a thematic analysis was conducted. RESULTS: Participants reported that healthcare and hospital infrastructure shapes and constrains the implementation of clinical education. The strength of the hospitals’ relationship with the medical profession facilitated the partnership, however other health professions’ partnerships were viewed less favourably. Participants emphasized the value of hospital leaders prioritizing education. Further, our findings highlighted that communication, collaboration, and involvement are considered as both facilitators and barriers to active engagement. Lastly, opportunities stemming from the partnership were identified as research, current best practice, improved patient care, and career development. CONCLUSION: Our study found that AHSPs involve the drive of the university and hospitals to gain valued capital, or opportunities. Reciprocal communication, collaboration, and involvement are modifiable components that are integral to optimizing AHSPs.
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spelling pubmed-64453142019-04-04 Building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders DeBoer, Sarah Dockx, Jamie Lam, Chris Shah, Shabdit Young, Gillian Quesnel, Martine Ng, Stella Mori, Brenda Can Med Educ J Major Contributions and Research Articles BACKGROUND: Clinical work-based internships form a key component of health professions education. Integral to these internships, academic health science partnerships (AHSPs) exist between universities and teaching hospitals. Our qualitative descriptive study explored the perspectives of hospital leadership on AHSPs: what they are composed of, and the facilitators and barriers to establishing and sustaining these partnerships. METHODS: Fifteen individuals in a variety of hospital leadership positions were purposively sampled to participate in face-to-face interviews, after which a thematic analysis was conducted. RESULTS: Participants reported that healthcare and hospital infrastructure shapes and constrains the implementation of clinical education. The strength of the hospitals’ relationship with the medical profession facilitated the partnership, however other health professions’ partnerships were viewed less favourably. Participants emphasized the value of hospital leaders prioritizing education. Further, our findings highlighted that communication, collaboration, and involvement are considered as both facilitators and barriers to active engagement. Lastly, opportunities stemming from the partnership were identified as research, current best practice, improved patient care, and career development. CONCLUSION: Our study found that AHSPs involve the drive of the university and hospitals to gain valued capital, or opportunities. Reciprocal communication, collaboration, and involvement are modifiable components that are integral to optimizing AHSPs. Canadian Medical Education Journal 2019-03-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6445314/ /pubmed/30949261 Text en © 2019 DeBoer, Dockx, Lam, Shah, Young, Quesnel, Ng, Mori; licensee Synergies Partners http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Journal Systems article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Major Contributions and Research Articles
DeBoer, Sarah
Dockx, Jamie
Lam, Chris
Shah, Shabdit
Young, Gillian
Quesnel, Martine
Ng, Stella
Mori, Brenda
Building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders
title Building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders
title_full Building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders
title_fullStr Building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders
title_full_unstemmed Building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders
title_short Building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders
title_sort building successful and sustainable academic health science partnerships: exploring perspectives of hospital leaders
topic Major Contributions and Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6445314/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30949261
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