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Background: Virtual interprofessional education (IPE) has emerged as a promising alternative to traditional in-person IPE. However, theoretical frameworks to support virtual interprofessional learning are not well established. Two theoretical frameworks emerged as relevant to virtual IPE: (1) the Canadian Interprofessional Health Collaborative (CIHC) interprofessional learning framework and (2) Dornan's Experience-Based Learning Model (ExBL) of workplace learning. In this study, we sought to explore virtual IPE using both frameworks to develop new theoretical understandings and identify assumptions, gaps and barriers.
Methods: This was a qualitative study. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with medical and nursing student participants (n = 14) and facilitators (n = 3) from virtual IPE workshops. Transcripts were analysed using directed content analysis methodology, informed by the CIHC and ExBL frameworks. Themes were explored using mind-mapping transitional coding. Data collection and analysis were continued iteratively until themes with adequate conceptual depth, relevance and plausibility were identified.
Results: Three themes were identified: (1) a shift in the balance of personal and professional, (2) blunted sociologic fidelity and (3) uncertainty and threats to interpersonal connections. Professional distinctions and hierarchies are blurred virtually. This contributed to an increased sense of psychological safety among most learners and lowered the threshold for participation. Separation from workplace sociologic complexity facilitated communication and role clarification objectives. However, loss of immersion may limit deeper engagement. Interprofessional objectives that rely on deeper sociological fidelity, such as conflict resolution, may be threatened. Informal interactions between learners are hindered, which may threaten organic development of interprofessional relationships.
Conclusions: Role clarification and communication objectives are preserved in virtual IPE. Educators should pay close attention to psychological safety and sociologic fidelity-both to leverage advantages and guard against threats to connection and transferability. Virtual IPE may be well suited as a primer to in-person activities or as scaffolding towards interprofessional workplace practice.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/medu.14867 | DOI Listing |
Jpn J Compr Rehabil Sci
September 2025
Department of AI Research Lab, Harada Academy, Kagoshima-shi, Kagoshima, Japan.
Unlabelled: Komaki S, Baba S, Yotsumoto Y, Yamashita T, Takayoshi S, Niidome H, Imamura M, Mihara M, Hirahara D. Development and Evaluation of a Virtual Reality-Based Teaching Material for Interprofessional Education: A Case Study on Swallowing Videofluorography. Jpn J Compr Rehabil Sci 2025; 16: 37-45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNurs Open
September 2025
Department of Pharmacy Practice and Administration, Rutgers University, Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA.
Aim: To identify individuals at risk of falls and the factors contributing to their risk, we screened community-dwelling older adults using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Stopping Elderly Accidents, Deaths, and Injuries (STEADI) Assessments.
Design: A descriptive correlational study design.
Methods: Fall risk screenings with community-dwelling older adults aged 65 or older were conducted during a virtual interprofessional education event (IPE) for fall risk screening.
Nurs Educ Perspect
July 2025
About the Author Jacklyn S. DelPrete, EdD, CRNP, FNP-C, is an assistant professor and assistant director of graduate nursing programs, Cedar Crest College School of Nursing, Allentown, Pennsylvania. For more information, contact her at
Two virtual and hybrid interprofessional education (IPE) activities involving family nurse practitioner (FNP) and adult-gerontology primary care nurse practitioner (AGPCNP) students were conducted in an online graduate nursing program. One activity included FNP and AGPCNP and undergraduate sonography students; the other activity included the nurse practitioner students and undergraduate BSN students. These case studies highlight the possibilities of virtual interprofessional activities in graduate nursing education and how such activities can meet program competencies and student learning outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Educ Curric Dev
July 2025
Division of Medical Education, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Background: Interprofessional education (IPE) is utilised as a teaching strategy for future health practitioners to be effective team members in the healthcare system. Technology such as simulation is widely used in education. Virtual reality (VR) is a branch of simulation where learners interact in a virtual world.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Allied Health
June 2025
Pharmacy Practice Dep., Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, Wayne State University, 259 Mack Ave., Suite 2190, Detroit, MI 48201, USA. Tel 313-577-0827.
Aims: During the pandemic, health professional programs shifted to virtually deliver the various components of their curricula including interprofessional education (IPE) offerings. An urban public College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences moved its interprofessional pain management workshop to virtual delivery. This workshop focused on preparing its participants to embrace the interprofessional competencies of roles/responsibilities, ethics/values, effective communication, teamwork, and the core concepts of safe and equitable pain treatment to address the complex needs of patients in pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF