Collaborative practice competencies needed for telehealth delivery by health and social care professionals: a scoping review

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Abstract

In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, many healthcare and social services professionals have had to provide services through virtual care. In the workplace, such professionals often need to be sufficiently resourced to collaborate and address collaborative care barriers in telehealth. We performed a scoping review to identify the competencies required to support interprofessional collaboration among clinicians in telehealth. We followed Arksey and O’Malley’s and the Joanna Briggs Institute’s methodological guidelines, including quantitative and qualitative peer-reviewed articles published between 2010 and 2021. We expanded our data sources by searching for any organization or experts in the field via Google. The analysis of the resulting thirty-one studies and sixteen documents highlighted that health and social services professionals are generally unaware of the competencies they need to develop or maintain interprofessional collaboration in telehealth. In an era of digital innovations, we believe this gap may jeopardize the quality of the services offered to patients and needs to be addressed. Of the six competency domains in the National Interprofessional Competency Framework, it was observed that interprofessional conflict resolution was the competency that emerged least as an essential competency to be developed, while interprofessional communication and patient/client/family/community-centered care were identified as the two most reported essential competencies.

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Poitras, M. E., Couturier, Y., Beaupré, P., Girard, A., Aubry, F., Vaillancourt, V. T., … McGraw, M. (2024). Collaborative practice competencies needed for telehealth delivery by health and social care professionals: a scoping review. Journal of Interprofessional Care. Taylor and Francis Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/13561820.2023.2213712

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