Educating health care professionals for working in interprofessional teams is a key preparation for roles in modern healthcare. Interprofessional teams require members who are competent in their roles. Self-assessment instruments measuring interprofessional competence (IPC) are widely used in educational preparation, but their ability to accurately and reliably measure competence is unknown. We conducted a systematic review to identify variations in the characteristics and use of self-report instruments measuring IPC. Following a systematic search of electronic databases and after applying eligibility criteria, 38 articles were included that describe 8 IPC self-report instruments. A large variation was found in the extent of coverage of IPC core competencies as articulated by the Interprofessional Education Collaborative. Each instrument’s strength of evidence, psychometric performance and uses varied. Rather than measuring competency as “behaviours”, they measured indirect proxies for competence, such as attitudes towards core interprofessional competencies. Educators and researchers should identify the most appropriate and highest-performing IPC instruments according to the context in which they will be used. Systematic review registration: Open Science Framework (https://archive.org/details/osf-registrations-vrfjn-v1).
CITATION STYLE
Allvin, R., Thompson, C., & Edelbring, S. (2024). Variations in measurement of interprofessional core competencies: a systematic review of self-report instruments in undergraduate health professions education. Journal of Interprofessional Care. Taylor and Francis Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/13561820.2023.2241505
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