Ameanthea Blanco Knezovich and Jessica Parrott
South University, Virginia USA
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Adv Practice Nurs
Innovative Advanced Practice Nursing Education (IAPNE) that promotes and instills interprofessional education and collaborative practice utilizing mobile medical health clinics is an educational and healthcare delivery model with a two-fold purpose of creating a built, yet flexible environment, that promotes, fosters and extends interprofessional collaborative practice for service agencies, while improving the health-related quality of life (HRQOL) for underserved populations. This innovative practice is a system transforming model that achieves the World Health Organizationâ??s (WHO) call for interprofessional education and collaborative practice, and the United Statesâ?? Healthy People 2020 objective of increase in self-reported better physical and mental health for the adult population. This practice model of IAPNE utilizes HRQOL initiatives that encompass physical, mental, emotional and social functioning. These four areas are addressed through a mobile medical health clinic (MMHC) that includes the interprofessional education and collaboration of nurse practitioners, baccalaureate prepared nurses, pharmacists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, chiropractors, health managers, social work, mental health providers, barber/beauticians and spiritual guides. This delivery model works to improves access and coordination of healthservices for vulnerable populations while decreasing tension among service agencies. The setting of the MMHC further works to increase patient and practitioner satisfaction, promote greater acceptance of treatment, reduce health-care cost and improve mental and emotional health. The culture shift that has been created by IAPNE has provided students of service agencies with an understanding and consideration of vulnerable, underserved populations, and instilled the necessity of interprofessional collaboration with the professional obligation to support communities for which they serve.
Journal of Advanced Practices in Nursing received 410 citations as per Google Scholar report