Interprofessional Education (IPE)
During the course of their studies, students will participate in an average of at least six different meaningful and relevant interprofessional collaborative learning experiences as determined and approved by the School. The experiences will include undergraduate/graduate students or professionals from a total of at least four different health professions with which there are natural affinities or linkages in the professional environment. At least one of these IPE experiences will be in a practice setting. Practicum placements often provide students with the opportunity to work on interprofessional teams. Interprofessional teams may include a variety of professionals such as parents/caregivers, teachers, resource staff, psychologists, early education specialists, occupational therapists, physiotherapists, otolaryngologists, and/or radiologists, to name a few.
Please see more details at Interprofessional Education - ϳԹԻ [PDF - 664 Kb]
Building capacity to support strong and healthy Indigenous communities
As part of the Faculty of Medicine’s commitment to work with Indigenous communities to build robust healthcare capacity, we are working to enrich our undergraduate and postgraduate curricula. Please come back often to learn more about these changes and to see what they will look like for students, residents, faculty, and staff.
ϳԹIPHE Course: Introduction to Cultural Safety in Healthcare for Indigenous People
Since 2019, one focus of the The ACHH Initiative Team has been creating an opportunity for future health practitioners to incorporate cultural safety into their practice and care for Indigenous children and youth. This resulted in the creation of the .
Introduction to Cultural Safety in Healthcare for Indigenous People is required for ϳԹ medical, pharmacy, nursing, dental hygiene and dentistry students. The main aim of the course is to begin to address the by engaging students to learn about the history of Indigenous People and policies that have impacted Indigenous Peoples health and health seeking behaviors. This introductory course is intended to begin to prepare students for clinical practice through the teachings of historical events, treaties, landmark documents as well as anti-racism training, trauma-informed care approaches and cultural safety.
During the course, three Calls to Action are attended to:
- The healthcare system to recognize the value of Aboriginal healing practices (#22)
- Cultural competency training for all health care professionals (#23)
- Medical and nursing students in Canada “to require all students to take a course dealing with Aboriginal health issues” (#24)
For more information, please visit:
/faculty/interprofessional-education.html
For additional information please contact:
- Katie Gloade - katie.gloade@dal.ca
- Brent Young - brent.young@dal.ca
- Margot Latimer - mlatimer@dal.ca