wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/84296ef069d3051f375faee8e87e4235-park-sunggeun-etha/info.yaml

100 lines
3.4 KiB
YAML

abstract: 'Providers of public health and social services ({''''}providers{''''})
develop and deliver services by engaging in interprofessional
collaboration (IPC), from seeking external advice to making referrals
and linkages to various social and public health services. Providers
collaborate with consumers of social and public health services
({''''}consumers{''''}) and student interns (e.g., social work, public
health) to explore, determine, and deliver relevant services through a
process referred to as co-production. Both IPC and co-production are
widespread strategies with the potential to improve service
accessibility and quality. However, the intersection of co-production
and IPC remains understudied. This study examines factors that influence
co-production in IPC among service providers, consumers, and student
interns. We used cross-sectional survey data from an NIMH-funded study,
including 379 providers in 36 HIV-service organizations in New York
City. We examined the relationships between providers'' perspectives on
co-production in IPC and multiple provider- and organization-level
variables using random-effects logistic regression. Most respondents
said that consumers and students in their agency participate in IPC on
the issues that concern them. Providers who perceive greater flexibility
in the IPC process were more likely to agree that their organizations''
providers co-produced IPC. Organizational service offerings (i.e.,
multilingual services, a comprehensive range of services), job
positions, and full-time employment status were strong predictors of
co-production. Our findings indicate that intentional and inclusive
models of flexible IPC are needed. Fostering co-production in the HIV
service field requires more institutional support and incentives for
organizations, providers, and student interns. Implications for research
and practice are discussed.'
affiliation: 'Park, S (Corresponding Author), Univ Michigan, Sch Social Work, 1080
S Univ Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
Park, Sunggeun (Ethan); Pinto, Rogerio Meireles, Univ Michigan, Sch Social Work,
1080 S Univ Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.'
author: Park, Sunggeun (Ethan) and Pinto, Rogerio Meireles
author-email: sunggeun@umich.edu
author_list:
- family: Park
given: Sunggeun (Ethan)
- family: Pinto
given: Rogerio Meireles
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.1080/19371918.2021.1974638
earlyaccessdate: SEP 2021
eissn: 1937-190X
files: []
issn: 1937-1918
journal: SOCIAL WORK IN PUBLIC HEALTH
keywords: 'Co-production; service consumer; student intern; interprofessional
collaboration; social and health services; HIV; AIDS'
keywords-plus: 'PATIENT-CENTERED CARE; UNITED-STATES; OUTCOMES; SYSTEMS;
RECOMMENDATIONS; PARTICIPATION; PERCEPTIONS; MANAGEMENT; CAPACITY;
BARRIERS'
language: English
month: JAN 2
number: '1'
number-of-cited-references: '60'
pages: 71-83
papis_id: 0fa1fb55eb864adbac7d175480929572
ref: Park2022factorsthat
times-cited: '0'
title: 'Factors that Influence Co-production among Student Interns, Consumers, and
Providers of Social and Public Health Services: Implications for Interprofessional
Collaboration and Training'
type: article
unique-id: WOS:000695363700001
usage-count-last-180-days: '2'
usage-count-since-2013: '49'
volume: '37'
web-of-science-categories: Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health; Social Work
year: '2022'