Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
954438 | Social Science & Medicine | 2008 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Systematic reviews of health care education have consistently reported a lack of long-term effects, failure to use theory, and inadequate methodological rigour. Such findings have highlighted the lack of a clear causality and predictability in health care education research and therefore the inadequacy of a traditional scientific framework with its focus on analysis, prediction and control. This article argues that in order to develop an effective and standardised framework we must go beyond such a restrictive agenda and toward one that appreciates education as a complex adaptive system. It uses the example of interprofessional education in the UK to showcase its discussion.
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Authors
Helen Cooper, Robert Geyer,