Interprofessional Collaborative Systems-based Practice
Though Dr. Marilyn Luptak has worked with interprofessional teams throughout her career
as a geriatric social worker, expanding team-based care more broadly across health
systems is a recent trend. “I’m convinced patients with complex medical and behavioral
health needs are better served by an interprofessional team than by a single health
provider,” she said. “I’m also convinced that, across health systems, we need to
ground more professionals in this approach at the beginning of their careers.” Thanks
to resources from the National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education
Accelerating Interprofessional Community-based Education and Practice grant, the University
of Utah College of Social Work is using interprofessional education (IPE) hotspotting
immersions to help students develop core competencies for interprofessional collaborative
practice. With this grant funding, the University of Utah has been able to place
hotspotting teams in a Salt Lake County Housing Authority setting for chronically
homeless individuals. The teams of students from health and behavioral health professions
support Housing First residents who have complex and persistent health and non-health
needs, such as substance use disorders, need for education, medical conditions, or
mental health issues. The inclusion of social work students on these teams is critical,
as they are professionally attuned to broader social determinants of health. Exposing
these emerging professionals to each other’s strengths early on encourages future
collaboration. Dr. Luptak explains, “By incorporating community-based interprofessional
team work into our students’ education, we are preparing them to better address social
determinants of health and improve health outcomes for their future real-world patients.”