Introduction
The ‘interprofessional collaborator’ is recognized as a critical role in working with different healthcare professionals in a team [
1]. The role of ‘collaborator’ in health workers formed in the interprofessional socialization process. The workers of different professions in an interprofessional team experience socialization through working and learning from and about each other.
Socialization is a process that begins in school and continues until the end of professional activity to form the professional identity of people [
2]. Cruess et al. believed that identity is achieved when a worker demonstrates knowledge, competence, performance, and action as a professional [
3]. Improving interprofessional knowledge, beliefs, and skills facilitates the formation of interprofessional identification [
2].
Interprofessional socialization facilitates the development of a dual identity. The dual identity formation requires creating a sense of belonging to the profession and self-awareness as a member of the healthcare team/community [
4]. Interprofessional socialization increases the preparedness of healthcare professionals for effectively integrating interprofessional collaboration into their current activities [
4].
The interprofessional identity of healthcare workers helps to achieve the goal of interprofessional practice. Interprofessional practice occurs when healthcare workers from two or more professions work together with a common purpose, commitment, and mutual respect [
5]. Reeves and colleagues explained the four forms of interprofessional practice including teamwork, collaboration, coordination, and networking. They believed The form of interprofessional teamwork required high levels of core elements consisting of shared team identity, clarity of goals and roles, interdependence, integration, and shared responsibility. Interprofessional teamwork facilitates the management of unpredictable, urgent, and complex situations such as emergency services. Interprofessional collaboration was a ‘looser’ form of interprofessional teamwork. Interprofessional collaboration required a high level of shared accountability and interdependence between individuals, as well, as clarity of roles/goals. The shared identity and integration of workers were less important in collaborative groups than in teams. Interprofessional coordination was similar to collaboration in terms of shared identity, shared accountability between workers, and clarity of roles and goals. However, integration and interdependence were viewed as less significant. In the format of interprofessional networks, shared team identity, clarity of roles/goals, interdependence, integration, and shared responsibility were viewed as less essential than coordination. The format of interprofessional networks matched with the situations where predictable, non-complex, and non-urgent care was required such as in a primary care practice setting. The clinical purpose and patients’ needs to direct the form of interprofessional practice according to the contingency approach [
6].
Interprofessional socialization plays a key role in the interprofessional identification of workers and team success [
7]. The interprofessional socialization process goes beyond the arrangement of different professionals [
4] and is affected by individual, cultural, and contextual factors. According to the best of our knowledge, the explanation of the interprofessional socialization process using a qualitative approach is less addressed in the previous studies [
4,
8‐
10]. McGuire’s study suggested further research on the reciprocal process of professional socialization and interprofessional socialization from the viewpoints of learners and personnel is needed [
11]. It was suggested to use a qualitative approach to identify the factors affecting the interprofessional collaboration process [
9]. This study aimed to explore the experience of healthcare team members related to facilitators and barriers in interprofessional socialization to become a collaborator.
Discussion
The interprofessional socialization process prepares healthcare workers to play the role of interprofessional collaborators. The confrontation between interprofessional professionalism commitment and uni-professionalism is explored as reciprocal dimensions in interprofessional socialization. The formation of the interprofessional identity of workers is facilitated by their commitment to interprofessional professionalism and values and recognition and team-centered accountability. As well, uni-professional centrism through immature team-centered competencies and uni-professional culture disrupted the interprofessional identity process.
Interprofessional identity is defined as belonging to both professions and the interprofessional community [
4]. The interprofessional identity is formed in interprofessional socialization as a process of building capacity in workers to form a dual professional identity and helping achieve interprofessional collaboration. Interprofessional socialization is defined as a process in which workers develop a dual professional and interprofessional identity (dual identity) through the acquisition of both professional and interprofessional beliefs, values, behaviors, and commitments to become an interprofessional collaborator. Interprofessional socialization facilitates the transformation of health professions education and practices toward effective interprofessional teamwork [
16].
A study by Khalili and colleagues described a three-step process of interprofessional socialization. This process includes removing barriers, learning professional and interprofessional roles, and developing dual identities. Khalili’s model emphasized breaking down barriers related to the uni-professional perspective of workers to reduce/eliminate their out-group discrimination. The second stage of Khalili’s model focused on achieving the interprofessional competency domains to improve a sense of belonging and identity to the interprofessional team/community [
16]. Consistently, the present results showed that the confrontation of uni-professional centrism and commitment to interprofessional professionalism as a main competency in the interprofessional socialization process was experienced by the healthcare workers. In Khalili’s model, the formation of interprofessional identity was shown as a linear model in three stages. In the present study, the formation of interprofessional identity was explained in the simultaneous confrontation between the commitment to interprofessional professionalism principles and uni-professional centrism. The predominance of each of the extracted factors plays an important role in the level of workers’ identification in the spectrum of interprofessional practice.
Reeves and colleagues defined the spectrum of interprofessional practice from teamwork to network. They showed that interprofessional practice is influenced by six elements including shared team identity, clear roles/goals, interdependence, integration, shared responsibility, and team tasks. The highest level of elements among team members facilitates the format of interprofessional teamwork and the lower level of those leads to the interprofessional network format [
6]. Our results showed the increase in interprofessional professionalism commitment among workers had a curial role in the transformation of interprofessional practice into the interprofessional teamwork format. The predominance of uni-professional centrism resulted in forming an interprofessional network that did not match the needs of the emergency department.
Pettigrew and Troop in an intergroup contact theory discussed adherence to respect and value each other, and recognition of team working roles in a team effect on the practice of team members. In addition, they stated anxiety as feelings of threat and uncertainty that people experience in intergroup contexts required to decrease [
17]. Similarly, our results indicated the components of interprofessional values such as respect, value-based relationships, appreciation, and effective interprofessional relationships were explained, which can have a positive impact on the formation of interprofessional identity and also in achieving the goal of interprofessional practice. In our results, the uni-professional culture, issues about the uni-professional attitude, and individualism disrupted the interprofessional socialization process and increase the out-group anxiety. The uni-professional education in our context may result in increasing out-group conflict and negative stereotypes [
18,
19].
Burford in a study discussed the group processes in medical education from the perspective of social identity theory. A main area in the social identity was defined as team-working as group processes in the workplace. According to the social identity theory, group membership was affected by positive attitudes towards in-group members and the denigration of out-group members. He stated healthcare workers often hold stereotyped views of one another and tensions can arise in different ways in a clinical setting [
20]. Consistently, the present results explained the effect of conflict between the in-group and out-group in forming interprofessional identity. In line with our result, positive attitude and commitment to team norms were explored as facilitators, and individualism and uni-professional culture were explored as the main barriers in the interprofessional socialization of the healthcare workers.
Interprofessional professionalism underlined the adherence to the principles and values such as respect, communication, excellence, altruism, trust and empathy, and responsibility of professional and team responsibilities within the interprofessional collaboration process [
21,
22]. According to this result, compliance with professionalism principles and respect for professional values such as mutual respect, gratitude, and accountability to team responsibility were explained as factors affecting interprofessional socialization. In the IPEC report, mutual respect constitutes the link in the interprofessional relationship for team-based care and plays a significant role in maintaining a respectful environment [
1]. In line with our findings, Peu’s study showed that internalizing interprofessional shared values in the socialization process improves ethical, and collaborative performance in clinical environments [
23]. The observance of respect and ethics, trust, integrity, and frankness in interprofessional collaboration explored the influential factors in their study [
23]. According to our results, compliance with the professionalism principles among the team members facilitates the socialization for forming the interprofessional identity.
Team-based accountability was explored as the most important facilitator of interprofessional socialization in this study. This subcategory includes responding to individual and team responsibilities, accommodating team-centered norms, and team-based support. The recognition and acceptance of professional and interprofessional roles, responsibility, and accountability to individuals and teams were emphasized in this subcategory. The participants have stated that mutual understanding, the explanation of shared goals, teamwork, supporting each other, and efforts to respond to team needs played significant roles in forming interprofessional identities. The experiences of participants about the perceived facilitators were compatible with the competency domains reported by the Collaborative Interprofessional Education including ‘value and ethics’, ‘role and responsibilities, ‘team and teamwork, and ‘interprofessional communication [
1]. In line with our study, an ethnographic study by Gaudet suggested that a sense of responsibility, communication in the collaborative process, and building mutual respect and trust were crucial elements of interprofessional collaboration [
24]. Different studies acknowledged understanding the role and expertise of different professions were explored as a facilitator of interprofessional collaboration and respectful communication in the team [
25‐
28].
The results showed adhering and respecting to team values highlighted in forming the interprofessional identity. The third step of the interprofessional socialization model that introduced by Khalili indicated people with dual identities value, respect, and celebrate a united team. Similar to the present study, adherence to the team-based norm was explored as a facilitating factor of interprofessional identity formation. A set of interrelated factors, including role recognition, team attitude, team support, and interprofessional commitment to collaboration, help the team members perform their professional duties and team responsibilities by following team norms. Consistent with the present study, Sims introduced team norms, shared and effective responsibility, and understanding of common goals as invisible factors affecting improved teamwork [
29]. Soones and colleagues highlighted the teamwork culture as an influential factor in team-based care [
30]. In line with the present findings, Schot’s results revealed that people of different professions collaborate differently. Their results indicated that interprofessional collaboration was established by eliminating professional social and physical problems, removing the barriers to professional duties via negotiation about overlapping roles and responsibilities, and creating opportunities to understand members’ professional duties and roles [
31]. The present study explored horizontal and vertical support between the team and the organization as a facilitator of interprofessional identity formation. Team-based support means planning, establishing, and supporting a collaborative environment to meet the shared organizational goals and direct team members and the organization to work together to achieve the goals [
24,
32]. Thus, the creation of interprofessional norms and the development of critical competencies among members of healthcare teams could significantly contribute to interprofessional identification.
In the next category, the factors disrupting interprofessional socialization were explored. Immature team-based competencies and uni-professional perceptions were two main factors disrupting the formation of interprofessional identity. The uni-professional centrism resulted in the acquisition of norms, values, beliefs, and the professional-centrism culture, without attention to the interprofessional culture. The dominancy of a uni-professional identity was explored as an obstacle to the interprofessional socialization process. Similarly, the social identity and intergroup contact theories discussed an isolationist approach that led to the development uni-professional identity of learners comprised of ‘in-profession favoritism’ and ‘out-profession discrimination’. These in-group and out-group behaviors may achieve due to limited understanding and knowledge of different professional roles. Their limitation is restricted to the participation of workers in interprofessional collaborative practice [
16,
17]. In our context, uni-professional education was used in clinical education in formal and informal programs, and continuous education may result in the dominancy of the uni-professional identity among the workers. Similarly, profession-centrism was described as a barrier to social identity in interprofessional practice [
33].
The present results showed the uni-professional culture, which arises from bounded relations and a negative attitude toward interprofessional collaboration among team members, disrupted interprofessional socialization. Individualism of team members, failure to understand the nature of interprofessional work, a biased attitude towards other professions, and stereotypes break down the interprofessional identification process. The ineffective communication [
34] and conflicts among disciplines [
35] hinder multilateral communication and team interactions that prevent effective collaboration [
36]. In addition, stereotypes and prejudices among members of different professions reduced collaboration [
37,
38]. These participants believed that the discriminatory atmosphere in the clinical wards due to the uni-professional culture obstructed the establishment of interprofessional identification. The effect of this atmosphere on other members, especially the new team members, led to the failing development of interprofessional identification. Similarly, Strudwick et al. believed that creating tribal and guild boundaries among different professions keeps members of different professions away from each other in the team and disrupt the interprofessional collaboration atmosphere [
39].
Poor communication and collaboration with other healthcare team members were discussed in the category of immature Team-centered competencies. Perceived hierarchy and unawareness about the role and responsibilities of team members were introduced as the challenges of interprofessional cooperation in several studies [
39,
40], which resulted from uni-professional centrism. As for the present study, Paradis’ study showed that failure to understand the professional hierarchy, roles, expertise, and performance could negatively affect service providers in the ward [
41]. Our study showed weak attitudes and skills in interprofessional collaboration were the main barriers to interprofessional socialization. Lack of communication and teamwork skills, unawareness of the role of other people, discriminatory attitudes, and stereotypes create an atmosphere not conducive to establishing interprofessional identity. Pecukonis discussed the elimination of profession-centrism as a solution to achieve interprofessional practice among healthcare workers [
33].
In the theoretical lens of signature pedagogy, three apprenticeships of learning have described the formation of identity; “ [
1] a cognitive apprenticeship to learn to think like others in your profession, [
2] a practical apprenticeship to learn how to perform like those in your profession and, [
3] a moral apprenticeship to learn how to act with moral integrity” [
42]. The cognitive and practical apprenticeship in the uni-professional setting reinforced the profession-centrism and disrupted the interprofessional identity formation among workers in our study. These issues may affect the resistance of workers to assume an interprofessional collaborator role in these teams. The participants acknowledged the uni-professional attitude, and individualism resulting from a cognitive apprenticeship in the uni-professional setting, that they learned to think uni-professionally. Moreover, the interprofessional competencies were learned by the practical apprenticeship that the workers learned from their professions in the uni-professional education and practice. The results of Best and colleagues showed the cognitive apprenticeship explored as the main challenge in the formation of professional identity. They believed that thinking as a member of an interprofessional team was a challenging issue while acting with moral integrity was more forthright [
43]. Shulman (2005) highlighted professional education assists in the formation of behaviors of workers in the future, and facilitate understanding of values and constructs within their professions and interprofessional relationship [
42]. Hence, the workers need support for preserving their professional identity and developing interprofessional identity through the fluidity of interprofessional working in a healthcare team. The interprofessional learning situations facilitated the exploration of the various facets of professional identity by the workers [
43]. Interprofessional education was suggested to improve the team working in medical education systems by increasing understanding of other professions and reducing negative stereotypes [
20].
We have addressed the experiences of healthcare workers related to the interprofessional practice of in-group and out-group. Further studies need to focus on the workers’ perception related to patients as a member of the team in interprofessional practice.
Limitations
Because a qualitative approach was used in this study, the qualitative findings may not apply to other populations with different cultural backgrounds.
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