Department of Maternal and Child Health, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7445, USA.
Matern Child Health J. 2013 Jul;17(5):949-58. doi: 10.1007/s10995-012-1078-8.
We studied the effects of the Interdisciplinary Leadership Development Program (ILDP) on MCH trainees from five MCHB-funded training programs at the UNC-Chapel Hill from the years 2001-2008. Specifically, we examined attitudes/beliefs about interdisciplinary practice and the frequency of use of interdisciplinary skills; identified effects of interdisciplinary training on career choices; and, examined the ways in which graduates used their interdisciplinary skills to effect change in MCH organizations and systems, up to 8 years after completion of training. Using a post-test design, participants in the ILDP were contacted to complete a web-based survey. Non-participating LEND and public health graduates were recruited for comparison. Guided by EvaluLEAD, we designed questions that asked graduates to rate the influence of their programs on their attitudes/beliefs and skills (on 5-point Likert scales), and to describe those influences in some detail in open-ended questions. The 208 respondents represented 59.6 % of the graduates from 2001 through 2008. Model-predicted mean levels of frequency of use of interdisciplinary skilIs was associated with ILDP participation (p = 0.008) and nearly so for interdisciplinary attitudes/beliefs (p = 0.067). There is an association between four domains of systems changes and frequency of skill use: develop/improve a program (3.24 vs. 2.74, p < 0.0001); improve the way an organization works (3.31 vs. 2.88, p < 0.0001); develop/improve a partnership (3.22 vs. 2.83, p < 0.0003); and, develop a policy (3.32 vs. 2.98, p < 0.0013). Graduates used interdisciplinary training to improve outcomes for families and to effect change in MCH systems. MCH leaders should disseminate, more broadly, rigorous assessments of the training intended to develop leadership competencies that underpin effective interdisciplinary practice.
我们研究了跨学科领导力发展计划(ILDP)对北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校五个由 MCHB 资助的培训项目的 MCH 学员的影响,这些项目的时间跨度为 2001 年至 2008 年。具体来说,我们研究了学员对跨学科实践的态度/信念以及使用跨学科技能的频率;确定了跨学科培训对职业选择的影响;并研究了毕业生在完成培训后长达 8 年内如何利用其跨学科技能来改变 MCH 组织和系统。我们采用后测设计,联系 ILDP 的参与者完成了一项基于网络的调查。还招募了未参加 ILDP 的 LEND 和公共卫生专业的毕业生作为比较。在 EvaluLEAD 的指导下,我们设计了一些问题,要求毕业生对他们的项目对他们的态度/信念和技能的影响进行评分(在 5 分制的李克特量表上),并在开放式问题中详细描述这些影响。208 名受访者代表了 2001 年至 2008 年期间毕业的学员的 59.6%。模型预测的跨学科技能使用频率的平均值与 ILDP 的参与相关(p=0.008),与跨学科态度/信念的参与也接近相关(p=0.067)。系统变化的四个领域与技能使用频率之间存在关联:制定/改进项目(3.24 对 2.74,p<0.0001);改善组织运作方式(3.31 对 2.88,p<0.0001);制定/改进伙伴关系(3.22 对 2.83,p<0.0003);以及制定政策(3.32 对 2.98,p<0.0013)。毕业生利用跨学科培训来改善家庭的成果,并改变 MCH 系统。MCH 领导者应更广泛地传播对旨在培养领导力的培训的严格评估,这些培训是有效跨学科实践的基础。