Occupational Therapy Professor Wins National Award for Excellence in Healthcare Teamwork

海角直播 (SMU) Assistant Professor Beth Ching will receive a national award for her work in fostering collaboration among occupational therapists and other healthcare professionals to improve health outcomes for patients.

Ching will be presented the Interprofessional Collaboration Award by the at its 2017 Annual Conference and Centennial Celebration in Philadelphia on April 1. The award recognizes an occupational therapist who 鈥渄emonstrates exemplary interprofessional collaboration in order to provide client-centered care, provide innovation in health professional education, or improve health outcomes through research.鈥

The award will be inscribed with the motto, 鈥淢aking space for everyone at the table.鈥

Ching said she has dedicated herself to building cross-professional knowledge throughout her career to improve the client鈥檚 experience. She鈥檚 worked mostly with patients who have serious and chronic needs, such as severe mental illness and traumatic brain injury.

鈥淚f we can鈥檛 all work together, we can鈥檛 serve the client as best we can,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he patient shows a different face to the doctor, a different face to the nurse, a different face to the social worker, and another face to the occupational therapist. We have to put those pieces together to work as a holistic team for the benefit of the patient.鈥

At SMU, one of Ching鈥檚 first assignments was to teach an interprofessional class that brought together occupational therapy and physical therapy students.

At first, the students focused on what made their future professions different and unique, rather than working as part of the same team. The challenges of the course led Ching to focus on improving at SMU, one of the nation鈥檚 early adopters of IPE curriculum.

鈥淲orking in teams with other healthcare professionals is the model of the future,鈥 Ching said. 鈥淥ur students are going to be prepared for that reality.鈥

Beginning in 2014 Ching, along with her SMU faculty colleagues, helped create a pilot class for 25 students from all five of the University鈥檚 degree programs: nursing, podiatric medicine, physician assistant, physical therapy and occupational therapy.

Over the six-month IPE class, the students gained a better understanding of one another鈥檚 professional roles and how to approach healthcare delivery as a team. They studied concepts like 鈥渋mplicit bias鈥 toward patients and discussed the social determinants of health, and how healthcare professionals can work together to identify the causes of their patient鈥檚 ailments.  

In his nominating letter for Ching, wrote that Ching exhibits a strong teamwork ethic both in clinical practice and in the classroom.

鈥淎ssistant Professor Ching recognizes that an interdisciplinary, non-hierarchal team can provide a seamless continuum of decision-making that results in client-centered care and maximizes patient outcomes鈥his attitude to client-centered care can begin during professional education but only if this is taught and experienced.鈥

Student Alondra Ammon said while Ching has strongly influenced how she鈥檒l approach her work as an occupational therapist, Ching鈥檚 real impact in her SMU experience has gone beyond textbooks and exam scores. 

鈥淥ne of the most important lessons I learned from Professor Ching was that faculty may serve as more than just educators, but also advocates and mentors,鈥 Ammon said.

Ching said whether she鈥檚 working with clients or students, she works hard to make the exchange equally valuable for all parties involved.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a gift to spend time with people in their most vulnerable moments,鈥 she said of patients. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a two-way exchange. Hopefully, the patient is getting from me skills and experiences and tools to grow; and they鈥檙e giving me a gift to be able to share a moment for them that鈥檚 both traumatic and transformative.

鈥淚 also try really hard to make students feel comfortable because I know what it鈥檚 like to be an outsider; I鈥檝e been one myself. So, I don鈥檛 take it for granted what anyone鈥檚 experience is like walking into a classroom and I try to welcome everyone into the group, no matter where they come from or whatever their background may be.鈥