ABSTRACT

The move to multidisciplinary teams in primary care and the emphasis on joined-up working across the human services make it increasingly necessary for health and social care professionals to take on a variety of leadership roles in teams made up of people from different professional backgrounds. This sort of leadership requires different skills from those required when working in the context of a single profession familiar to every member of the team.

In Leading Interprofessional Teams in Health and Social Care, the authors use detailed case-studies to explore these skills. Nurses, social workers and other health and social care professionals, specialists and managers are included in the case-studies to demonstrate how leadership and teamworking roles can be taken in different ways and in different circumstances. The final section of the book presents an analysis of the case-studies to draw out the key issues and discusses how readers might develop themselves to be successful leaders and team members in these diverse settings.

part |1 pages

PART 1 INTRODUCTION

part |1 pages

PART 2 CASE STUDIES

chapter 2|25 pages

VIRTUAL MULTIDISCIPLINARY TEAM

chapter 3|26 pages

ASSERTIVE OUTREACH MENTAL HEALTH TEAM

chapter 4|18 pages

OUTPATIENTS REFERRAL TEAM

chapter 5|24 pages

CANCER COLLABORATIVE NETWORK

chapter 6|18 pages

REABLEMENT FOR HOMECARE TEAM

part |1 pages

PART 3 THEORY AND PRACTICE

chapter 8|8 pages

A FRAMEWORK FOR UNDERSTANDING LEADERSHIP

chapter 9|8 pages

THEORY AND PRACTICE IN TEAMWORKING

chapter 10|2 pages

REFLECTIONS AND CONCLUSIONS