In healthcare, teamwork is "a dynamic
process involving two or more healthcare professionals with complementary
background and skills, sharing common health goals and exercising concerted
physical and mental effort in assessing, planning, or evaluating patient
care".
In a business setting, accounting techniques
may be used to provide financial measures of the benefits of
teamwork which are useful for justifying the concept. Health-care
policy-makers increasingly advocate teamwork as a means of assuring quality and
safety in the delivery of services a committee of the Institute of
Medicine recommended in 2000 that patient-safety programs
"establish interdisciplinary team training programs for providers that
incorporate proven methods of team training, such as simulation."
In health care, a systematic concept
analysis in 2008 concluded teamwork to be "a dynamic process
involving two or more healthcare professionals with complementary backgrounds
and skills, sharing common health goals and exercising concerted physical and
mental effort in assessing, planning, or evaluating patient care." Elsewhere teamwork is defined as "those behaviors
that facilitate effective team member interaction", with "team"
defined as "a group of two or more individuals who perform some work
related task, interact with one another dynamically, have a shared past, have a
foreseeable shared future, and share a common fate". Another
definition for teamwork proposed in 2008 is "the interdependent components
of performance required to effectively coordinate the performance of multiple
individuals"; as such, teamwork is "nested within" the broader
concept of team performance, which also includes individual-level task work.
A 2012 review of the academic literature
found that the word "teamwork" has been used "as a catchall to
refer to a number of behavioral processes and emergent states".
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