Module 3: Education & LTC

90 3.5.2 Communities of Practice

A Community of Practice (CoP) is a group of practitioners with a shared interest who collaborate to exchange knowledge and experiences and support practice change[1].

Role of CoPs:

  • CoPs are instrumental for supporting health care professionals in LTC
  • CoPs exist province wide and nationally
  • Foster collaboration and knowledge-sharing
  • CoPs exist for a multitude of reasons including and not limited to; clinical and/or professional skills and issues, organizational and leadership, and interestingly even from a legal standpoint

Benefits of a CoP:

CoP to support NP role development and integration can help to advance the NP role in healthcare

A collaborative CoP model addresses:

  • The internal interests and requirements of participating members
  • Attends to the external worries of the organization, and
  • Contributes to health care enhancement

CoPs also provide:

  • Perspective and understanding of the problems
  • Shared practice to reduce duplication, cost and time
  • Shared knowledge to foster a stronger workforce and increased sources of expertise
  • Meaningful participation and increased trust and confidence

Building a successful CoP

A CoP can start small as people come together in shared interest, and does not have to proceed in a lock step order

Key factors that are crucial to the success of a CoP include:


  1. Burgess & Sawchenko, 2011a
  2. Hospice Palliative Care Ontario, n.d.
  3. Community of Practice, 2016
  4. Wenger-Trayner et al, 2013

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Nurse Practitioners Delivering Primary Care in the Long Term Care Setting Copyright © 2024 by Erin Ziegler, Carrie Heer and Adhiba Nilormi is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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