Megan E. Gregory, Ph.D.

Associate Professor



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Megan E. Gregory, Ph.D.

Associate Professor


Curriculum vitae


Health Outcomes & Biomedical Informatics

University of Florida




Megan E. Gregory, Ph.D.

Associate Professor


Health Outcomes & Biomedical Informatics

University of Florida



Promoting Teamwork in Translational Medical Teams: Insights and Recommendations from Science and Practice


Journal article


Lauren E. Benishek, A. Hughes, M. Gregory, Shirley Sonesh, E. Salas, E. Lazzara
2014

Semantic Scholar
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Benishek, L. E., Hughes, A., Gregory, M., Sonesh, S., Salas, E., & Lazzara, E. (2014). Promoting Teamwork in Translational Medical Teams: Insights and Recommendations from Science and Practice.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Benishek, Lauren E., A. Hughes, M. Gregory, Shirley Sonesh, E. Salas, and E. Lazzara. “Promoting Teamwork in Translational Medical Teams: Insights and Recommendations from Science and Practice” (2014).


MLA   Click to copy
Benishek, Lauren E., et al. Promoting Teamwork in Translational Medical Teams: Insights and Recommendations from Science and Practice. 2014.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{lauren2014a,
  title = {Promoting Teamwork in Translational Medical Teams: Insights and Recommendations from Science and Practice},
  year = {2014},
  author = {Benishek, Lauren E. and Hughes, A. and Gregory, M. and Sonesh, Shirley and Salas, E. and Lazzara, E.}
}

Abstract

Translational medical teams are transdisciplinary, highly collaborative, and operate within dynamic environments to solve time-sensitive and complex problems. These teams are tasked with turning observations in the laboratory and clinic into effective interventions that improve the health of individuals and the public. The nature of the problems they seek to solve requires coordination among clinicians, scientists, and experts from various scientific disciplines. Characteristically, translational medical teams have complex compositions, structure, and pluralistic goals, which pose significant challenges and barriers to enacting effective teamwork, compromising team performance. Given these challenges, it is imperative to glean insights from teams research and the science of team science on how to execute efficacious teamwork. Consequently, the purpose of this paper is to discuss specific teamwork processes (i.e., trust, communication, self-correction, backup behavior, shared mental models, and conflict management) that are critical to translational medical team performance and offer mechanisms to better equip such teams. Utilizing a theoretical framework of transdisciplinary teamwork adapted from the science of team science and tailored to translational medical teams, we describe each of these processes, their relation to translational medical team outcomes, and how they can be leveraged to improve teamwork. Such a discussion aims to provide practical guidance for conceptualizing and enhancing teamwork in translational medical teams.


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