Introduction: It is now widely accepted in physiotherapy and in other health professions, that involving patients in the design, planning and implementation of services is best practice. Little is, however, known about how physiotherapy students perceive their professional development in applying person-centered practice.
Objective: To analyze how undergraduate physiotherapy students experience the process of learning to work in a person-centered way in clinical practice.
Method: Five focus-group interviews of final-year physiotherapy students.
Results: It is important that students communicate in ways that accommodate the sociocultural characteristics of their patients. Students, where they experience that mutual understanding is not possible to achieve, tend to resort to the biomedical model and take on an expert instructor role that is met with acceptance from the patients. Some practice contexts were also found to strongly promote person-centered practice, others tightly restricting it.
Conclusion: In the educational setting, attention should be paid to the practice learning context, to the improvement of the ability of students to grasp the lived world of patients, and to activate their own identities and experiences as a relational tool in practicing person-centered care.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09593985.2022.2089609 | DOI Listing |
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