The Role of Movement in Physical Therapist Clinical Reasoning.

Phys Ther

Department of Physical Therapy, Jefferson College of Rehabilitation Sciences, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how physical therapists incorporate movement into their clinical reasoning and whether this aligns with educational practices that view the human body as a teacher.
  • It used qualitative methods and focus groups across various practice settings to identify key themes in therapists' reasoning related to movement.
  • Three main themes emerged: movement as a driver for optimizing function, the multisensory nature of movement reasoning, and the importance of communication in understanding movement.
  • The research highlights the need for physical therapy education to reflect the role of movement in clinical reasoning for future practitioners.

Article Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study was to explore how physical therapists use movement as a component of their clinical reasoning. Additionally, this research explored whether movement as a component of clinical reasoning aligns with the proposed signature pedagogy for physical therapist education, human body as teacher.

Methods: The study utilized qualitative, descriptive methods in a multiple case studies design (each practice setting represented a different case for analysis purposes) with cross-case comparisons. Researchers conducted 8 focus groups across practice settings including acute care, inpatient neurological, outpatient orthopedics, and pediatrics. Each focus group had 4 to 6 participants. Through an iterative, interactive process of coding and discussion among all researchers, a final coding scheme was developed.

Results: Through exploration of the research aims, 3 themes emerged from the data. These primary themes are: (1) movement drives clinical reasoning to optimize function; (2) reasoning about movement is multisensory and embodied; and (3) reasoning about movement relies on communication.

Conclusions: This research supports a description of movement as the lens used by physical therapists in clinical reasoning and the integral role of movement in clinical reasoning and in learning from and through movement of the human body while learning from clinical reasoning experiences in practice.

Impact: As the understanding of the ways physical therapists use and learn from movement in clinical reasoning and practice continues to emerge, it is important to continue exploring ways to best make this expanded, embodied conception of clinical reasoning explicit in the education of future generations of physical therapists.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ptj/pzad085DOI Listing

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