AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how clinicians perceive and address factors influencing wheelchair skills training for children who use manual or power wheelchairs.
  • Data were collected through audio-recorded Zoom sessions where clinicians analyzed videos of children performing wheelchair skills, discussing the factors they observed and considered.
  • Results showed that clinicians identified over 1,200 distinct factors related to skills training, with most factors relating to the Activities and Participation domain of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) framework, indicating complexity in training that involves more than just motor skills.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Children who use a manual wheelchair (WC) or a power WC may not receive adequate WC skills training. Clinicians report knowledge as a barrier to the provision of paediatric WC skills training. The purpose of this study was to explore the breadth and depth of specific factors clinicians consider when providing WC skills training for children.

Methods: Data in this modified Think Aloud study were gathered one-on-one, Zoom-based, audio-recorded Think Aloud Sessions. Sessions consisted of participants viewing four videos, each of different children performing a different WC skill while thinking aloud (verbally expressing) about the factors they recognized, observed, and considered while watching the video. After each video, participants also responded to questions regarding the specific WC skill and the provision of WC skills training for the child in the video. Factors participants reported were independently identified by three researchers through a deductive process of directed content analysis and categorized using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) coding system.

Results: Twenty-eight English-speaking clinicians participated in the study. A total of 1246 distinct factors were mapped to 352 unique ICF codes spanning all four ICF Domains. The largest number of identified factors mapped to codes within the Activities and participation Domain (42.25%).

Conclusion: Participants reported considering multiple factors across the ICF in the provision of WC skills training for children. Providing paediatric WC skills training is a complex activity requiring clinicians to consider a wide range of factors that go beyond a child's motor abilities.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17483107.2023.2238004DOI Listing

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