What scholarly practice means to respiratory therapists: An interpretive description study.

J Eval Clin Pract

School of Physical and Occupational Therapy, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Engagement in scholarly practice enhances professional empowerment and satisfaction in healthcare, but respiratory therapy lacks this aspect in its competency frameworks, creating an educational gap.
  • * The study aimed to examine the meaning and manifestation of scholarly practice from the perspectives of respiratory therapists through qualitative interviews.
  • * Five themes emerged from the analysis, highlighting the identity of scholarly practitioners, influences on their practice, self-image, the role of scholarly practice in evolving healthcare, and the interconnectedness of knowledge and practice.

Article Abstract

Rationale: Engagement in scholarly practice has been associated with professional empowerment, role satisfaction and improvements in care delivery and patient outcomes across many healthcare professions. However, in evolving professions like respiratory therapy, scholarly practice is excluded from competency frameworks, resulting in a gap in education and subsequent application of this competency in practice. An exploration of scholarly practice in respiratory therapy may provide insights into evolving professions that face tensions between meeting competency requirements as outlined in frameworks and providing quality healthcare to the populations they serve.

Aims And Objectives: The aim of the study was to explore what scholarly practice means, and how it manifests in practice from respiratory therapists' (RTs) perspectives.

Methods: We used interpretive description methodology. We purposively sampled participants to obtain varied perspectives of scholarly practice in respiratory therapy. We conducted 26 semistructured interviews with RTs in different roles (clinicians, educators, researchers, leaders and managers) across Canada and analysed the data using inductive analysis. Data collection and analysis proceeded concurrently.

Results: We developed five main themes: (i) the identity of a scholarly practitioner in RTs; (ii) factors influencing scholarly practice; (iii) one's impression of their professional self-image; (iv) scholarly practice as a vehicle for changing practice and (v) the complex interconnections between knowledges and practices.

Conclusion: Scholarly practice appears to be a multifaceted phenomenon encompassing a wide range of activities and skills including conducting research, reflective practice, application of research to practice, and contributing to the advancement of the profession and healthcare. Scholarly practice is influenced by organisational context and culture, available resources, intrinsic motivation and external political context. We identified similarities between professional identity and the description of the scholarly practitioner, suggesting that these two phenomena may be interconnected. Furthermore, participants believed that scholarly practice could enhance the image, credibility, legitimacy and professionalisation of the profession.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jep.13917DOI Listing

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