학술논문

An orthopedic manual physical therapy fellowship training's impact on professional development, involvement, personal lives, and income – A survey study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy (Taylor & Francis Ltd). Dec2020, Vol. 28 Issue 5, p287-297. 11p.
Subject
*COMMITMENT (Psychology)
*CONFIDENCE
*EMPLOYMENT
*INCOME
*MANIPULATION therapy
*RESEARCH methodology
*PROFESSIONAL employee training
*QUESTIONNAIRES
*SCALE analysis (Psychology)
*SCHOLARSHIPS
*SELF-evaluation
*EVIDENCE-based medicine
*PROFESSIONAL practice
*PROFESSIONALISM
*THEMATIC analysis
*WORK-life balance
*PATIENT-centered care
*DATA analysis software
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
Language
ISSN
1066-9817
Abstract
Introduction: Little research exists investigating the personal and professional outcomes of postprofessional physical therapy (PT) training. Therefore, the purpose of the current descriptive, web-based survey study was to determine self-reported outcomes from a postprofessional PT fellowship program, including graduate professional, educational, and research involvement; perceptions of the impact of training on clinical and professional attributes; changes in employment and income; and barriers to training. Methods: Graduates of a part-time, hybrid-model, multisite orthopedic manual PT fellowship program were invited to complete the web-based survey. Descriptive data analyses were performed for all quantitative data, and responses to questions were analyzed and categorized into themes. Results: Of the 77 fellowship graduates, 75 (97%) completed the survey. Graduates were involved in teaching; 43% (32/75) filled lead instructor roles in PT education programs. Further, 75% (57/75) were involved in research. The mean (SD) and median (range) increase in annual gross income was $9560 ($17,545) and $2,500 ($0-$125,000), respectively. Perceived areas with the largest impact of training included clinical reasoning, patient-centered and evidence-based practice, and professionalism. Life balance and family commitments were frequent barriers during training. Discussion: Graduates noted substantial perceived professional, clinical, and financial benefits to fellowship training. Limitations included lack of a control group and surveying participants from a single program. Future research should determine the influence that program and participant-related factors have on personal and professional lives of graduates and on clinical outcomes. Level of Evidence: Descriptive survey, level 3. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]