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The clinical reasoning processes of extended scope physiotherapists assessing patients with low back pain

The clinical reasoning processes of extended scope physiotherapists assessing patients with low back pain
The clinical reasoning processes of extended scope physiotherapists assessing patients with low back pain
Introduction

Employing allied health professionals in extended scope roles has developed relatively recently in health-care. Within physiotherapy, the extended role has provided clinicians with autonomy to use knowledge and clinical acumen to request investigations such as Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and X-ray as part of the diagnostic process, a practice beyond the traditional scope of physiotherapy. In these advancing roles, little is written about the clinical reasoning processes that clinicians use in managing patients with musculoskeletal pain and knowledge of these processes would advance training for new recruits to this arena.

Study

This qualitative study has explored the processes by which extended scope physiotherapists (ESPs) clinically reason their decisions regarding patients reporting low back pain in a musculoskeletal outpatient setting. The study used a multiple case study design informed by grounded theory methodology, using focus groups (involving ESPs and non-ESPs/musculoskeletal physiotherapists) and semi-structured interviews with a think-aloud method (ESPs only) to investigate these processes.

Conclusions

The themes identified include: prior thinking; patient interaction; formal testing; time; safety and accountability; external and internal factors; and gut-feeling (which challenges current physiotherapy models of reasoning). Extended scope physiotherapists reported experiencing greater stress due to higher levels of perceived accountability, safety requirements and internal drivers for competence than non-ESPs. Further research is indicated to explore the role of gut-feeling in musculoskeletal physiotherapy clinical reasoning.
physiotherapy, reasoning, back, pain
1356-689X
745-750
Langridge, Neil
287ca8c0-0501-4177-a8a1-5963fad1b0d7
Roberts, Lisa
0a937943-5246-4877-bd6b-4dcd172b5cd0
Pope, Catherine
21ae1290-0838-4245-adcf-6f901a0d4607
Langridge, Neil
287ca8c0-0501-4177-a8a1-5963fad1b0d7
Roberts, Lisa
0a937943-5246-4877-bd6b-4dcd172b5cd0
Pope, Catherine
21ae1290-0838-4245-adcf-6f901a0d4607

Langridge, Neil, Roberts, Lisa and Pope, Catherine (2015) The clinical reasoning processes of extended scope physiotherapists assessing patients with low back pain. Manual Therapy, 20 (6), 745-750. (doi:10.1016/j.math.2015.01.005). (PMID:25686862)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction

Employing allied health professionals in extended scope roles has developed relatively recently in health-care. Within physiotherapy, the extended role has provided clinicians with autonomy to use knowledge and clinical acumen to request investigations such as Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and X-ray as part of the diagnostic process, a practice beyond the traditional scope of physiotherapy. In these advancing roles, little is written about the clinical reasoning processes that clinicians use in managing patients with musculoskeletal pain and knowledge of these processes would advance training for new recruits to this arena.

Study

This qualitative study has explored the processes by which extended scope physiotherapists (ESPs) clinically reason their decisions regarding patients reporting low back pain in a musculoskeletal outpatient setting. The study used a multiple case study design informed by grounded theory methodology, using focus groups (involving ESPs and non-ESPs/musculoskeletal physiotherapists) and semi-structured interviews with a think-aloud method (ESPs only) to investigate these processes.

Conclusions

The themes identified include: prior thinking; patient interaction; formal testing; time; safety and accountability; external and internal factors; and gut-feeling (which challenges current physiotherapy models of reasoning). Extended scope physiotherapists reported experiencing greater stress due to higher levels of perceived accountability, safety requirements and internal drivers for competence than non-ESPs. Further research is indicated to explore the role of gut-feeling in musculoskeletal physiotherapy clinical reasoning.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 15 January 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 January 2015
Published date: December 2015
Keywords: physiotherapy, reasoning, back, pain
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 383098
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/383098
ISSN: 1356-689X
PURE UUID: d50a2c1e-6723-463e-be06-48543415b913
ORCID for Lisa Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2662-6696
ORCID for Catherine Pope: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8935-6702

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Oct 2015 13:49
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:53

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Contributors

Author: Neil Langridge
Author: Lisa Roberts ORCID iD
Author: Catherine Pope ORCID iD

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