Objectives The provision of musculoskeletal assessment and pathway management by physiotherapists in primary care is an expanding innovation within the UK National Health Service. This new model of care is challenging physiotherapists to work in new ways, and so an understanding of these roles is timely and wil contribute to the growing knowledge regarding these practitioners and their impact. Methods This qualitative study aimed to improve the understanding of the clinical practice of first‐contact clinicians in musculoskeletal healthcare. The study used a think‐aloud method to explore eight clinicians’ views via a stage 1 semi‐structured interview process. This was followed by a stage 2 focus group involving physiotherapists and a general practitioner trainer. A thematic analysis then followed, which involved the researcher and a research colleague coding the data and subsequently developing themes. Results The themes identified were: medical assessment and systems knowledge; speed of thought in an uncertain environment; breadth of knowledge; people and communication skills; common sense/simplify; and responsibility and experience. Conclusions The identified themes should help to underpin the competence, capability and training requirements for these new roles, and should be considered when developing new services utilizing first‐contact primary care physiotherapy practice.
a b s t r a c tIntroduction: 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 semistructured 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.
TitleThe role of clinician emotion in clinical reasoning: balancing the analytical process.Key words: Physiotherapy; reasoning; emotion. Authors DiscussionIt is proposed that clinicians should consider the emotions associated with decision-making, especially when there is concern surrounding a presentation. Reflecting on practice in the clinical environment and subsequently applying this to a patient presentation should involve some acknowledgement of clinicians' physical responses, emotions and how they may play a part in any decision made. Presenting intuition and gut-feeling as separate reasoning methods and how these processes co-exist with other more accepted reasoning such as hypotheticodeductive is also discussed. ConclusionMusculoskeletal physiotherapy should consider the elements of feelings, emotions and physical responses when applying reflective practice principles. Furthermore, clinicians dealing with difficult and challenging presentations should look at the emotional as well as the analytical experience when justifying decisions and learning from practice.
Purpose – Clinical specialist physiotherapy (CSP)-led musculoskeletal triage clinics have been established in the UK as a means of managing patients referred for outpatient orthopaedic consultation. The purpose of this paper is to determine if a CSP could allocate patients into distinct diagnostic triage categories in line with national and international guidelines. A second aim was to describe the CSPs clinical decision making. Design/methodology/approach – A review of 100 spinal patients, consecutively referred between February and April 2013 to a CSP spinal triage clinic was undertaken. Patient demographics (age, gender, employment status), clinical diagnosis and diagnostic triage categories selected for each patient were recorded. Subsequently, if clinical triage led to further investigation or a consultant opinion then the onward management pathway was followed to calculate conversion to consultant surgical intervention. Findings – In total, 69 per cent of patients were independently managed by the CSP and discharged back to the General Practitioner or on to therapy. In total, 30 per cent of patients (n=30) were referred for consultant opinion, of these 12 underwent intervention. This represents a conversion rate to consultant intervention of 40 per cent. Originality/value – Findings suggest that a significant number of spinal patients referred for an orthopaedic consultation may be managed independently by a CSP. Referral for consultant review was deemed appropriate in terms of conversion to intervention, advice on further imaging, referral to other medical disciplines and patient counselling. This study suggests that CSPs can manage a significant number of patients with spinal conditions whilst providing high-quality referrals to surgical colleagues. This audit provides a novel insight into practitioner behaviour that supports the development of advanced practice for non-medical clinicians.
Four novel compositions containing chalcogenide layers, adopting the Ba3M2O5M′2Ch2, or 325 layered structure have been identified: Ba3Sc2O5Cu2Se2, Ba3Y2O5Cu2S2, Ba3Sc2O5Ag2Se2 and Ba3In2O5Ag2Se2. A comprehensive comparison of experimental and computational results providing...
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