Paediatric Physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of Australian entry-level Physiotherapy programs

Abstract Background No documented standard or core competencies exist for paediatric curriculum in entry-level physiotherapy programs in Australia. Consequently, extensive variability is thought to exist amongst Australian entry-level physiotherapy programs for preparing physiotherapists to work saf...

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Main Authors: Karen Mistry, Emi Yonezawa, Nikki Milne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-04-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-019-1540-z
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spelling doaj-c880b724c3974c07b2ec81af22c295592020-11-25T03:37:07ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202019-04-0119111810.1186/s12909-019-1540-zPaediatric Physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of Australian entry-level Physiotherapy programsKaren Mistry0Emi Yonezawa1Nikki Milne2Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond Institute of Health and Sport, Bond UniversityFaculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond Institute of Health and Sport, Bond UniversityFaculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond Institute of Health and Sport, Bond UniversityAbstract Background No documented standard or core competencies exist for paediatric curriculum in entry-level physiotherapy programs in Australia. Consequently, extensive variability is thought to exist amongst Australian entry-level physiotherapy programs for preparing physiotherapists to work safely and effectively with children. The purpose of this study was to explore the landscape of paediatric curriculum in Australian entry-level physiotherapy programs and identify the paediatric content being covered, its perceived importance according to university academics who teach paediatrics, the mode of delivery and assessment, and the strengths, weaknesses, barriers and facilitators to implementing paediatric curriculum. Methods A web-based desktop audit and an online cross-sectional survey using closed and open-ended questions was administered to all Australian universities offering entry-level physiotherapy programs in November 2017. Content coverage and perceived level of importance for paediatric content areas were determined using Likert scale responses. Open-ended responses were thematically analysed to identify key themes for strengths, weaknesses and facilitators to implementation of paediatric curriculum. Results All (n = 20, 100%) entry-level programs used the terms lifespan, child and/or paediatrics somewhere in at least one subject descriptor. Forty-five percent (n = 9) of universities did not use the terms lifespan, child or paediatric in their published learning objectives. Eight (40%) universities offered a paediatric stand-alone course. Sixty-five (13/20) percent of universities invited, responded to the survey. For paediatric conditions the perceived level of importance was predominately higher than its course content coverage for 19 of the 31 conditions surveyed. Key barriers to implementating paediatric curriculum were: crowded curriculum, limited financial resources resulting in a lack of qualified staff, lack of prioritisation of paediatric curriculum and inadequate paediatric placement availability. Facilitators for effective implementation of paediatric content were stand-alone paediatric subjects, demonstrated dedication to paediatric curriculum and having suitably qualified faculty members. Conclusion The results of this survey provide the physiotherapy community with the views of paediatric physiotherapy academic educators regarding the content, perceived need to expand content delivery in identified clinical areas, and the barriers and facilitators to implementing paediatric content in Australian entry-level physiotherapy programs. Further research exploring similar questions with paediatric physiotherapy clinicians would complement the findings of this study.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-019-1540-zAustralianPhysiotherapyPaediatricCurriculumEntry-levelUniversity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karen Mistry
Emi Yonezawa
Nikki Milne
spellingShingle Karen Mistry
Emi Yonezawa
Nikki Milne
Paediatric Physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of Australian entry-level Physiotherapy programs
BMC Medical Education
Australian
Physiotherapy
Paediatric
Curriculum
Entry-level
University
author_facet Karen Mistry
Emi Yonezawa
Nikki Milne
author_sort Karen Mistry
title Paediatric Physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of Australian entry-level Physiotherapy programs
title_short Paediatric Physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of Australian entry-level Physiotherapy programs
title_full Paediatric Physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of Australian entry-level Physiotherapy programs
title_fullStr Paediatric Physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of Australian entry-level Physiotherapy programs
title_full_unstemmed Paediatric Physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of Australian entry-level Physiotherapy programs
title_sort paediatric physiotherapy curriculum: an audit and survey of australian entry-level physiotherapy programs
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Abstract Background No documented standard or core competencies exist for paediatric curriculum in entry-level physiotherapy programs in Australia. Consequently, extensive variability is thought to exist amongst Australian entry-level physiotherapy programs for preparing physiotherapists to work safely and effectively with children. The purpose of this study was to explore the landscape of paediatric curriculum in Australian entry-level physiotherapy programs and identify the paediatric content being covered, its perceived importance according to university academics who teach paediatrics, the mode of delivery and assessment, and the strengths, weaknesses, barriers and facilitators to implementing paediatric curriculum. Methods A web-based desktop audit and an online cross-sectional survey using closed and open-ended questions was administered to all Australian universities offering entry-level physiotherapy programs in November 2017. Content coverage and perceived level of importance for paediatric content areas were determined using Likert scale responses. Open-ended responses were thematically analysed to identify key themes for strengths, weaknesses and facilitators to implementation of paediatric curriculum. Results All (n = 20, 100%) entry-level programs used the terms lifespan, child and/or paediatrics somewhere in at least one subject descriptor. Forty-five percent (n = 9) of universities did not use the terms lifespan, child or paediatric in their published learning objectives. Eight (40%) universities offered a paediatric stand-alone course. Sixty-five (13/20) percent of universities invited, responded to the survey. For paediatric conditions the perceived level of importance was predominately higher than its course content coverage for 19 of the 31 conditions surveyed. Key barriers to implementating paediatric curriculum were: crowded curriculum, limited financial resources resulting in a lack of qualified staff, lack of prioritisation of paediatric curriculum and inadequate paediatric placement availability. Facilitators for effective implementation of paediatric content were stand-alone paediatric subjects, demonstrated dedication to paediatric curriculum and having suitably qualified faculty members. Conclusion The results of this survey provide the physiotherapy community with the views of paediatric physiotherapy academic educators regarding the content, perceived need to expand content delivery in identified clinical areas, and the barriers and facilitators to implementing paediatric content in Australian entry-level physiotherapy programs. Further research exploring similar questions with paediatric physiotherapy clinicians would complement the findings of this study.
topic Australian
Physiotherapy
Paediatric
Curriculum
Entry-level
University
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-019-1540-z
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