Clinical reasoning strategies in physical therapy.

Ian Edwards, Mark Jones, Judi Carr, Annette Braunack-Mayer, Gail M Jensen
Author Information
  1. Ian Edwards: The Brian Burdekin Clinic, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. ian.edwards@unisa.edu.au

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Clinical reasoning remains a relatively under-researched subject in physical therapy. The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine the clinical reasoning of expert physical therapists in 3 different fields of physical therapy: orthopedic (manual) physical therapy, neurological physical therapy, and domiciliary care (home health) physical therapy.
SUBJECTS: The subjects were 6 peer-designated expert physical therapists (2 from each field) nominated by leaders within the Australian Physiotherapy Association and 6 other interviewed experts representing each of the same 3 fields.
METHODS: Guided by a grounded theory method, a multiple case study approach was used to study the clinical practice of the 6 physical therapists in the 3 fields.
RESULTS: A model of clinical reasoning in physical therapy characterized by the notion of "clinical reasoning strategies" is proposed by the authors. Within these clinical reasoning strategies, the application of different paradigms of knowledge and their interplay within reasoning is termed "dialectical reasoning."
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The findings of this study provide a potential clinical reasoning framework for the adoption of emerging models of impairment and disability in physical therapy.

MeSH Term

Data Collection
Decision Making
Home Care Services
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Knowledge
Logic
Manipulation, Orthopedic
Physical Therapy Modalities
Physical Therapy Specialty
Problem Solving
Research
Research Design
Teaching
Thinking

Word Cloud

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