Self-Efficacy with Telehealth Examination: the Doctor of Physical Therapy Student Perspective

Derrick F. Campbell, J. Brismée, Brad Allen, T. Hooper, Manuel A. Domenech, K. Manella
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Abstract

Introduction: The shift to telehealth exposed gaps in our understanding of how physical therapy students perceive patient assessment in a remote situation using the examination component of the patient/client management (PCM) model. The purpose of the study was to compare Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) students’ self-efficacy performing patient assessment using the examination component of the PCM model using telehealth compared with conventional examination. To achieve the purpose of this study, the Physical Therapist Self-Efficacy (PTSE) scale was used. More specifically, self-efficacy in clinical reasoning was measured using the following items: (1) PTSE total score (2) performance of tests and measures, (3) determining when to refer to another practitioner, and (4) screening for primary medical disease. Methods: A survey-based descriptive and exploratory repeated measures design was used, with surveys distributed to entry-level DPT students during their clinical experiences in the United States during the Fall 2020 semester. A convenience sample of 35 second- and third-year entry-level DPT students who reported provided both telehealth and traditional examinations during clinical experiences was used. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to evaluate within group differences comparing student self-efficacy using telehealth and conventional examination. Results: Wilcoxon sign ranks revealed statistically significant differences in self-efficacy scores of students conducting patient assessment using telehealth compared to conventional examination. More specifically, scores for telehealth were lower (P < 0.001) compared to conventional examination in PTSE total score, performance of tests and measures, determining when to refer to another practitioner, and medical screening for primary disease. Discussion: Doctor of Physical Therapy students’ self-efficacy was lower when providing telehealth across all PTSE questions pertaining to the examination component of the PCM model. Exploring telehealth content and sequence in entry-level physical therapy curriculum may help students feel more prepared to perform telehealth examination.
自我效能感与远程健康检查:物理治疗博士学生的视角
简介:向远程医疗的转变暴露了我们对物理治疗学生如何在使用患者/客户管理(PCM)模型的检查组件的远程情况下感知患者评估的理解差距。本研究的目的是比较物理治疗博士(DPT)学生使用远程医疗的PCM模型的检查组件进行患者评估的自我效能感与常规检查的比较。为达到本研究的目的,采用物理治疗师自我效能感量表(Physical Therapist Self-Efficacy, PTSE)。更具体地说,临床推理的自我效能感是用以下项目来衡量的:(1)ptsd总分(2)测试和测量的表现(3)决定何时转诊给其他医生,(4)筛查原发疾病。方法:采用基于调查的描述性和探索性重复测量设计,在2020年秋季学期在美国进行临床经验的入门级DPT学生中进行调查。本研究使用了35名二年级和三年级的初级DPT学生作为方便样本,这些学生报告在临床体验期间提供了远程医疗和传统检查。采用描述性和推理性统计来评价学生自我效能感在远程医疗和常规检查中的组内差异。结果:Wilcoxon符号排名显示,使用远程医疗进行病人评估的学生的自我效能得分与常规检查相比有统计学意义。更具体地说,与常规检查相比,远程医疗的得分(P < 0.001)在PTSE总分、测试和措施的表现、决定何时转诊给另一位医生以及对原发疾病的医疗筛查方面较低。讨论:当提供远程医疗时,物理治疗博士学生的自我效能感较低,这些问题与PCM模型的考试组成部分有关。探索入门级物理治疗课程中的远程医疗内容和顺序可以帮助学生更好地准备进行远程医疗检查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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