了解少数种族和族裔群体的理疗博士学员如何看待理疗师教育课程的国家基准。

IF 3.5 4区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Richard K Shields, Julia Chevan, Kai Kennedy, Charlotte Bailey, Shauna Dudley-Javoroski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:物理治疗师队伍及其教育途径的人口同质性可能会削弱该职业改善社会健康的潜力。建立支持所有学习者发展的学术环境,是培养满足社会医疗保健需求的人才队伍的基础。物理治疗教育基准研究使用物理治疗毕业问卷来全面评估学习者对物理治疗师学术环境的看法。本报告研究了少数种族和族裔(REM)理疗师学员对其理疗博士(DPT)教育的看法是否与非少数种族和族裔同龄人不同:方法:89 所院校的 580 名即将毕业的 DPT 学员提供了人口统计学数据以及对一系列学习环境领域的看法。分析包括快速眼动与非快速眼动的比较,以及不同种族和民族群体之间的比较:结果:与非轻视化的同龄人相比,轻视化受访者对自己所受教育的满意度较低,对自己为入门级实践所做准备的信心也较低。REM 受访者观察到更多的教师专业脱节现象,并且不太认同他们的课程促进了他们的整体心理健康。与同龄人相比,REM 受访者遭受虐待的比例较高,并且报告了较高的疲惫感和脱离感(学术倦怠的两个轴心)。黑人/非裔美国人和拉美裔/拉丁裔/a/x(西班牙裔、拉丁裔、拉美裔和/或拉丁裔)受访者的教育债务明显高于亚裔和白人受访者。REM受访者对在服务不足的社区工作表示出更大的同理心和兴趣:结论:少数民族受访者对理疗师学习环境的看法比非少数民族受访者更消极,但他们对为服务不足社区的人们提供服务表示出浓厚的兴趣。这些国家基准为学术机构提供了自我评估自身环境的机会,并努力提高所有学习者的教育体验质量:在一项全国性的基准研究中,来自少数种族和民族背景的学习者在接受理疗师教育期间所报告的负面经历和结果要多于非少数种族和民族背景的学习者。这些学员表现出高度的同理心,并有兴趣为来自服务不足(资源不足)社区的人们提供服务。让所有人都能茁壮成长的学习环境可能是改善快速多元化社会健康状况的重要途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
National Benchmarks to Understand How Doctor of Physical Therapy Learners From Minoritized Race and Ethnicity Groups Perceive Their Physical Therapist Education Program.

Objective: The demographic homogeneity of the physical therapist workforce and its educational pathway may undermine the profession's potential to improve the health of society. Building academic environments that support the development of all learners is fundamental to building a workforce to meet societal health care needs. The Benchmarking in Physical Therapy Education study uses the Physical Therapy Graduation Questionnaire to comprehensively assess learner perceptions of the physical therapist academic environment. The present report examined whether racial and ethnic minoritized (REM) physical therapist learners perceive their doctor of physical therapy education differently from their non-REM peers.

Methods: Five thousand and eighty graduating doctor of physical therapy learners in 89 institutions provided demographic data and perceptions of a range of learning environment domains. Analyses included REM versus non-REM comparisons as well as comparisons among individual race and ethnicity groups.

Results: Compared with their non-minoritized peers, REM respondents expressed less satisfaction with their education and lower confidence in their preparedness for entry-level practice. REM respondents observed more faculty professionalism disconnects and demonstrated less agreement that their program had fostered their overall psychological well-being. REM respondents experienced higher rates of mistreatment than their peers and reported higher rates of exhaustion and disengagement, the 2 axes of academic burnout. Black/African American and Hispanic/Latino/a/x (Hispanic, Latino, Latina, and/or Latinx) respondents incurred significantly more educational debt than Asian and White respondents. REM respondents reported greater empathy and greater interest in working in underserved communities.

Conclusion: REM respondents perceived the physical therapist learning environment more negatively than their non-minoritized peers but expressed strong interest in serving people from underserved communities. These national benchmarks offer academic institutions the opportunity to self-assess their own environment and to work to improve the quality of the educational experience for all learners.

Impact: In a nationwide benchmarking study, learners from minoritized race and ethnicity backgrounds reported more negative experiences and outcomes during physical therapist education than their non-minoritized peers. These same learners demonstrated high empathy and interest in serving people from underserved (under-resourced) communities. Learning environments that permit all individuals to thrive may be an essential avenue to improve the health of a rapidly diversifying society.

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来源期刊
Physical Therapy
Physical Therapy Multiple-
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
187
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Physical Therapy (PTJ) engages and inspires an international readership on topics related to physical therapy. As the leading international journal for research in physical therapy and related fields, PTJ publishes innovative and highly relevant content for both clinicians and scientists and uses a variety of interactive approaches to communicate that content, with the expressed purpose of improving patient care. PTJ"s circulation in 2008 is more than 72,000. Its 2007 impact factor was 2.152. The mean time from submission to first decision is 58 days. Time from acceptance to publication online is less than or equal to 3 months and from acceptance to publication in print is less than or equal to 5 months.
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