初级保健物理治疗师和运动学家进行糖尿病体育锻炼干预的转诊途径和能力概况:改良德尔菲研究。

IF 2 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Carly Proctor, Cara L Brown
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:由于糖尿病的发病率和相关并发症不断增加,高质量的糖尿病护理是基层医疗机构的一项基本服务。体育锻炼能有效预防和控制糖尿病,但在糖尿病护理中却未得到充分利用。运动专业人员拥有提供体育锻炼干预措施的专业技能,但要在糖尿病护理方面开展有效的跨专业合作,就必须明确角色定位。本研究确定了初级物理治疗师和运动学家在初级医疗机构进行糖尿病护理的体育锻炼干预的能力,并利用这些能力开发了临床工具,以促进跨专业护理团队的角色明确:方法:我们采用了改良的德尔菲流程。方法:我们采用了改良的德尔菲程序。11 名物理治疗专家和 3 名运动学专家参与了两轮德尔菲调查,以开发针对具体学科和环境的能力。这些能力被用于起草能力简介和转诊路径工具。然后,11 名参与者参加了一个焦点小组,对工具进行成员检查。描述性统计和内容分析分别用于分析定量和定性数据:通过修改后的德尔菲流程,得出了 38 项物理治疗能力和 27 项运动学能力,明确了物理治疗师和运动学专家在为糖尿病患者提供体育锻炼干预时的不同角色。物理治疗能力描述了物理治疗师在支持各类糖尿病患者参与体育锻炼方面的独特作用,尽管他们面临着复杂的医疗或身体障碍。运动学能力说明了这些专业人员可能需要额外培训的地方,尤其是在与 1 型糖尿病患者或孕妇合作时。所有开发的工具都具有良好的表面效度,并被主题专家视为潜在的有用工具:研究结果表明,物理治疗师和运动学家都具备为糖尿病患者提供体育锻炼干预的基本技能和能力,但根据临床情况的复杂程度,可能需要不同的运动专业人员。所开发的临床工具明确了物理治疗和运动学在为糖尿病护理提供体育锻炼干预中的作用,并强调了这两个不同的专业如何为解决基层医疗机构中日益严重的糖尿病流行问题做出贡献,从而为改善跨专业合作提供了支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Referral pathway and competency profiles of primary care physiotherapists and kinesiologists for physical activity interventions for diabetes: a modified Delphi study.

Background: High quality diabetes care is an essential service in primary care settings since the prevalence and associated complications of diabetes is increasing. Physical activity is effective for the prevention and management of diabetes yet is underutilized in diabetes care. Exercise professionals have specialized skills to deliver physical activity interventions, but effective interprofessional collaboration for diabetes care requires role clarity. This study established the competencies of entry-level physiotherapists and kinesiologists for physical activity interventions for diabetes care in primary care settings and used these competencies to develop clinical tools to promote role clarity in interprofessional care teams.

Methods: We used a modified Delphi process. Eleven physiotherapy and three kinesiology subject matter experts participated in two rounds of Delphi surveys to develop discipline and context specific competencies. These competencies were used to draft competency profiles and a referral pathway tool. Eleven of the participants then participated in a focus group for member-checking of the tools. Descriptive statistics and content analysis were used to analyze quantitative and qualitative data respectively.

Results: The modified Delphi process resulted in 38 physiotherapy and 27 kinesiology competencies that identify the distinct roles of physiotherapists and kinesiologists in delivering physical activity interventions for diabetes care. The physiotherapy competencies describes their unique role in supporting people with all types of diabetes to engage in physical activity despite complex medical or physical barriers. The kinesiology competencies indicate where these professionals may require additional training, especially when working with people living with type 1 diabetes or who are pregnant. All developed tools had good face validity and were seen to be potentially useful tools by the subject matter experts.

Conclusions: The findings highlight that both physiotherapists and kinesiologists have fundamental skills and abilities to deliver physical activity interventions to people living with diabetes, but that different exercise professionals may be needed depending on the complexity of the clinical profile. The developed clinical tools support improved interprofessional collaboration by clarifying physiotherapy and kinesiology roles in delivering physical activity interventions for diabetes care and highlighting how the two distinct professions can contribute to addressing the growing diabetes epidemic in primary care.

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