Virtual communities of practice for novice occupational therapists: a vehicle for learning, support and professional identity strengthening?

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Rural and remote health Pub Date : 2024-05-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-22 DOI:10.22605/RRH8555
Kirsty van Stormbroek, Lisa O'Brien, Tania Rauch van der Merwe, Hellen Myezwa
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Healthcare practitioners delivering services in rural and underserved areas need timely access to appropriate knowledge to optimise the care they deliver. Novice generalist occupational therapists in South Africa experience this need as they respond to a high demand for hand therapy. Embedded within a study aimed at identifying their support and development needs, this article describes participants' experience of a virtual community of practice.

Methods: A qualitative case study design was employed. Nine occupational therapists participated in a virtual community of practice that met fortnightly for meetings and interacted on WhatsApp. Data were collected through photo elicitation, facilitated reflection, and case discussions. An online survey questionnaire was used to evaluate participants' experience of this virtual community. Thematic analysis was applied to the anonymous responses submitted by participants (n=7). A number of strategies were employed to ensure the trustworthiness of results including prolonged engagement, member checking, peer examination, reflexive reading and writing, triangulation, and a dense description of participants to enable readers to evaluate the transferability of results.

Results: Three themes were generated from analysis. The first theme, versatile support, describes participants' experience of being helped and supported, appreciating the immediacy of support, and being able to share resources. A vehicle for learning captures participants' experience of mutual learning, opportunity to reflect, to acquire knowledge and skills, and develop their clinical reasoning. Finally, the community of practice was grounding: learning opportunities were contextually relevant and participants were able to consolidate their professional values and identity. Participants raised the importance of using online platforms that were accessible, recommended a group size of 5-10 members, and proposed 60-90-minute meetings held weekly or fortnightly.

Conclusion: A virtual community of practice provided both support and professional development opportunities for therapists delivering hand therapy. Careful planning and implementation to upscale this intervention are recommended for rehabilitation personnel delivering care to underserved communities in South Africa. The logistics of virtual communities need to mitigate for connectivity difficulties, and online platforms should enable real-time support. Participant satisfaction and the evaluation of implementation outcomes should be considered in the design of virtual communities of practice.

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职业治疗师新手的虚拟实践社区:学习、支持和强化专业身份的工具?
导言:在农村和服务欠缺地区提供服务的医疗从业人员需要及时获取适当的知识,以优化他们提供的医疗服务。南非的全科职业治疗师新手在应对手部治疗的高需求时就遇到了这种需求。本文在一项旨在确定他们的支持和发展需求的研究中,描述了参与者在虚拟实践社区中的体验:方法:采用定性案例研究设计。九名职业治疗师参加了一个虚拟实践社区,他们每两周举行一次会议,并通过 WhatsApp 进行互动。通过照片诱导、协助反思和案例讨论收集数据。在线调查问卷用于评估参与者对该虚拟社区的体验。对参与者(7 人)提交的匿名回复进行了主题分析。为确保分析结果的可信度,研究人员采用了一系列策略,包括长期参与、成员核查、同行审查、反思性阅读和写作、三角测量以及对参与者的详细描述,以便读者评估分析结果的可转移性:分析产生了三个主题。第一个主题 "多功能支持 "描述了参与者获得帮助和支持的经历,赞赏支持的即时性,以及能够共享资源。学习的载体反映了参与者相互学习、反思、获取知识和技能以及发展临床推理能力的经历。最后,实践社区具有基础性:学习机会与背景相关,参与者能够巩固其专业价值观和身份。参与者提出了使用可访问的在线平台的重要性,建议小组人数为 5-10 人,并建议每周或每两周举行一次 60-90 分钟的会议:虚拟实践社区为手部治疗师提供了支持和专业发展机会。建议南非为服务不足社区提供护理服务的康复人员认真规划和实施这一干预措施。虚拟社区的后勤工作需要缓解连接困难,在线平台应能提供实时支持。在设计虚拟实践社区时,应考虑参与者的满意度和对实施结果的评估。
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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来源期刊
Rural and remote health
Rural and remote health Rural Health-
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
9.50%
发文量
145
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Rural and Remote Health is a not-for-profit, online-only, peer-reviewed academic publication. It aims to further rural and remote health education, research and practice. The primary purpose of the Journal is to publish and so provide an international knowledge-base of peer-reviewed material from rural health practitioners (medical, nursing and allied health professionals and health workers), educators, researchers and policy makers.
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