Raine Osborne, Matthew S Briggs, Sara Kraft, Mary Jane Rapport, Lisa Black, Carol Jo Tichenor, Gregory W Hartley, Chloe E Bailey, Gail M Jensen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This Perspective provides a crucial set of actions with corresponding recommendations aimed at propelling the physical therapy profession toward excellence in residency education. The conceptual model includes elements of excellence in the delivery and outcomes of physical therapist residency education and the domain of value experienced by stakeholders impacted by physical therapist residency education. Linked to the conceptual model, the 15 actions, and 28 recommendations draw from (1) the Physical Therapist Residency Excellence and Value (PT-REV) study, (2) the Physical Therapist Education for the 21st Century (PTE-21) study, and (3) research in the learning sciences. This paper proposes a transformative call for decisive and consistent reform directed toward residency programs, residents, sponsoring organizations, and the physical therapy profession. Physical therapist residency education, initiated over 23 years ago, is no longer in its infancy with critical gaps in its maturation that need to be addressed systematically by stakeholders across the profession, thus improving the profession's ability to respond to changing societal needs. This Perspective serves as a call to action and provides specific recommendation for what is needed to promote and achieve excellence in physical therapist residency education to improve the professions' ability to adapt to changing societal needs.
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.