Development of Advanced Competencies in Physiotherapy: Impact of a Single-Blinded Controlled Trial on Ethics Competence
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design and Setting
2.2. Participants
2.3. Intervention
2.3.1. Cooperative Learning Group
2.3.2. Individual Learning Group
2.4. Outcomes
2.4.1. Knowledge of Professional Ethics
2.4.2. Perception of Knowledge Regarding Professional Ethics
2.4.3. Teaching Quality Assessment
2.4.4. Satisfaction Questionnaire
2.5. Statistical Analysis
2.6. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Knowledge of Professional Ethics
3.2. Perception of Knowledge Regarding Professional Ethics
3.3. Teaching Quality Assessment
3.4. Satisfaction Questionnaire
4. Discussion
Limitations and Strengths
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Theoretical Sessions | Techniques |
---|---|
Session 1: Introduction to professional ethics. Professional ethics and the importance of professional ethics in Physiotherapy. | Participatory master class Concept maps |
Session 2: Introduction to professional ethics. Professional ethics and the importance of professional ethics in Physiotherapy. | Glossary Brainstorming |
Session 3: Professional ethical principles. | Participatory master class Concept maps |
Session 4: Professional ethical principles. | Glossary Four Corners activity |
Session 5: Ethical and deontological code in Physiotherapy. | Participatory master class Concept maps |
Session 6: Ethical and deontological code in Physiotherapy. | Glossary Brainstorming |
Session 7: Ethical situations and legal aspects in Physiotherapy | Participatory master class Concept maps |
Session 8: Ethical situations and legal aspects in Physiotherapy. | Glossary Aquarium |
Session 9: Ethical decisions in Physiotherapy. | Participatory master class Concept maps |
Session 10: Ethical decisions in Physiotherapy. | Philip 6-6 Kahoot and guided debate |
Practical Sessions | Technique |
Session 11: Ethical situations in Physiotherapy. | Resolution of ethical cases using the Realm Individual Process Situation method Reduced groups and guided debate |
Session 12: Process of resolution of ethical cases in Physiotherapy. | Resolution of ethical cases using the Realm Individual Process Situation method Spontaneous group discussion |
Technique | Explanation of the Technique | Aims |
---|---|---|
Participatory master class | The teacher gives the master class and generates participation, interactivity, being the center of the learning process. | Students are involved |
Concept maps | Concept maps are developed, including concepts related to the topic by interrelating them with each other or one concept leading to another. | Promote the perspective of conceptual relation of the topic |
Glossary | The teacher proposes novel terms of the curriculum, and students should attempt to define them in their own words. Term definitions are then shared and feedback is generated towards the students. | Promote participation and critical thinking |
Brainstorming | Students expresse their ideas aloud and the teacher writes them on the blackboard, classifying the ideas in different categories; ideas are analyzed to discuss their viability. Rules: the more ideas, the better; combine ideas, relate ideas, improve ideas; any idea is acceptable; there are no bad ideas. | Find new solutions and promoting creativity |
Four Corners activity | The teacher chooses 4 solutions or ideas to solve a clinical case and distributes each to a corner of the classroom. They can be written as posters and students walk around the room reading the statements and stay in the corner they most agree with. Finally, a spokesperson of each group discusses their decision. They can change group if convinced by others’ arguments. | Learn how to solve problems and integrate participants creating a favorable climate for communication |
Aquarium | Students are seated in 2 circles, one inside the other; in the small circle (the inner one), the group discuss a problem or situation. There are 1–2 more seats for external members who may participate at given moments. Students in the outer circle watch the discussion of the inner circle and analyze it. A final discussion among the whole group takes place to share ideas. The aim is to open up a space in which the whole group can have an organized debate where everyone can express themselves freely. | Generate discussion about a topic and analyze the different roles of students. |
Philips 6-6 | Groups of 6 people are formed; each student has 1 min to give his/her opinion about a topic (6 people = 6 min). Afterwards, there is a group discussion. A coordinator reads the report, and a summary of the conclusions is written on the blackboard. | Ensure the participation of all members of the group and promotes activity. |
Kahoot | A questionnaire with questions about the students’ opinions about the techniques is used, as well as satisfaction, usefulness and fun. A debate then takes place. It is used to create contests, discussions and surveys based on games. | Stimulate further debate among students guided by the teacher. |
Resolution of ethical cases using the Realm Individual process Situation method | The ethical decision-making process has four steps: identifying and defining ethical issues, reflecting, deciding what is right, and implementing, evaluating, and re-evaluating. All this within an ethical context. The participants’ put into context the situations of the clinical cases and proposed solutions. | Stimulate critical thinking and case resolution. |
Reduced groups and guided debate | Each group is given the name of a basic ethical principle (autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence and justice) and they work on the conceptualization of their principle in order to create a document and explain it to the other students. In addition, a debate is held, moderated and guided by the teacher, to discuss each document with the other groups. At the end, the groups summarize their point of view. In the second session, the role-playing game is used. The teacher defines the objectives and assigns roles. The students learn their role for 5 min and subsequently start the role play. Finally, a discussion is held with the group to critically analyze the process. After the role-playing game, a discussion starts and is guided by the teacher. Clinical case solutions are established and decisions are made, based on the consensus between the groups. The participants’ put into context the situations of the clinical cases and propose group solutions. | Conduct a deep and critical exploration of cases, focused on building knowledge through collaboration. |
Spontaneous group discussion | Students are seated in teams and are asked, at various times during an explanation or presentation, to discuss a meaning or concept, why it works, or how a problem can be solved. This simple cooperative learning structure complements a traditional activity and group work can last from a few minutes to an entire class. The discussion stimulates interaction and spontaneity. | Promote spontaneous discussion of cases. |
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Total n = 216 | CL n = 106 | IL n = 110 | p-Value | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Age (mean ± SD) | 21.06 ± 4.76 | 20.84 ± 4.04 | 21.26 ± 5.38 | 0.51 |
Gender, n (%): | 0.13 | |||
Male | 107 (49.5) | 47 (44.3) | 60 (54.5) | |
Female | 109 (50.5) | 59 (55.7) | 50 (45.5) | |
Do you have family members who work in the health area?, n (%) | 77 (35.6) | 38 (35.8) | 39 (35.5) | 0.95 |
Did you study physiotherapy voluntarily?, n (%) | 216 (100) | 106 (100) | 110 (100) | N.A. |
Do you want to work as in physiotherapy in the future?, n (%) | 215 (99.6) | 106 (100) | 109 (99.1) | 0.33 |
Multiple-Choice Questionnaire * | Pre-Intervention (Mean ± SD) | Post-Intervention (Mean ± SD) | p-Value within Groups |
---|---|---|---|
CLG n = 106 | 5.34 ± 1.17 | 7.76 ± 1.26 | <0.001 |
ILG n = 110 | 5.42 ± 1.17 | 6.14 ± 1.25 | <0.001 |
p-value between groups | 0.662 | <0.001 |
Pre-PKPEPT * (Mean ± SD) | Post-PKPEPT * (Mean ± SD) | p-Value within Groups | |
---|---|---|---|
CLG n = 106 | 19.03 ± 7.77 | 41.68 ± 6.76 | <0.001 |
ILG n = 110 | 17.02 ± 7.26 | 38.27 ± 7.73 | <0.001 |
p-value between groups | 0.06 | <0.001 |
Satisfaction Questionnaire | CLG n = 106 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(1) Methodology | ||||||
I positively value the learning methodology used, n (%) | 106 (100) | |||||
I believe that the methodology used has allowed me to achieve the objectives of the training activity, n (%) | 98 (92.5) | |||||
I believe that the methodology is better than those based mainly on master classes, n (%) | 92 (86.8) | |||||
The use of this methodology has had positive results for me, n (%) | 92 (86.8) | |||||
The teaching methodology has improved my ability to accept other classmates’ proposals even if they are different from mine, n (%) | 78 (73.6) | |||||
(2) Topics | ||||||
The activities have helped to understand the concepts better, n (%) | 93 (87.7) | |||||
The extension of each topic has been enough to understand the concepts, n (%) | 91 (85.8) | |||||
In general, the contents seem specific enough for future physiotherapy professionals, n (%) | 83 (78.3) | |||||
The language used in the topics is written in a comprehensive way, n (%) | 80 (75.5) | |||||
I would recommend my peers to study these topics, n (%) | 72 (67.9) | |||||
(3) Contents | Low | Little | Enough | High | ||
How appropriate has the combination of virtual activities and theoretical and practical contents been?, n (%) | 1 (0.9) | 9 (8.5) | 79 (74.5) | 17 (16.0) | ||
How useful have the topics discussed in the theory and practice classes been?, n (%) | 1 (0.9) | 7 (6.6) | 88 (83.0) | 10 (9.4) | ||
How interesting have the topics discussed in the theory and practice classes been?, n (%) | 4 (3.8) | 14 (13.2) | 83 (78.3) | 5 (4.7) | ||
(4) Satisfaction, utility and fun | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
Level of satisfaction, n (%) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (0.9) | 18 (17.0) | 71 (67.0) | 16 (15.1) |
Level of utility, n (%) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (0.9) | 17 (16.0) | 62 (58.5) | 26 (24.5) |
Level of fun, n (%) | 0 (0) | 6 (5.7) | 15 (14.2) | 50 (47.2) | 29 (27.4) | 6 (5.7) |
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Cortés-Amador, S.; Arnal-Gómez, A.; Marques-Sule, E.; Hernández-Guillén, D.; Tolsada-Velasco, C.; Espí-López, G.V. Development of Advanced Competencies in Physiotherapy: Impact of a Single-Blinded Controlled Trial on Ethics Competence. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 10590. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710590
Cortés-Amador S, Arnal-Gómez A, Marques-Sule E, Hernández-Guillén D, Tolsada-Velasco C, Espí-López GV. Development of Advanced Competencies in Physiotherapy: Impact of a Single-Blinded Controlled Trial on Ethics Competence. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(17):10590. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710590
Chicago/Turabian StyleCortés-Amador, Sara, Anna Arnal-Gómez, Elena Marques-Sule, David Hernández-Guillén, Catalina Tolsada-Velasco, and Gemma V. Espí-López. 2022. "Development of Advanced Competencies in Physiotherapy: Impact of a Single-Blinded Controlled Trial on Ethics Competence" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 17: 10590. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710590
APA StyleCortés-Amador, S., Arnal-Gómez, A., Marques-Sule, E., Hernández-Guillén, D., Tolsada-Velasco, C., & Espí-López, G. V. (2022). Development of Advanced Competencies in Physiotherapy: Impact of a Single-Blinded Controlled Trial on Ethics Competence. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(17), 10590. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710590