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Perspectives from physiotherapy supervisors on student-patient communication

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Perspectives from physiotherapy supervisors on student-patient communication. / Woodward-Kron, Robyn; van Die, Diana; Webb, Gillian et al.
In: International Journal of Medical Education, Vol. 3, 31.08.2012, p. 166-174.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Woodward-Kron, R, van Die, D, Webb, G, Pill, J, Elder, C, McNamara, T, Manias, E & McColl, G 2012, 'Perspectives from physiotherapy supervisors on student-patient communication', International Journal of Medical Education, vol. 3, pp. 166-174. https://doi.org/10.5116/ijme.502f.6e18

APA

Woodward-Kron, R., van Die, D., Webb, G., Pill, J., Elder, C., McNamara, T., Manias, E., & McColl, G. (2012). Perspectives from physiotherapy supervisors on student-patient communication. International Journal of Medical Education, 3, 166-174. https://doi.org/10.5116/ijme.502f.6e18

Vancouver

Woodward-Kron R, van Die D, Webb G, Pill J, Elder C, McNamara T et al. Perspectives from physiotherapy supervisors on student-patient communication. International Journal of Medical Education. 2012 Aug 31;3:166-174. doi: 10.5116/ijme.502f.6e18

Author

Woodward-Kron, Robyn ; van Die, Diana ; Webb, Gillian et al. / Perspectives from physiotherapy supervisors on student-patient communication. In: International Journal of Medical Education. 2012 ; Vol. 3. pp. 166-174.

Bibtex

@article{eb8c6de2b74c469ebb745b734ad33b14,
title = "Perspectives from physiotherapy supervisors on student-patient communication",
abstract = "Objectives: To explore what Australian physiotherapy educators value in student-patient clinical communication by investigating their feedback on physiotherapy students' communication with patients in practice settings. These findings were compared to the national standard descriptors.Methods: A qualitative study design incorporated delayed time feedback elicited in two workshops from 12 partici-pants who viewed video recorded interactions as triggers for discussion, and real time feedback observed in a hospital setting of 14 clinical supervisors and their students. Both sets of feedback were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed thematically.Results: The findings identified five major themes in the clinical supervisor and educators' feedback: non-verbal communication, manner, language, content and organisa-tion, and interactional tools. In the findings, several of the themes resonate with those espoused in available communication frameworks. The findings provide examples of the framework descriptors.Conclusions: The findings provide important information about the communication skills, attitudes and behaviours that are valued by clinical supervisors and educators. The findings can be used to inform standard setting and curriculum development. Knowledge gained about students' communication skills in practice settings can assist in enhancing communication between physiotherapy students and patients, and it can ultimately contribute to improving patient safety and treatment outcomes.",
author = "Robyn Woodward-Kron and {van Die}, Diana and Gillian Webb and John Pill and Catherine Elder and Tim McNamara and Elizabeth Manias and Geoff McColl",
year = "2012",
month = aug,
day = "31",
doi = "10.5116/ijme.502f.6e18",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "166--174",
journal = "International Journal of Medical Education",
issn = "2042-6372",
publisher = "International journal of medical education",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Perspectives from physiotherapy supervisors on student-patient communication

AU - Woodward-Kron, Robyn

AU - van Die, Diana

AU - Webb, Gillian

AU - Pill, John

AU - Elder, Catherine

AU - McNamara, Tim

AU - Manias, Elizabeth

AU - McColl, Geoff

PY - 2012/8/31

Y1 - 2012/8/31

N2 - Objectives: To explore what Australian physiotherapy educators value in student-patient clinical communication by investigating their feedback on physiotherapy students' communication with patients in practice settings. These findings were compared to the national standard descriptors.Methods: A qualitative study design incorporated delayed time feedback elicited in two workshops from 12 partici-pants who viewed video recorded interactions as triggers for discussion, and real time feedback observed in a hospital setting of 14 clinical supervisors and their students. Both sets of feedback were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed thematically.Results: The findings identified five major themes in the clinical supervisor and educators' feedback: non-verbal communication, manner, language, content and organisa-tion, and interactional tools. In the findings, several of the themes resonate with those espoused in available communication frameworks. The findings provide examples of the framework descriptors.Conclusions: The findings provide important information about the communication skills, attitudes and behaviours that are valued by clinical supervisors and educators. The findings can be used to inform standard setting and curriculum development. Knowledge gained about students' communication skills in practice settings can assist in enhancing communication between physiotherapy students and patients, and it can ultimately contribute to improving patient safety and treatment outcomes.

AB - Objectives: To explore what Australian physiotherapy educators value in student-patient clinical communication by investigating their feedback on physiotherapy students' communication with patients in practice settings. These findings were compared to the national standard descriptors.Methods: A qualitative study design incorporated delayed time feedback elicited in two workshops from 12 partici-pants who viewed video recorded interactions as triggers for discussion, and real time feedback observed in a hospital setting of 14 clinical supervisors and their students. Both sets of feedback were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed thematically.Results: The findings identified five major themes in the clinical supervisor and educators' feedback: non-verbal communication, manner, language, content and organisa-tion, and interactional tools. In the findings, several of the themes resonate with those espoused in available communication frameworks. The findings provide examples of the framework descriptors.Conclusions: The findings provide important information about the communication skills, attitudes and behaviours that are valued by clinical supervisors and educators. The findings can be used to inform standard setting and curriculum development. Knowledge gained about students' communication skills in practice settings can assist in enhancing communication between physiotherapy students and patients, and it can ultimately contribute to improving patient safety and treatment outcomes.

U2 - 10.5116/ijme.502f.6e18

DO - 10.5116/ijme.502f.6e18

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 166

EP - 174

JO - International Journal of Medical Education

JF - International Journal of Medical Education

SN - 2042-6372

ER -