Comparisons of Clinical Competency and Job Responsibilities of Physical Therapists with and Without Postprofessional Training

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Abstract

Introduction.Understanding how educational pathways may influence clinical competence and work responsibilities is important in providing guidance to academic and clinic stakeholders and physical therapists (PTs) on PT career development. The purpose of this paper was to compare perceived clinical competency and job duties between PTs with formal mentored postprofessional clinical education with PTs without formal postprofessional clinical education.Review of Literature.The understanding of self-perceived clinical competence of PTs overall in the United States is limited, especially as related to the impact of postprofessional education. Furthermore, there is limited understanding of the career pathways and development of job duties of PTs in the United States.Subjects.Two thousand three hundred thirty-four PTs in the United States.Methods.An online survey was sent to licensed PTs. This survey included items measuring self-perceived clinical competency and questions related to weekly job responsibilities. Participants were categorized as residency trained, fellowship trained, or non-residency/fellowship trained. Frequency analyses and Kruskal-Wallis tests with pairwise post hoc tests were performed comparing the 3 groups.Results.Residency-trained (P

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Briggs, M. S., Gulla, N., Howald, H., Weber, M. D., Olson-Kellogg, B. J., Dewitt, J. J., … Tichenor, C. J. (2023). Comparisons of Clinical Competency and Job Responsibilities of Physical Therapists with and Without Postprofessional Training. Journal of Physical Therapy Education, 37(4), 332–341. https://doi.org/10.1097/JTE.0000000000000295

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