| Literature DB >> 21929815 |
Janine Margarita R Dizon1, Karen Grimmer-Somers, Saravana Kumar.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Country by country similarities and differences in physical therapy practice exists. Therefore, before updates in practice can be provided, such as trainings in evidence-based practice, it is necessary to identify the profile and nature of practice in a given country or setting. Following a search of the international literature, no appropriate tool was identified to collect and establish data to create the profile of physical therapy practice in the Philippines. We therefore developed, validated and pilot tested a survey instrument which would comprehensively describe the practice of physical therapy in the PhilippinesEntities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21929815 PMCID: PMC3182925 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-4-362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Contents of the draft survey instrument
| Themes regarding content of the survey instrument | |
|---|---|
| 1. General Information and profile of practice | The first part is intended to obtain the demographic data, educational background and characteristics of practice of the participants in terms of years in practice, area of practice (musculoskeletal, neurological, pediatric etc) setting of practice (hospital, clinic, and others) and roles performed (clinician, administrator and others). |
| 2. Treatment Preferences | The second part was intended to obtain treatment techniques/procedures used in practice. An option was provided for general (Manual techniques, electrotherapy, general exercises and others) and specific techniques used (Mulligan's techniques, electrical stimulation, Bobath exercises and others). |
| 3. Basis for Treatment Selection | The third part aimed to determine the basis for the physical therapists' treatment selections (undergraduate education, experience, trainings). From the possible reasons or bases for treatment selection in the focus group discussion, a list was created where options to tick one or more choices as applicable were provided. |
Results of pilot testing
| Items rated for pilot testing | Average scores based from a scale of 1(lowest)- | Comments/Suggestions |
|---|---|---|
| 1. usability | 4.43 | • PTPQ was general useful |
| 2. ease of administration | 4.86 | • PTPQ was very easy to administer either through paper copies or online |
| 3. comprehensiveness | 4.71 | • PTPQ was very comprehensive and covers essential information to describe the profile of practice |
| 4. format | 4.43 | • PTPQ has good format |
Practical applications in designing profile questionnaires
| Steps | Purpose | Who are involved? |
|---|---|---|
| • To check the availability of an appropriate instrument which matches the objectives of an intended study | • Authors | |
| • If no instrument is available, identify ways and possible sources of information on how to develop an instrument which will match the intended objectives of a study | • Researchers | |
| • To explore key areas of concern in designing the instrument | • Key informants | |
| • Researchers | ||
| • To ensure that the instrument measures what it intends to measure | • Experts in different areas of practice | |
| • To collect highly generalisable data from the answers to be collected | ||
| • To "trial" the survey and identify possible problems to be encountered and allow troubleshooting to address the problems | • Participants representative of the sample population | |