| Literature DB >> 29927660 |
Maria Sandborgh1, Elizabeth Dean1,2, Eva Denison1,3, Maria Elvén1, Johanna Fritz1, Petra von Heideken Wågert1, Johan Moberg1, Thomas Overmeer1,4, Åsa Snöljung1, Ann-Christin Johansson1, Anne Söderlund1.
Abstract
In 2004, Mälardalen University, Sweden, introduced a new undergraduate entry-level physiotherapy program. Program developers constructed the curriculum with behavioral medicine content that reflected the contemporary definition and values of the physiotherapy profession aligning it with current best practices, evidence, and the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF). The new curriculum conceptualized movement and function as modifiable behaviors in that they reflect behavioral contingencies, perceptions, beliefs, and lifestyle factors as well as pathophysiology and environmental factors. The purpose of this article is to describe how one university accordingly structured its new curriculum and its review. We describe the rationale for the curriculum's behavioral medicine content and competencies, its development and implementation, challenges, long-term outcomes, and its related research enterprise. We conclude that physiotherapy practiced by our graduates augments that taught in other programs based on accreditation reviews. With their expanded practice scope, graduates are systematically practicing within the constructs of health and function conceptualized within the ICF. Our intent in sharing our experience is to exemplify one university's initiative to best prepare students with respect to maximizing physiotherapy outcomes as well as establish a dialogue regarding minimum standards of behavioral medicine competencies in physiotherapy education and practice.Keywords: Behavioral medicine; education; evaluation; physiotherapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29927660 DOI: 10.1080/09593985.2018.1488192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Physiother Theory Pract ISSN: 0959-3985 Impact factor: 2.279