Masley P.M., Havrilko C.L., Mahnensmith M.R., Aubert M., Jette D.U.
Physical therapy, June 2011, vol./is. 91/6(906-919).
Physical therapist practice in the acute care setting is not thoroughly understood, and it has been argued that skilled care is not required. The objective of this study was to describe the role of physical therapists, the clinical reasoning processes used by physical therapists, and the context for providing physical therapy services in the acute care setting. A convenience sample of 18 physical therapists working in 3 academic medical centers in the United States was included in this qualitative study with grounded-theory methods. Semistructured interviews were conducted. Transcripts were coded, and a constant comparative process of analysis was used to determine common themes. A theoretical model was derived. Eight themes were identified: collection and analysis of medical information, application of specialized physical therapy knowledge, communication to gain information, communication to provide information, continual dynamic assessment, professional responsibility, complex environment, and decision making for patient care. The major concerns for physical therapists in the acute care setting, like physical therapists in other settings, were patients' mobility and safety. The goals were an optimal plan of care and an appropriate discharge setting for each patient. The therapists' roles reflected professional core values applied in ways unique to the acute care setting.
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