An analysis of physiotherapy classroom-based teaching and hospital practical skills in Zambia

dc.contributor.authorMoyo, Geoffrey
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-18T10:53:26Z
dc.date.available2025-08-18T10:53:26Z
dc.date.issued2001
dc.description.abstractThe last decade 1990 to 2000 brought many changes to the global health care delivery systems. The changes have rendered the clinical-set up to be complex, ambiguous and unstable. Some physiotherapy training programmes have not kept the pace of change as that recorded in the health care delivery systems during the last ten years. The uneven changes between the health care delivery systems and physiotherapy education in the last decade have made the physiotherapy traditional techniques to be seemly unable to respond to the complex, and ambiguous situations in the clinical setting. Some recent research studies have identified gaps in the curricula of health science training programmes as a result of the rapid changes in the health care systems. Employers of health science professionals are in agreement that new graduates in health sciences possess a body of knowledge in their respective field of study. However, the employers' agreement is below 50% in relation to the graduates' capacity for applying theory to practice in unfamiliar situations, being able to exercise critical judgement and rigorous independent thinking. The researcher was driven to carry out this study because of the persistent complaints about students' inability to translate their theory into practice in the clinical area by clinical educators. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the physiotherapy theory at the Evelyn Hone College (EHC) matched the hospital clinical curriculum. A descriptive quantitative design was employed in the study, using retrospective data from the EHC physiotherapy curriculum, physiotherapy records from Chipata General (rural) and Ndola Central Hospitals (urban) from 1995 to 1999. The Physiotherapy curriculum data and patient records from the two hospitals were compared to establish whether there was any congruence between the two.
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10566/20750
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUniversity of the Western Cape
dc.subjectCurriculum
dc.subjectPhysiotherapy
dc.subjectClinical Practice
dc.subjectTechnical Knowledge
dc.subjectClinical placements
dc.titleAn analysis of physiotherapy classroom-based teaching and hospital practical skills in Zambia
dc.typeThesis

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