Handbook home
Physiotherapy Theory and Practice 1 (PHTY90095)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 18.75Not available in 2022
From 2023 most subjects will be taught on campus only with flexible options limited to a select number of postgraduate programs and individual subjects.
To learn more, visit COVID-19 course and subject delivery.
About this subject
Overview
Fees | Look up fees |
---|
Students will have the opportunity to learn the foundational knowledge, skills and attitudes necessary to becoming a physiotherapist. The focus of the subject will be on preparing students to work with patients in a variety of contexts including as first contact practitioners and as practitioners working within health care teams. The subject will emphasize topics such as professional identity formation, ethical decision making, clinical reasoning, collaborative practice and effective communication.The development of professional knowledge and skills that underpin assessment, diagnosis and education in physiotherapy practice will be included. Students will focus on developing skills of physical assessment such as observation, palpation and analysis of movement and function. Particular attention will be given to the analysis of normal movement and function as a basis for identifying variations from normal. Students will build on their understanding of the World Health Organization, (WHO) International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, (ICF) model and will explicitly link this model of classification to physiotherapy assessment using patient profiles. Students will be introduced to a variety of outcome measures commonly used in physiotherapy practice.
Intended learning outcomes
- Outline the theoretical principles that underpin assessment procedures used in physiotherapy to identify functional limitations and impairments
- Analyse human movement and apply knowledge of kinesiology and biomechanics of movement to interpret normal joint and muscle function and to recognise variations from normal
- Include knowledge of anatomy, physiology, neuroscience, pain sciences and exercise physiology in the appropriate selection of assessment tools for selected patient cases
- Interpret and evaluate the use of measurement and measurement tools in the practice of physiotherapy
- Analyse the purpose of common physiotherapy measurement tools with respect to their clinimetric properties
- Critically examine the principles of evidence-based practice as they apply to common physiotherapy treatment strategies
- Analyse the role of physiotherapy within the Australian healthcare context and identify the ethical and legal standards of physiotherapy practice and the mechanisms of accountability for patient and therapist safety within the profession
- Demonstrate skills in patient centred communication that acknowledges the social, economic and cultural factors which influence both physiotherapists and patients.
Generic skills
By the completion of this subject, students will have had the opportunity to develop the following generic skills:
- the ability to identify and address their own learning needs;
- the ability to give effective feedback to colleagues in order to help them improve their performances;
- an understanding of the factors that might disturb normal structure, function and developement;
- the ability to construct with the patient an accurate, thorough, organsied, physiotherapy history and examination.
Last updated: 8 November 2024