Employing a coaching model of supervision during physiotherapy placements: charting the learner experience in England

Smith, Sarah, Godley, Simon, Anderson, Adele and Miller, Paul K. ORCID logo ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5611-1354 (2025) Employing a coaching model of supervision during physiotherapy placements: charting the learner experience in England. Physiotherapy . Item availability may be restricted.

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Abstract

Objectives: The UK government has moved to increase pre-qualification training places across all Allied Health Professions by 50%, without any reduction in quality of education. Universities and healthcare teams are therefore being asked to change their ways of working and consider alternative practice supervision models during placements. This study explores the experiences of pre-qualifying physiotherapy learners involved in a trial of one such model, a coaching and peer-learning approach. The work described assesses its facility as an augmentation to the traditional one-to-one clinical supervision model.

Design: A qualitative-thematic approach using semi-structured interviews was employed. Detailed, open-ended interviews were conducted in order to ascertain the nuanced experiences of participants involved in the trial.

Setting: An intervention in multiple sites (both hospital inpatient and community care) within a single NHS trust, administered by a single UK university.

Participants: N=17 pre-qualifying participants involved in the trial consented to be interviewed. Of these, n=11 were final year undergraduate learners, and n=6 were final year postgraduates, of which n=12 identified as female and n=5 identified as male.

Results: Analysis revealed four interconnected major themes: 1. Teamwork, Camaraderie and Hierarchical Tensions in Peer-Support; 2. Adapting to Leadership and Being Led; 3. Safety Nets versus Supervisors; 4. Fast Starts and Variable Endings in Learning and Experience.

Conclusion and Implications: The model was broadly well-received by participants, and ultimately gave rise to greater workplace confidence, with potential impact for capacity, though the nuanced outcomes of the research indicated contingencies around gradual assimilation and group dynamics that should be considered in future development.

Item Type: Article
Journal / Publication Title: Physiotherapy
Publisher: Elsevier
ISSN: 1873-1465
Departments: Institute of Health > Psychology and Psychological Therapies
Institute of Health > Rehabilitation and Sport Science
Additional Information: Sarah Smith, Senior Lecturer in Physiotherapy; Simon Godley, Lecturer in Physiotherapy Studies; Paul K. Miller, Associate Professor in Social Psychology, all of the Institute of Health, University of Cumbria, UK. Adele Anderson, North Cumbria Integrated Care, UK.
Depositing User: Paul Miller
Date Deposited: 14 Jan 2025 10:36
Last Modified: 14 Jan 2025 11:45
URI: https://insight.cumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/8575
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