Abstract

A challenge in health professions is training practitioners to navigate health care complexities, promote health, optimize outcomes, and advance their field. Physical therapist residency education offers a pathway to meet these needs in ways that "entry-level" (professional) education may not. Identifying key aspects of excellence in residency education and understanding its value in developing adaptive expertise will help devise strategies to enhance program, resident, and patient outcomes. The objective of this study was to examine current physical therapist residency education practices to identify and describe examples of excellence and value. A multi-site, multi-specialty qualitative case series was conducted, examining exemplary physical therapist residency programs and their contextual environments using a social constructivist theoretical lens. Six residency programs operating 20 individual residencies that were considered exemplar were selected for the study to participate in site visits. Qualitative case studies were generated from individual interviews, focus groups, review of artifacts, and field observations. The residencies were diverse in specialty area of practice, setting, and geographic location. A conceptual framework was generated grounded in the domains of excellence and value. These domains were connected by 3 signature indicators: (1) atmosphere of practice-based learning, (2) embodiment of professional formation, and (3) elevated practice. These signature indicators represent the aggregate effects of the interchange between the excellence and value domains which sustain residency education. This study builds upon the work of the Physical Therapist Education for the 21st Century (PTE-21) study and identifies key elements of excellence in residency education, the value of such education, and related outcomes. Findings from this study substantiate the need for a postprofessional phase of physical therapist education founded in practice-based learning encapsulated in residency education. Results from this study could have compelling and powerful implications on the dialogue and strategic direction in physical therapist residency education.

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