Abstract

AimTo investigate the facilitators and barriers to attaining a postgraduate physiotherapy degree in South Africa.MethodsA quantitative, cross-sectional design using an internet-based survey was employed. The population of the study included all qualified physiotherapists who had completed community service and who were on the South African Society of Physiotherapy e-mailing list at the time of the study.ResultsIn all, 425 valid responses were received. The study participants were predominantly white women with a mean age of 36.9 and the majority were working in private practice. A total of 20.5% of respondents had completed a master’s or doctoral degree in physiotherapy, while a further 13% of respondents were registered for a postgraduate degree in physiotherapy at the time of the study. Study participants who had obtained a postgraduate degree identified the same main barriers (namely cost/lack of financial support, family commitments and lack of time) and the same main facilitators (namely gaining of expertise, fulfilment of a personal goal and improvement of patient care) as participants who had not obtained a postgraduate degree. Participants who had not obtained a postgraduate degree were significantly more likely (p < 0.05) to report concerns regarding their own ability and a lack of motivation as barriers to further study.ConclusionSouth African physiotherapists with and without a postgraduate degree reported common facilitators and barriers to pursuing postgraduate studies. In order to ensure that a greater number and diversity of physiotherapists see postgraduate studies as a worthwhile career option, stakeholders in health and education in both the South African public and private sectors need to be engaged to limit the barriers to postgraduate study and seek novel methods of making postgraduate study a more attractive option from a personal development and career perspective.

Highlights

  • For over two decades, calls for more research in physiotherapy have been made in order to assist in developing a distinct identity for the profession (Robertson 1995)

  • The majority (78.1%) of participants were working in private practice, while 9.4% worked for the South African Department of Health (DOH) and 9.3% worked in tertiary or primary education

  • A majority (79.5%) of participants had only completed a bachelor’s degree in physiotherapy, with 13% of these participants registered for postgraduate degree at the time of the study

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Summary

Introduction

Calls for more research in physiotherapy have been made in order to assist in developing a distinct identity for the profession (Robertson 1995). The eminent Australian professor of physiotherapy, Jack Crosbie, stated that while physiotherapists generally endorse the need for evidence-based practice, they are involved in relatively little research specific to the profession (Crosbie 2000). While there is little published evidence on the involvement of South African physiotherapists in formal research activities, this state of affairs would appear to remain unchanged in this country. One way of encouraging clinicians to conduct research is for them to enrol in postgraduate physiotherapy programmes. These programmes, which include master’s and doctoral (or PhD) degrees, involve a significant research component and may involve elements work (CHE 2009)

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