Thesis
Thesis
Thesis
The thesis contains no material which has been accepted for the award of
any other degree or diploma in any university or other tertiary institution and,
to the best of my knowledge and belief, contains no material previously
published or written by another person, except where due reference has
been made in the text. I give consent to this copy of my thesis, when
deposited in the University Library, being made available for loan and
photocopying subject to the provisions of the Copyright Act 1968.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF AUTHORSHIP
I hereby certify that the work embodied in this thesis is the result of original
research, the greater part of which was completed subsequent to admission
to candidature for the degree.
Date __________________________
Signed __________________________
Peter Andrew Miller
ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
SUPERVISOR:
Prof Darren Rivett
BAppSc (Phty), MAppSc (ManipPhty), PhD
CO-SUPERVISOR:
Rosemary Isles
BPhty (Hons), M Ed, GradCertEduc (Tertiary)
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
DECLARATION ……………………………….…… ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ……………………………….…… iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS ……………………………….…… iv
LIST OF TABLES ……………………………….…… x
LIST OF FIGURES ……………………………….…… xii
LIST OF APPENDICES ……………………………….…… xiii
ABSTRACT ……………………………….…… xiv
ABBREVIATIONS ……………………………….…… xvi
iv
2.3.2 Diagnostic hypotheses …………………………………… 23
2.3.3 Basis for empirico-analytical reasoning models …………… 24
2.4 HYPOTHETICO-DEDUCTIVE REASONING …………………… 25
2.4.1 Defining hypothetico-deductive reasoning …………………… 25
2.4.2 Hypothetico-deductive reasoning in physiotherapy …………… 26
2.4.3 Characteristics of hypothetico-deductive reasoning …………… 27
2.4.4 Summary of hypothetico-deductive reasoning …………………… 29
2.5 PATTERN RECOGNITION …………………………………… 29
2.5.1 Defining pattern recognition …………………………………… 30
Single hypothesis …………………………………… 32
Significant case features …………………………………… 32
Information availability …………………………………… 33
2.5.2 Pattern recognition in physiotherapy …………………………… 34
2.5.3 Characteristics of pattern recognition …………………………… 35
Knowledge …………………………………… 35
Categorisation …………………………………… 36
Efficiency …………………………………… 37
Accuracy …………………………………… 38
2.5.4 Summary of pattern recognition …………………………………… 40
2.6 INTEGRATION OF CLINICAL REASONING MODELS …… 41
2.6.1 Further exploration of forwards reasoning …………………… 42
2.6.2 Separating forwards from backwards reasoning…………………… 42
2.6.3 Context specificity …………………………………… 45
2.7 KNOWLEDGE …………………………………… 46
2.7.1 Types of knowledge …………………………………… 46
2.7.2 Structured knowledge …………………………………… 47
2.7.3 The role of knowledge …………………………………… 49
2.8 EXPERTISE …………………………………… 49
2.8.1 Common attributes of an expert physiotherapist …………… 50
2.8.2 Clinical reasoning skill …………………………………… 51
2.8.3 Significant case features …………………………………… 52
2.9 REASONING IMPACT ON CURRENT HEALTHCARE ………… 53
2.9.1 Errors in clinical reasoning …………………………………… 54
v
2.9.2 Possible impact of accurate clinical patterns …………………… 56
2.9.3 Reasoning skill as a cost effective variable …………………… 57
2.10 SUMMARY …………………………………… 57
vi
3.6.2 Expert and novice group differences in pattern recognition use…. 85
3.6.3 Accuracy of pattern recognition …………………………………… 85
3.6.4 Hypothesis category utilisation …………………………………… 85
3.7 QUANTITATIVE VIDEO DATA ANALYSIS …………………… 86
3.8 TRIANGULATION …………………………………… 87
3.9 SUMMARY OF METHODOLOGY …………………………… 89
vii
Structured knowledge …………………………………… 102
Personal non-propositional knowledge …………………… 103
Self awareness …………………………………… 103
4.3.2 Intra-coder reliability …………………………………… 105
4.3.3 Free codes …………………………………… 106
4.3.4 Thematic analysis …………………………………… 112
4.4 PATTERN RECOGNITION …………………………………… 115
4.4.1 Identification of pattern recognition …………………………… 115
4.4.2 Comparison of expert and novice use of pattern recognition …… 122
4.4.3 Accuracy …………………………………… 124
4.4.4 Efficiency …………………………………… 127
Pattern recognition efficiency …………………………………… 128
Comparison of efficiency between groups …………………… 129
4.4.5 Participant order of assessment questions …………………… 130
4.5 QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS FINDINGS …………………………… 132
4.5.1 Analytical process …………………………………… 132
4.5.2 Pattern related …………………………………… 133
4.5.3 Developing patterns …………………………………… 135
4.6 PARTICIPANT HYPOTHESES …………………………………… 139
4.6.1 Final hypothesis category utilisation …………………………… 139
4.6.2 Overall hypothesis category utilisation …………………………… 141
4.7 ADDITIONAL FINDINGS …………………………………… 146
4.7.1 Relative importance of data …………………………………… 146
4.7.2 Concurrent integration of data …………………………………… 148
4.7.3 Awareness of errors …………………………………… 152
4.7.4 Predictive reasoning …………………………………… 152
4.7.5 Person centred approach to assessment …………………………… 153
4.8 STUDY DESIGN RELATED RESULTS …………………………… 155
4.8.1 Case simulation data …………………………………… 155
4.8.2 Study context influences …………………………………… 159
viii
5.1.1 Accuracy of pattern recognition …………………………………… 167
5.1.2 Efficiency of pattern recognition …………………………………… 170
5.2 PARTICIPANT ORDER OF QUESTIONING …………………… 172
5.2.1 Triangulation …………………………………… 172
5.3 PATTERNS …………………………………… 174
5.3.1 Categorisation and patterns …………………………………… 174
5.3.2 Knowledge structure and pattern accuracy …………………… 176
5.3.3 Developing patterns …………………………………… 178
5.3.4 Specificity of patterns …………………………………… 180
5.3.5 Significant case features …………………………………… 182
5.3.6 Pattern elimination …………………………………… 183
5.4 HYPOTHESIS CATEGORY USE …………………………………… 184
5.5 OBSERVED APPROACHES TO REASONING …………………… 187
5.5.1 Predictive reasoning …………………………………… 187
5.5.2 Metacognition …………………………………… 188
5.5.3 Awareness of errors …………………………………… 189
5.5.4 Person centred approach …………………………………… 190
5.6 STUDY DESIGN …………………………………… 192
5.6.1 Participant recruitment …………………………………… 192
5.6.2 Experimental context influences …………………………………… 193
5.6.3 Simulated client …………………………………… 194
5.6.4 Coding process …………………………………… 195
5.7 STUDY LIMITATIONS …………………………………… 196
5.8 SUMMARY OF DISCUSSION …………………………………… 198
ix
LIST OF TABLES
x
Table 4.20 Total assessment time relative to delayed versus concurrent
integration of data …………………………………… 151
Table 4.21 Total assessment time of participants using HDR relative to
delayed versus concurrent integration of data …………… 151
Table 4.22 Simulated client response data …………………………… 157
xi
LIST OF FIGURES
xii
LIST OF APPENDICES
xiii
ABSTRACT
The study utilised a single case study with multiple participants. A real clinical
case with a diagnosis of high grade lumbar spine spondylolisthesis was
simulated using a trained actor. This provided a high fidelity case study
method allowing the observation of more realistic problem solving practices
as compared with the common low fidelity paper case approach.
Two participant groups were included in the study to investigate the common
belief that pattern recognition is an experience based reasoning process. The
expert group comprised ten titled musculoskeletal physiotherapists with a
minimum of ten years overall clinical experience and greater than two years
experience following the completion of postgraduate study. The novice group
included nine physiotherapists in their first year of clinical practice following
completion of an undergraduate degree.
xiv
study provided methodological triangulation of the results and supported the
presence of pattern recognition in musculoskeletal physiotherapy. The
quantitative research findings indicated that pattern recognition was
significantly more likely to produce an accurate diagnostic outcome than
analytical reasoning strategies during a physiotherapy history. However its
use was not a guarantee of success with only three of the four experts using
pattern recognition identifying the correct diagnosis. Although four experts
utilised pattern recognition as compared with only one novice, no significant
overall differences were found in the use of pattern recognition between the
expert and novice participant groups. The findings relating to time data found
that expert participants took longer to conduct the client history than novices.
Similarly those participants identified using pattern recognition also required
more time which seemingly contradicts the view of pattern recognition being
an efficient clinical reasoning process. This finding was limited by the
incomplete nature of the study which did not include a physical examination
or any client management.
xv
ABBREVIATIONS
xvi
CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION
The clinical reasoning model of PR and its attributes form the basis for the
research study reported in this thesis. Its existence as a diagnostic reasoning
model has acceptable evidence in medicine based on profession specific
research and psychology foundations (Norman et al, 2007). The research in
1
both of these domains underpins its current understanding in physiotherapy,
however questions relating to its existence and advantages remain within the
profession (Jones & Rivett, 2004).
2
1. Determine whether PR is utilised by expert and novice clinical
physiotherapists in the musculoskeletal field
2. Relate the use of PR to efficiency within a physiotherapy assessment
3. Relate the use of PR to accuracy within a physiotherapy assessment
3
CHAPTER 2. REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE
2.1 BACKGROUND
Knowledge
Interpretation Decision-
of case making
Management
4
2.1.1 Literature search strategy
For the purpose of this literature review, searches were conducted in several
databases to maximise the capture of information relevant to the topic.
Medline, CINAHL, PsycINFO and AMED databases were searched using
both MeSH headings (if available) and key words. The MeSH headings
utilised included problem solving, decision-making and diagnosis
(differential). Key words searched in isolation and combination included:
clinical reasoning, pattern recognition, hypothetico-deductive reasoning,
cognition, metacognition, knowledge, expert / expertise, experience and
physiotherapy. These databases were searched for English papers only
throughout all available years. The ‘find citing articles’ command contained in
individual databases was used to search for more recent relevant articles.
Each paper’s reference list was scrutinised to identify further articles not
located in prior searches. Searches were repeated during the entire period of
the study to ensure that recently published papers were included.
5
based on observations of concurrent use within a clinical decision-making
process (Edwards & Jones, 2007).
6
Integrating research paradigms is useful in providing a better understanding
of clinical reasoning. Edwards and Jones (2007) have comfortably integrated
both empirico-analytical and interpretive paradigms into their understanding
of clinical reasoning but without requiring a process model as previously
developed. In particular, they describe the use of interpretive reasoning skills
with more complex clinical encounters where management without diagnosis
is commonplace. The empirico-analytical reasoning models are
comparatively described in relation to more characteristic clinical
presentations with recognisable management strategies.
7
Table 2.1 Interpretive reasoning strategies
(Edwards et al, 2005; Edwards & Jones, 2007; Higgs & Jones, 2000)
8
reasoning type but rather to introduce PR and HDR as primarily diagnostic
reasoning strategies.
Clinical
Reasoning
Interactive reasoning
Teaching as reasoning
Procedural reasoning
Predictive reasoning
Diagnosis Management
Ethical reasoning
Collaborative reasoning
Narrative reasoning
Hypothetico-
Pattern
deductive
recognition
reasoning
9
More recently the terms analytical and non-analytical models of clinical
reasoning have been used to encompass HDR and PR respectively (Norman
et al, 2007). The term non-analytical reasoning has in essence been used as
another name for PR. It seeks to separate experience based models from
methodical problem solving processes associated with unfamiliar
circumstances. The present chapter has primarily made reference to the
original terms of HDR and PR, whereas Chapters 4 and 5 have also used the
more contemporary terms of analytical and non-analytical reasoning.
10
research can include a variety of methods from real to paper cases, with
each offering their own benefits.
11
2.2.3 Simulated client assessments
12
patient technology as a means of introducing much needed experimental
control in their studies” (p.24).
13
A particular method of retrospective recall involves a stimulus to trigger prior
cognitive thoughts (Elstein et al, 1978; Ladyshewsky, 2004). Observing a
video replay of an assessment is considered an ideal stimulus for recall and
has been utilised in several studies investigating clinical reasoning (Embrey
et al, 1996; Gale & Marsden, 1982; Jensen et al, 2000; Noll et al, 2001). It is
important that during the video replay the subject actually verbalises their
thoughts from the cognitive event without ‘theorizing’ at the time of recall
(Patel & Arocha, 2000). Timing of recall is important to ensure optimal
accuracy of verbal reporting. Although delayed thoughts are reported to
utilise a subject’s short and long term memory, the data obtained is
considered sufficiently similar to the thoughts during the actual event
(Ladyshewsky, 2004). Immediate review of the cognitive event allows for a
high level of accuracy of data obtained via stimulated recall. Any increase in
time delay following the event reduces the accuracy of recalled thoughts
(Barrows, 2000; Ladyshewsky, 2004; Patel & Arocha, 2000).
Verbal reported data has been criticised by some authors based on the
potential for participants to adapt to the study and report what they think the
researcher wants to hear (Elstein et al, 1990; Elstein & Schwartz, 2000). The
alternative research methods enabling investigation of clinical reasoning
have been those utilised in conventional psychology research which
emphasise the relationship between the observed responses to each
stimulus rather than participant’s verbalisations (Elstein et al, 1990; Elstein &
Schwartz, 2000). This study method also has its limitations, particularly with
respect to face validity when generalising results to real life clinical
reasoning. Collectively, the use of these different research methods should in
fact provide a better overall understanding of clinical reasoning.
14
professional fields (Britten, 1995) with those following an event referred to as
retrospective. Clinical reasoning research in physiotherapy has commonly
incorporated retrospective interviews with high fidelity studies (Doody &
McAteer, 2002; Edwards et al, 2004; Embrey et al, 1996; Jensen et al, 2000;
Noll et al, 2001). Careful consideration of interview method and structure is
necessary to obtain the required information that will answer the research
question.
15
reasoning theory require careful design of a semi-structured interview to
minimise reflection during stimulated recall but encourage recollection of
thought processes from the actual event. Audio or video technology captures
all information from an interview and allows for critical appraisal of interview
technique to ensure maximum value from the data.
16
study to utilise qualitative data sources such as observation or verbal
reporting, as has been extensively and appropriately used to date. However,
two commonly reported mixed method approaches suited to research in
clinical reasoning include embedded and triangulated designs (Creswell &
Plano Clark, 2007).
Embedded Design
Qualitative Data
Quantitative
Data
Interpretation
17
can vary from simple number counts to more complex statistical analysis
depending on the data generated. Embedded designs are useful in providing
greater strength to research studies of existing theory.
Triangulation
Integrating data sets allows for a more detailed understanding of the entity
under investigation. A second data set in parallel with an embedded design
allows for a triangulation design (Cresswell & Plano Clark, 2007) as indicated
in Figure 2.4. This is reported as a type of methodological triangulation (Sim
& Wright, 2000) which may involve differing data sources within mixed
method research. Other types of pure qualitative research triangulation are
beyond the scope of this thesis.
Qualitative Data
Quantitative
Quantitative Data
Data
Interpretation
18
2.3 HYPOTHESIS GENERATION
19
may provide information that rejects the primary hypothesis, however the
clinician rarely sets out to disprove their hypothesis (or prove the null
hypothesis) which is often the case in experimental research. It has been
suggested by prominent researchers in medical clinical reasoning that
confirmation strategies are more often utilised in clinical problem solving than
those that negate a hypothesis (Arocha, Patel & Patel, 1993). Physiotherapy
clinical reasoning includes testing that may confirm or reject a clinical
hypothesis, however it is unknown if either is more commonly utilised.
20
disability models that provide a more holistic view of a person and their
problem rather than merely the pathology.
The hypothesis categories in Table 2.2 allow for a broad array of possible
clinical descriptions within the same clinical case. The utilisation of some of
the individual categories as reported by Jones and Rivett (2004) has not
been investigated in current clinical practice and as such the relative
frequency of their use remains somewhat unknown. Only a few studies of
physiotherapy clinical reasoning have recorded frequency of use in differing
hypothesis category classifications (Payton, 1985; Rivett & Higgs, 1997).
Payton (1985) utilised the following categories (observed occasions in
parentheses): pathological (3), pathokinesiological (18), pathophysiological
(8), and psychosocial (5). Rivett and Higgs (1997) reported on an earlier
version of those presented in Table 2.2, including: source of the symptoms
and / or dysfunction, contributing factors, precautions for and
contraindications to physical examination and treatment, management,
prognosis, mechanisms of signs and symptoms, and reassessment.
Consideration of hypothesis categories is useful reflection in preventing a
narrow view of musculoskeletal physiotherapy clinical reasoning, or in other
words expanding on basic impairment / structural problem solving.
21
Table 2.2 Hypothesis categories (Jones & Rivett, 2004, pp.13-20)
Category Definition
Activity and Concerns the capabilities or restrictions of an individual
participation during a specific activity or being involved in a life situation.
Patient’s perspective / An individual person’s perspective may be considered in
psychosocial factors terms of their understanding, feelings or beliefs related to
the presenting problems. The patient’s perspective may be a
contributing factor or a consequence of the pain or
restriction in activity / participation, but either way may be
relevant in the recovery process.
Pathobiological Consideration of tissue healing and pain mechanisms allows
mechanisms for reasoning related to initial onset or maintenance of signs
and symptoms by the nervous system. Normal tissue
healing can be a basis for hypothetical understanding of a
patient’s presentation. Pain mechanisms can help in
understanding the activity or participation levels, patient’s
perspectives and physical impairments. These refer to the
input mechanism of pain, the central nervous system
processing of the input, and the output mechanisms that
may result in distorted movement patterns and motor
activity.
Physical impairments & Impairments identified in the physical examination are
associated structure / atypical findings in the neuromusculoskeletal system.
tissue sources Associated pathological sources are the structures or
tissues hypothesised to be related to the client’s symptoms
and signs. This category alone is insufficient to understand a
problem, its effect on a patient or the reason for
management.
Contributing factors A causative factor may be “environmental, psychosocial,
behavioural, physical / biomechanical, and even hereditary”
(p. 17). This category refers to any aspect of a client’s case
that may contribute towards or is associated with the onset
or maintenance of the presenting problem(s).
Precautions & Hypotheses regarding precautions and contraindications to
contraindications examination and / or treatment. The type of pathology /
disorder, stage of healing, severity / irritability, and patient’s
perspectives must all be considered when hypothesising in
this category. Precautions and contraindications can be
viewed simply as safety related hypotheses.
Management & Any intervention to assist a patient towards recovery or
treatment achieving their stated goals, including specific treatment
techniques, is considered a hypothesis in management or
treatment.
Prognosis Predicting a possible response to treatment intervention or
an outcome for a particular problem / pathology is a
prognostic hypothesis. Features of a case that may
influence the outcome in a positive or negative way can be
labelled as prognostic features.
22
2.3.2 Diagnostic hypotheses
23
(structure / source)’. Alternatively a diagnostic hypothesis may lie within only
one of the categories. Figure 2.5 displays the use of different hypothesis
categories to explain the variations in stated final hypotheses despite a
similar understanding of a case. This has implications for designing studies in
diagnostic accuracy.
Clinical case
Therapist Therapist
Therapist
A C
B
24
2.4 HYPOTHETICO-DEDUCTIVE REASONING
The HDR model was first developed as a general problem solving strategy by
Elstein and associates in the medical profession (Elstein, Shulman &
Sprafka, 1978). It provided a sequence of problem solving stages that could
be associated with any clinical encounter. As implied in the term, the
deductive process refers to a search for findings to support or validate a
limited number of previously generated hypotheses (Elstein & Schwartz,
2000). It has been the base of much clinical reasoning research and debate
over the last three decades.
25
The third stage relates to the evaluation of cues relevant to each hypothesis
generated. ‘Cue interpretation’ requires awareness and knowledge of the
various data sources to understand the value of each cue in supporting the
hypotheses (Elstein, Shulman & Sprafka, 1978). The validity and reliability of
each question in the history or specific test during a physical assessment
must be considered fundamental for accurate cue interpretation.
26
was used by physicians and musculoskeletal physiotherapists (Payton,
1985).
HDR is known to be a slow but thorough analytic process that when utilised
by a skilled clinician leads to effective management of more complex and / or
unfamiliar situations. It is a process recognised in physiotherapy to continue
beyond management strategies. Encouraging critical reflection on response
to treatment interventions enables further evaluation and refinement of the
final hypothesis.
An early criticism of the HDR model related to its generality, which refers to
its applicability to all problem solving situations. All analytical problem solving
models like HDR have generality limitations when attempting to understand
clinical reasoning. The problem solving approach varies depending on the
27
case and the clinician’s knowledge in the particular domain (Elstein et al,
1990; Groen & Patel,1985; Norman, 2005). The original misconception that
HDR is the sole explanation for clinical reasoning should not reduce the
value it has provided in understanding part of the problem solving process
within medicine and physiotherapy.
HDR has also been criticised for being a strategy utilised predominantly
when knowledge and experience is insufficient. Groen and Patel (1985) refer
to the cognitive psychology literature on differences between novice and
expert, and note that HDR is characteristic of novices. Expertise research in
medicine supports this view via a lack of association between HDR
processing and expert practice (Norman, 2005). This leaves us with the view
that an expert operating in their domain does not generally use HDR
processing, but novices who are attempting to develop a structured
knowledge base across many areas of practice do rely on analytical and
backwards problem solving strategies such as HDR.
The backwards nature of HDR and its relative use in less familiar situations is
thought to result in overall inefficiency when compared with other forwards
reasoning strategies. The formation and testing of several competing
hypotheses during a deductive assessment process is slowed particularly by
the need to gain information that supports or negates each hypothesis. HDR
has been reported as a slow process when compared with inductive type
processes or what is actually observed in experts within familiar situations
(Arocha et al, 1993; Higgs & Jones, 2000; Jones & Rivett, 2004; Patel &
Groen, 1986). Although relatively inefficient, HDR remains commonly utilised
by novices and a ‘fall back’ strategy for experienced clinicians encountering
complex or unfamiliar cases requiring a diagnostic approach.
28
2.4.4 Summary of hypothetico-deductive reasoning
29
PR is notably only one type of several inductive models of clinical reasoning.
Ridderkhoff (1989) also describes inductive-heuristic and inductive-algorithm,
alongside PR, as inductive reasoning models. However it is PR that almost
exclusively exists as a forwards reasoning model in the physiotherapy
literature.
30
Table 2.3 Common elements of pattern recognition described in the literature
Prototypes of single
patient or abstract
model (several
patients combined)
Direction Forwards reasoning Coughlin & Patel, 1987 Edwards & Jones, 2007
strategy Noll et al, 2001
Patel & Groen, 1986
Patel et al, 1990
31
The synthesis of these common elements found in the literature leads to an
overall understanding of PR as a process within clinical reasoning:
Single hypothesis
The stand out feature that clearly separates PR from other hypothesis
generating models is the single dominant hypothesis. A recent study
undertaken by Coderre et al (2003) attempted to determine the diagnostic
reasoning strategy used by novices and experts in medicine. They labelled
PR as one strategy and identified its use via “a single diagnosis with only
perfunctory attention to the alternatives” (Coderre et al, 2003, p.703).
Ridderkhoff (1989, 1991) also identified PR as a type of inductive reasoning
with a single hypothesis.
It has been argued however that more than one hypothesis can be
considered as a result of PR. Arocha et al (1993) refer to different data
sources (cues) triggering different hypotheses within a forwards reasoning
process. Although this is probably valid, it becomes increasingly difficult to
separate PR from hypothesis generation within a HDR process when more
than one unrelated hypothesis is present throughout a clinical assessment.
32
process. Patel et al (1990) demonstrated that comparison of irrelevant cues /
features against the primary hypothesis disrupted the forwards reasoning
process. On this basis, pure PR should be evident by the use of predominant
significant case features that relate directly to the primary hypothesis.
Contrary to this, following the generation of an initial hypothesis, any
unrelated data collection may indicate a backwards process.
Information availability
33
observations of specific movements do not usually add to the assessment
until a thorough understanding of the problem has already been formed (i.e.
after reaching the initial hypothesis). Norman et al (1992) highlighted in
radiology that a visual cue alone can trigger a diagnostic hypothesis. Figure
2.6 illustrates the range of cues within a physiotherapy assessment. This
suggests that PR is more likely to relate to visual or verbal cues during the
early stage of a clinical encounter but may possibly occur at any stage during
an assessment.
Patient
34
varied definitions of PR create discord amongst the findings of these studies.
Doody and McAteer (2002) described PR only by movement from hypothesis
generation to evaluation and bypassing the appraisal of data relative to the
hypothesis. Hypothesis evaluation in this study referred to assessing each
hypothesis for best fit with the case. Noll et al (2001) reported PR as a
qualitative code, labelled as a pattern of data (signs and symptoms)
recognisable from prior experience and used to develop a working
hypothesis. King and Bithell (1998) used only reported similarity to previous
clinical experience, during a retrospective interview, as identification of PR.
These studies provide some support for PR based on each researcher’s
understanding of the model, however the evidence supporting PR as a
diagnostic strategy in physiotherapy lacks strength.
The synthesis of PR definitions from the literature may provide some clarity in
describing its elements as a model. Further insight can be provided with
respect to knowledge, categorisation, efficiency and accuracy. These
characteristics relate to or underpin PR as previously described and offer
potential benefits within musculoskeletal physiotherapy research.
Knowledge
35
Categorisation
The theory of categorisation has been utilised when dissecting PR. Several
authors advocate categorisation, which refers to the grouping of objects or
events, as a means of understanding PR (Brooks et al 1991; Hayes &
Adams, 2000), while others believe categorisation and PR utilise similar
concepts in achieving a diagnosis (Elstein & Shwartz, 2000 & 2002).
Categorisation specifically refers to the comparison of “two or more
distinguishable cases, objects or events” (Hayes & Adams, 2000, p. 45). The
recognition of a clinical pattern relies on finding a similarity between separate
but similar cases and could therefore be considered as a type of
categorisation.
36
actions (Hayes & Adams, 2000). This view ultimately depends on the depth
of understanding of PR.
Efficiency
Efficiency in clinical practice has become a feature of modern healthcare
provision. Considerable external pressure is placed on clinicians from various
sources, including business management within both public and private
sector practice. The government currently demands evidence of value for
money in public sector health. Similarly the private sector has the internal
pressure of maintaining financial viability in an economic environment that is
becoming more client / user funded (Higgs & Jones, 2000). Clinical reasoning
remains a complex and potentially imprecise part of healthcare, however
some authors have argued that forwards reasoning strategies such as PR
are more efficient (Arocha et al, 1993; Higgs & Jones, 2000; Ridderkhoff,
1989) and potentially cost effective than backwards reasoning models such
as HDR. These claims are apparently based on plausible theory but as yet
are not supported by research evidence within physiotherapy.
37
Early research in medical reasoning found that experts generate a diagnostic
hypothesis earlier than novices during a patient’s history (Joseph & Patel,
1990). More recent qualitative studies of physiotherapy clinical reasoning
have also found differences in timing between novices and experts (King &
Bithell, 1998; Doody & McAteer, 2002). The experts in these studies were
however reported to spend more time taking a patient history and longer to
express their initial hypothesis. This view supports earlier cognitive
psychology research findings that experts are often slower during the initial
phases of problem solving but are faster overall (Glaser & Chi, 1988). Doody
and McAteer (2002) conducted an assessment of a real patient and
compared the time taken for all parts of each management session. The
experts spent less time on the physical examination, although this was not a
statistically significant finding. Review of the small amount of data available
relating to timing and efficiency does not produce any conclusive finding.
Nevertheless, Doody and McAteer (2002) contend that experts have refined
a more definitive hypothesis by the end of the patient history and use more
specific confirmation testing during the physical examination, thus requiring
less overall time compared with novices.
Accuracy
The ability of an expert clinician to develop an accurate diagnostic hypothesis
has been previously proposed to be influenced by the direction of reasoning.
Early research in medicine has found associations between forwards
reasoning and the accuracy of diagnostic performance (Patel & Groen,
1986). More recently, Coderre et al (2003) found similar results in that PR
38
had the greatest likelihood of producing an accurate diagnosis during their
study. These studies notably included the use of low fidelity methods
involving diagnosis of a written / paper case.
There is only one study in the physiotherapy literature that sheds any light on
the accuracy of the clinical reasoning process. King and Bithell (1998)
conducted a study involving a segmentally reviewed paper case integrated
with a structured interview. All five participants in the ‘physiotherapy
39
specialist’ group provided an accurate diagnosis compared with only one of
five in the ‘generalist’ group. This study concluded that there is an
association between diagnostic accuracy and reported recognition of
previous cases. No studies investigating accuracy with respect to clinical
reasoning process have been found which use high fidelity methods such as
real or simulated patients.
40
its interpretation, PR is commonly reported as a forwards reasoning process
model. The majority of research evidence relating to PR lies in medicine and
this has predominantly used low fidelity methodology.
The clinical reasoning literature suggests that neither PR nor HDR alone are
sufficient to understand clinical problem solving. Elstein and Shwartz (2000)
refer to the difficulty of a specific case and the experience of the clinician as
predictors of the problem solving strategy utilised in any given clinical
situation. On this basis any single strategy on its own cannot be simply
considered as superior (Norman & Eva, 2003). Grant and Marsden (1987)
give support to the view that no single best way of thinking exists when
determining a medical diagnosis and that varied pathways (and thus models
of clinical reasoning) can exist to reach similar conclusions. In a study
identifying case interpretations and forceful (clinical) features, they
demonstrated that experts did not use the same thought processes nor did
they utilise the same important case features to reach their interpretations
(Grant & Marsden, 1987). Diagnostic reasoning can therefore be described
as complex and ever changing and include both the forwards and backwards
models of PR and HDR respectively.
41
more emphasis on the backwards-reasoning loops and multiple hypotheses
in the clinical reasoning process, however also allows for forwards reasoning
or PR to occur with confirmation testing of a single hypothesis.
42
Rivett & Higgs, 1997), whilst pure forwards reasoning is likely only in familiar
cases with little variance in differential diagnosis (Figure 2.7). It is plausible
that an integration of both directions of reasoning may well occur in many of
the semi complex cases presenting to clinicians.
Data collection
Forwards Backwards
reasoning reasoning
Confirmation testing
Final hypothesis
43
Data collection
Significant case
features recognised
Single
hypothesis Working
Multiple hypotheses
hypothesis
Confirmation testing
Confirmation testing
Final hypothesis
Data collection
Significant case
features recognised
Multiple Single
hypotheses hypothesis
Confirmation testing
Final hypothesis
44
hypothesis was already one of the multiple hypotheses previously generated.
This means that some episodes of PR use could be difficult to detect within
deductive problem solving strategies if recognition occurred later during a
clinical assessment and after a deductive data collection process had
commenced.
45
2.7 KNOWLEDGE IN CLINICAL REASONING
Clinical reasoning research has taken several directions in the past three
decades. Research involving the exploration of memory followed the failure
of single process models to fully explain how a clinician problem solves.
Based on memory recall research with chess experts / masters, research in
medical reasoning investigated memory recall of experts but was unable to
find a clear association between expertise and memory performance
(Ericsson, 2004). This led to a belief that the structuring of knowledge leads
to improved performance in medical reasoning (Norman, 2005). A full
discourse on the complexity of knowledge is beyond the scope of this
literature review but an overview has been provided to facilitate an
understanding of the clinical reasoning process, particularly in respect to
methodology within problem solving research.
46
to theories and concepts or objective views based on sound research (e.g.
biopsychosocial knowledge) (Higgs & Titchen, 2000), whilst non-propositional
knowledge includes experiential, personal and practical types of knowledge
(Higgs, 1992). Experiential knowledge encompasses the learning from both
personal and practical experience, whilst practical knowledge in particular
refers to that developed from professional practice in a specific domain.
Practical knowledge has also been labelled ‘professional craft knowledge’
within the physiotherapy literature (Higgs, 2004).
47
compared with medical students. Encapsulation is a means to understand
organised knowledge structures which in turn relates to expertise.
Pain Illness
Tissue healing
mechanisms experience
Inflammatory
process Patho- Psychosocial
physiology
Impairment
Contributing
Biomedical
factors
Structural
Management
Prognosis
options
Clinical case
48
2.7.3 The role of knowledge
Despite the findings that clinical reasoning process and knowledge alone are
not fully able to explain expertise, both remain important elements of problem
solving in clinical practice. The interaction of many factors, including problem
solving skill and knowledge, is likely to be central to the development of
expert status.
2.8 EXPERTISE
49
1998; Wilkes & Krebs, 1989). The study of expertise crosses many
professional fields, including and beyond healthcare. A view of expert
characteristics based on cognitive psychology research includes:
Most of Glaser and Chi’s (1988) findings on experts relate in part to a greater
and more structured knowledge base. These findings can be utilised to assist
with understanding expertise in modern healthcare.
50
The two primary expert attributes of interest to this thesis relate to knowledge
and clinical reasoning skill. Both are essentially linked when considering a
reasoning pathway such as PR and the associated underlying knowledge
structures. Knowledge has been discussed with respect to expertise in
section 2.7, whilst the clinical reasoning skill of experts will now be further
considered.
51
psychology research, which essentially only had a theoretical basis due to
the lack of strength of the original empirical studies. However several authors
have since demonstrated that medical expert problem solving does vary from
that of novices (Doody & McAteer, 2002, King & Bithell, 1998; Coughlin &
Patel, 1987; Joseph & Patel, 1990). In recalling a normally structured
problem, experts were significantly better able to recognise and interpret
cases than novices (Coughlin & Patel, 1987). The experts recognised
patterns of familiar problems via significant case features or critical cues.
52
Just as knowledge and experience are unique to an individual, the features of
the case deemed important are also expected to vary amongst expert
clinicians. Grant and Marsden (1987) found that significantly different forceful
features were utilised to arrive at the same end point by experts whilst
solving paper based clinical cases. However despite the differences in type
of case features utilised, expert clinicians more effectively identify and use
significant features in a case as compared with novices.
Clinical reasoning can be partly viewed via the use of significant case
features to promote the recognition of specific clinical patterns (May &
Dennis, 1991). As previously highlighted, this characterises a forwards
process which likely enhances efficiency, and one that is primarily observed
in experts.
53
business and the overall economy (National Occupational Health & Safety
Commission, 2004). More effective and efficient health service provision
theoretically may reduce lost work time and enhance economic gain. Overall
better healthcare should have a positive effect on an economy in many ways.
54
Table 2.4 Clinical reasoning errors in physiotherapy (Rivett & Jones, 2004,
p.409)
Component Example
Information collection Neglecting or misinterpreting relevant information
Premature decision-making
Not recognising data inconsistencies
Hypothesis formation Confirmation bias – overemphasis on supporting
features and neglecting negating features of a
hypothesis
Limited hypothesis category use
Not testing hypotheses
Identifying flags Missing data indicative of red (serious pathology) or
yellow (psychosocial barriers) flags
Diagnosis Presumption that a relationship between symptoms
confirms cause and effect and thus diagnosis
Treatment Use of recipe treatments and not clinically reasoned
management strategies
Lack of involvement of client in decision-making
Certain process models have been linked with greater possibility of errors in
problem solving. As discussed in section 2.5.3, PR is possibly more prone to
error than backwards reasoning models, especially with novice clinicians.
Jones and Rivett (2004, p.8) go as far as stating, “pattern recognition …
represents perhaps the greatest source of errors in our thinking”. However
these authors also highlight that critical reflection on clinical patterns may
reduce inaccuracy in reasoning. This may occur over time as more
experience is gained. Errors from PR should be reduced by continual
refinement and development of each pattern through reflective practice.
The time available to a clinician during an encounter with a client can impact
on the clinical reasoning process and thus affect hypothesis accuracy. When
healthcare is placed under financial pressure from a governing body, it has
greater potential for inaccurate outcomes (Rivett & Jones, 2004). Clinical
55
reasoning errors may then directly impact on the effectiveness of
management, which will indirectly impact on efficiency in achieving outcomes
or client goals.
Little conclusive research has been conducted into clinical reasoning error.
There is no single process that has been clearly associated with greater error
in physiotherapy clinical practice. The causes of error outlined above indicate
that incomplete or inappropriate use of knowledge is linked to inaccurate
reasoning. Knowledge is a core element of any model or process of clinical
reasoning and thus could be theoretically identified as a primary associate to
error in clinical practice.
56
an expert? In other words, at what stage during a physiotherapist’s career
development does accuracy outweigh inaccuracy when utilising PR or other
efficient forwards reasoning strategies? The answer to this question is
undoubtedly complex and currently unknown.
2.10 SUMMARY
The area of interest in this thesis is the diagnostic reasoning models that
relate to the pathway a clinician takes in current physiotherapy practice. The
present review of the literature provides a background and basis to the most
57
common forwards and backwards diagnostic reasoning models and the
potential impact of these process models on healthcare.
58
CHAPTER 3. METHODS
3.1 INTRODUCTION
This chapter describes a case study used in a mixed method research design
to gain insight into the clinical reasoning model of PR in physiotherapy. Section
2.2 provides support for the mixed method design based on the research aims
and prior case study research in the literature. Albeit a non-traditional research
approach, both qualitative and quantitative methods have been commonly
used in combination in similar research. The aims of the study outlined in
sections 1.2 and 2.10, required a mixed method approach to ensure successful
deductive testing of PR.
The study used a carefully chosen single critical case to provide research data
relating to the phenomenon of PR. The case was a real life clinical situation
portrayed by a trained actor. Details of the case study and its simulation are
provided in section 3.2. The single case study was repeatedly assessed by
research participants made up of expert and novice physiotherapy clinicians
with varied clinical experience and qualifications. The chosen study sample
and rationale for their inclusion is outlined in section 3.3. Qualitative
observation and interview data collection methods form the foundation of the
study (section 3.4) with subsequent analysis incorporating qualitative (section
3.5) and quantitative (sections 3.6 & 3.7) methods. The result of mixed method
analysis provided a comparative view of the clinical reasoning process
employed by participants and inherent relationships. The overall study design
and chapter outline are depicted in Figure 3.1.
59
Preparation (section 3.2)
Ethical
approval Case Actor Piloting
development training
Sample size
Recruitment
Inclusion /
exclusion criteria
Location Transcription
Equipment Interview
Participation
process
Analysis
Qualitative transcript Quantitative video
analysis analysis
(section 3.5) Quantitative transcript (section 3.7)
analysis
(section 3.6)
60
3.2 PREPARATION
A key element of any research study involving a simulated client is the actual
case itself. Developing a case study is complex and demands careful
consideration (Creswell, 2007). In this study, a suitable case was sought to
facilitate exploration of the primary research question. Firstly, the identification
of PR requires a clinical presentation that is known or familiar to the therapist.
Secondly, a real life case that was taken from a single physiotherapy clinical
experience was deemed appropriate as it allows for a documented outcome
including clear diagnosis of the primary pathology and problem identification.
This is necessary to ascertain the accuracy associated with PR.
The case utilised for the study involved a 20 year old female presenting to a
physiotherapist for the first time with lower back pain (LBP). It is known that
LBP is frequent in the community and a regular presenting problem to
musculoskeletal physiotherapists. A high percentage (85%) of LBP cases are
labelled non-specific as they cannot be sufficiently diagnosed from a patho-
anatomical perspective with available radiological and other investigations
(O’Sullivan, 2005; Waddell & van Tulder, 2004). The remaining 15% of specific
LBP cases are generally still common in presentation to physiotherapy
clinicians working in the musculoskeletal field. One such specific condition is
spondylolisthesis of the lower lumbar spine with established diagnostic criteria
via X-ray imaging. Spondylolisthesis refers to the forwards movement of one
vertebral body relative to the vertebra below. It is a type of mechanical
61
instability of the spine and most commonly occurs due to a bilateral pars
interarticularis defect or spondylolysis (Floman, 2000; Herman & Pizzutillo,
2005; Rossi & Dragoni, 2001).
The level most commonly observed with an anterolisthesis deformity is the 5th
lumbar segment (Beutler et al, 2003; Earl, 2002; Haun & Kettner, 2005; Lim et
al, 2004; Rossi & Dragoni, 2001; Stanitski, 2006; Treble et al, 2005). Although
the history of spondylolisthesis can involve insidious symptomatic onset,
62
Hensinger and Michegan (1989, p.1098) state that a “history of minor trauma is
common … and an episode of trauma often initiates the onset of symptoms”.
Given that clients with spondylolisthesis are more likely to have LBP than the
general population and that LBP is one of the most common problems
presenting to a musculoskeletal healthcare professional, the prevalence of
such conditions will likely be greater in a healthcare setting than in the general
population (Treble et al, 2005). Thus an experienced clinician should be
familiar with this condition enabling recognition and use of forwards reasoning
strategies. The details of the case utilised in this study are found in Appendix
2. The case was found to be consistent with the reported presentations in the
literature.
The real life case chosen for the study was considered from the perspective of
the hypothesis categories (Jones & Rivett, 2004, p.13-20) as summarised in
Table 2.2. This provided an actual case outcome for comparison with
hypotheses formulated by participants. The primary management of the case
included X-ray imaging undertaken after the first physiotherapy assessment
and demonstrated a grade 3 spondylolisthesis of the 5th lumbar on the first
sacral vertebra (Figure 3.2). An evidence based specific stabilisation exercise
approach to management was commenced (O'Sullivan, Twomey & Allison,
1997). Short term follow up demonstrated a reduction in symptom levels via
two main treatment interventions; activity modification and specific exercise.
The pain mechanism involved in reported symptoms was primarily mechanical
without any clear neuropathic or ongoing inflammatory components. Leg
symptoms were attributed to somatic referral from the lower lumbar spine (i.e.,
non-radicular pain). Precautions and contraindications identified for the case
included extension based manual therapy techniques or exercises, and spinal
manipulation of the unstable segment. No clear psycho-social features were
deemed relevant to the outcome or recovery of the client. Medical
management involved an orthopaedic specialist monitoring the degree of
anterolisthesis movement over a 12 month period. Evidence of continued
vertebral translation resulted in surgical fusion of the unstable segment.
63
Activity / participation restrictions continued beyond the post-operative
rehabilitation period however a return to full functional capacity was achieved
with respect to completion of studies, subsequent employment and sports
participation. With conservative management alone the prognosis towards
achieving full function in this case was predictably poor, however with surgical
intervention the prognosis can be stated in hindsight as very good.
Preparing the actor for the role as a simulated patient involved a three part
process. Firstly, the case was converted to lay format (Appendix 3) and
presented to the actor who simultaneously took their own notes during
discussion to complement their understanding. Each aspect of the case was
individually discussed without offering the actor more than a lay understanding
64
of the data. Following a period of independent review of the case information, a
second training session was undertaken involving the researcher questioning
the actor on the case details and providing feedback regarding responses.
Questioning was undertaken as per a routine physiotherapy assessment but
was completed in sections allowing for feedback and further note taking by the
actor. A third phase of training involved a second researcher conducting an
uninterrupted videotaped subjective assessment (history) with the actor as the
simulated client. The second researcher provided feedback regarding the
realism and accuracy of the case and the videotape was then viewed by both
the actor and primary researcher. The final phase of training was incorporated
into a pilot trial as described in section 3.2.4. Once more the actor was
provided with feedback regarding accuracy and performance.
65
3.2.4 Pilot trial of method
3.3 SAMPLING
On commencement of the study, it was anticipated that ten expert and ten
novice physiotherapists were required for data collection. These numbers were
based on previous comparable published research projects in physiotherapy
(Doody & McAteer, 2002; Rivett & Higgs, 1997) and predicted saturation rates.
Qualitative research refers to saturation when further data collection does not
reveal any new themes than previously identified.
66
3.3.2 Expert inclusion criteria
The physiotherapy and allied health literature has generally failed to agree on
consistent criteria for expertise. Problem solving research involving medical
experts has largely been based on specialisation groups as defined by the
various registration bodies (Grant & Marsden, 1987; Joseph & Patel, 1990;
Patel et al, 1990). At the time of designing the methodology of the study, the
process of attaining the title of ‘specialist musculoskeletal physiotherapist’ was
a work in progress by the Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA)
(Australian Physiotherapy Association, 2008). During the period of recruitment
for the study, the number of musculoskeletal physiotherapists in Australia, who
had attained the title of ‘specialist’ remained insufficient for the study sample.
67
When considering experience, a minimum of ten years exposure in any given
domain has been reported as being necessary to achieve expertise (Simon,
1980). This is supported in the physiotherapy clinical reasoning literature by
King and Bithell (1998) who utilised ten years experience as a minimum
timeframe in their research to predict the presence of expert clinical patterns. It
was deemed necessary in the present study that expert physiotherapists
remained currently practising due to the association between relevant and
accessible clinical experience and the use of forwards reasoning strategies
such as PR.
68
3. More than ten years overall clinical experience in musculoskeletal
physiotherapy;
4. Currently involved in clinical practice.
Given that PR has been strongly linked with clinical experience and domain
specific knowledge it is unlikely that a novice will display this strategy. This
view has been supported by previous research however the novice groups
investigated have often been undergraduate students without complete
education in their particular professions (Arocha et al, 1993; Doody & McAteer,
2002; Gale & Marsden, 1982; Grant & Marsden, 1987; Grant & Marsden, 1988;
Groves et al, 2003). Alternate research designs have used ‘sub-experts’ for the
comparison group, who are experts in their own domain but not with that of the
case type presented (Joseph & Patel 1990; Patel et al 1990) or generalists
who have considerable overall clinical experience but no specific postgraduate
qualifications (King & Bithell, 1998). The ‘sub-expert’ comparison group is
fraught with potential difficulties of the intermediate effect in which participants
with less domain specific knowledge or experience may outperform experts in
their domain (Patel & Arocha, 2000).
69
The novice physiotherapy participants included in the study were classified by
the following inclusion criteria:
1. Completed a recognised physiotherapy qualification and be registered with
the NSW Physiotherapists Registration Board;
2. Less than one year of clinical experience as a physiotherapist;
3. Currently involved in clinical practice.
Any formal postgraduate study in physiotherapy excluded participation in the
novice group.
A written information sheet and consent form (Appendix 7) was provided for
further consideration once potential subjects contacted the researcher.
Following an opportunity to ask additional questions and sign the consent form,
participants were included in the study and scheduled a time that suited their
work commitments. The first ten physiotherapists meeting the inclusion criteria
and consenting to participate formed each group.
70
3.4 DATA COLLECTION
3.4.1 Location
The project’s data collection phase took place within the School of Health
Sciences Research Laboratory at The University of Newcastle. The
assessment was conducted at a small table with both the participant and
simulated patient seated on facing chairs. A room adjacent to the Research
Laboratory allowed for the setup of the notebook computer recording the video
to be out of participant view during the client assessment. The retrospective
interview was undertaken at the same table in the Research Laboratory with
the notebook computer located on the table. The videorecorded client
assessment was replayed on the notebook computer as the stimulus for
retrospective recall. The adjacent room was not required during the interview
process.
71
alternate location except the notebook computer was located in the same
room.
3.4.2 Equipment
72
during the simulated client assessment and retrospective downloading of the
interview data. The notebook computer was relocated to the interview table in
the Research Laboratory for the participant interview.
The client assessment and participant interview were recorded from two
sources to ensure a backup source of data. The separate sources included the
microcassette audio tape recorder and mini digital video cassette camcorder. A
full list of setup procedures and equipment utilised for data collection is
documented in Appendix 9. The study investigated only the subjective
examination (history) information of a physiotherapy assessment, which
reduced the complexity and extensiveness of equipment required, recording
methods and overall space required.
73
3.4.3 Participation process
On completion and return of the consent form a session time was scheduled
for the study. The study equipment was setup in advance (Appendix 9). On
arrival the participant was provided with an ‘orientation to the patient
assessment’ information sheet (Appendix 10). This did not state the client to be
simulated however the participant was made aware via the research project
information statement (Appendix 7) that the client was an actor simulating a
real clinical case. After reading the orientation sheet the audio and video
equipment commenced recording / downloading and the simulated patient was
introduced to the participant. The researcher was not present in the room for
the entirety of the assessment with the participant instructed to let the
simulated client know when the assessment was complete.
During the preparation for the stimulated interview, the participant was
provided with an ‘orientation to the interview’ information sheet (Appendix 10).
The interview was then commenced and conducted in the same location.
The first group of questions were asked throughout the video-replayed portion
of the interview. These were open-ended enquiring questions allowing the
participant to discuss their problem solving from the client assessment without
74
creating bias or reflection in the participant’s responses. The timing of the
video stops throughout the interview was either following each group of similar
clinical questions or if the participant sought to comment on their thoughts from
that part of the assessment. A few examples of groups of clinical questions
commonly leading to video stops include location of symptoms, description or
severity of symptoms, current or past history, or investigation questions. Due to
the varied nature of individual physiotherapy assessments the questioning and
subsequently the time stops were never the same between participants.
The second more specific group of interview questions followed the completion
of the video replay. At this point the participant had described their choice of
pathway through the data, provided reasons for their chosen methods and
described their understanding of the case along the way. Once the video
replay had finished all the data was available for use in discussing the final
hypothesis. This second group of questions were designed to ensure the
necessary information had been gathered from the interview to address the
research questions. These related to the first and final hypotheses developed,
the physical examination plan, and the influence of the study method on
participants. If the information had already been obtained for any question it
was not repeated.
3.4.5 Transcription
75
3.5 QUALITATIVE TRANSCRIPT ANALYSIS
The predominant data source in the study was the verbal interview transcripts.
Qualitative analysis of these transcripts was similar to that described by
Creswell and Plano Clark (2007). Preparation of data for analysis first involved
the professional transcription of interview data from audio tape recordings.
Corrections were then made where required to complete the transcripts
(section 3.4.5). The participant interview transcripts were then imported into
NVivo 7 (QSR International, n.d.), a qualitative software program (section
3.5.2).
76
(2007). The first two participant transcripts of each group were independently
coded by all three researchers. Following complete coding of each transcript,
the researchers met to discuss and reach consensus on coding data. This
process was repeated for all four transcripts following which the researchers
had a consistent understanding regarding the allocation of codes to the textual
data. At this coding agreement stage only the ‘hypothesis’ sub-codes were
reviewed.
The three researchers involved in the coding agreement process included the
student researcher who was currently practising in musculoskeletal
physiotherapy and had completed post-graduate study in clinical reasoning.
The other two researchers have a track record in clinical reasoning research
and related publications. All three researchers each had more than ten years
of physiotherapy clinical experience.
The computer software program NVivo 7 was used throughout data analysis.
Qualitative data analysis software has recently become commonplace
amongst academic research of a qualitative nature (Davidson & Jacobs,
2008). NVivo software is produced by QSR International Pty Ltd, originating
with NVivo 1 in 2001 and releasing NVivo 7 in February 2006 (QSR
International, n.d.).
The primary benefits of qualitative data analysis software in the study included
the organisation of files, notes, memos, codes and their descriptions. The
program allowed for efficient data retrieval and enhanced ability to compare or
77
relate transcript sections or themes. The transcripts from novice and expert
participants were placed in individual NVivo 7 files to allow for separate
thematic analysis and easier comparison.
The pre-determined coding schema was entered into the NVivo 7 software as
tree nodes, which were able to be organised in a hierarchical fashion with sub-
codes. A node is referred to as the location for a compilation of references
identified by the same code. The new codes identified during transcript
analysis were labelled as free nodes and documented with an associated
description. These free nodes contain codes that don’t necessarily relate to
others in a clear structure. The stand alone information in the free nodes was
useful for identifying potential emerging themes throughout the analysis.
Steps:
1. Initial reading of transcripts whilst making memo notes
2. Coding from pre-existing codebook (tree nodes) and identifying new
codes (free nodes)
3. Checking for coding accuracy and reliability
4. Creating categories or themes from codes and memo notes
5. Comparing themes across groups
78
Overview reading
Coding
Each transcript was analysed in detail to identify data fitting the pre-determined
(tree) codes. The tree codes have been detailed in Table 3.2. Researcher
notes were made during this coding process and any specific notes relating to
each participant or code were recorded as memos. Any new codes revealed
from raw transcript data during this phase were labelled as free nodes.
79
The sub-coding of knowledge and self awareness and associated descriptions
have been outlined in section 4.3.1.
Any new code identified during coding was reviewed for content and assigned
a description. These were assigned a free node with associated description. If
a free node was identified mid-way through transcript coding, each prior coded
transcript was re-read specifically for the identification of the newly developed
free node. This was a cyclical process until no further free nodes were
identified. Free nodes developed during analysis have been listed in section
4.3.3 of this thesis.
80
Coding accuracy and reliability
Accuracy during the coding process was ensured by node content review.
Each tree or free node and associated sub-nodes were opened and contents
reviewed relative to the description. Editing at this stage involved un-coding or
re-coding any data found to be inappropriately labelled. The description of
each node was also reconsidered with respect to its contents.
Following the coding review process involving all three researchers, the
remainder of the study involved the student researcher coding alone. Given the
sole coding nature of the study an intra-rater reliability evaluation was
undertaken. This involved the first two transcripts of each group being repeat
coded at a later stage following complete coding of all transcripts. This
occurred after more than a three month period after the initial coding of each
transcript to reduce the likelihood of memory recall during repeat coding. Intra-
rater reliability was undertaken only for tree nodes and analysed via
percentage agreement and kappa reliability coefficient (Domholdt, 2005).
The reduction of data into themes occurred throughout the coding process.
Themes are patterns repeated throughout the transcripts. Notes and memos
relating to any aspect of a developing theme were documented by the
researcher during coding. These notes were then compared alongside the
codebook and coded data to further develop and encapsulate themes. The
final element of analysis involved displaying the data and themes allowing for
81
visual representation of the research findings. This included the comparison
between the novice and expert groups.
3.5.5 Interpretation
Quantitative analysis of verbal transcripts involved reviewing the tree nodes for
coded portions of the transcripts that related to the identification of PR and
type of hypothesis category used. Completion of this aspect of analysis was
undertaken following the qualitative coding and thematic analysis and thus did
not influence the qualitative conclusions.
82
The formation of a synthesised understanding of PR from the prior literature
has been outlined in section 2.5.1. Based on this interpretation the features of
PR were refined and detailed to provide a consistent structure when reviewing
transcript data (Table 3.3). An associated identification tool for each interview
time stop and an overall scoring tool (Appendix 13) for each participant were
developed and utilised in conjunction with the features of PR. The application
of the identification and scoring tools to the coded transcript data provided a
structured method of identifying PR from each participant’s clinical encounter.
Identifying PR relies on more than just using the word ‘pattern’ or stating that
this case had been recognised. In the current study, the identification of PR
required a central hypothesis to be stated at a distinct time related to the client
83
assessment. As discussed in section 2.5.1, separating PR from HDR requires
the hypothesis to be immediately formed and not developed gradually.
The ‘time stop identification tool’ was applied to each participant transcript and
involved reviewing all coded text from each point in time where the client
assessment was paused to obtain the participant’s thought processes. This
involved transferring hypothesis coded text transcripts into the ‘Hypothesis
formed’ column and subsequently indicating the hypothesis category identified.
The primary benefit of this process was to observe the presenting case
hypothesis in sequential order throughout the assessment. Additional tree
codes were then reviewed for significant case features, knowledge, experience
and management. These were directly compared with the central hypothesis if
present. Relevant transcript text supporting the positive identification of any of
these codes was documented in the ‘comments / quotes’ column.
84
The data was then summarised from the ‘time stop identification tool’ into the
‘overall pattern recognition scoring tool’. This provided a score from 0 to 5 for
each participant relating to PR use. A central hypothesis was necessary
throughout the assessment for overall identification of PR. Higher overall
scores provided greater support for utilisation of PR.
The stated final hypothesis for each participant was listed in summarised form
for comparison with identified PR. Subsequent participant numbers per group
utilising the PR strategy and the respective case accuracy relative to the
known case diagnosis was presented in a 2x2 format for visual comparison.
85
Hypothesis sub-codes stored within NVivo 7 software allowed for simple
review of data relating to the range of categories used by each participant and
the percentage use of each category by the expert and novices groups.
Following this quantitative process the integration of various categories into
one overall case understanding can be reviewed qualitatively to add more
depth to the findings.
The final stage of data analysis involved obtaining quantitative data from the
simulated client assessments. The videorecorded client assessments provided
observational data which included:
Order of participant questions to the simulated client
Timing data during the client assessment
Simulated client response accuracy.
86
study. The analysis of time data took place following identification of reasoning
processes.
3.8 TRIANGULATION
The two forms of triangulation utilised in the current study include data
triangulation and methodological triangulation (Patton, 1990). Data
triangulation involves the use of more than one type of data to understand a
phenomenon, whilst methodological triangulation can refer to the inclusion of
mixed methods. The present research design has included a combination of
data and method triangulation to enhance the validity of the findings. This
triangulated design has been depicted in Figure 3.6.
87
Qualitative transcript
analysis
Quantitative
Quantitative analysis video analysis
of transcript data
Study interpretation
Qualitative data
obtained from
interview
transcripts
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3.9 SUMMARY OF METHODOLOGY
This chapter details the inclusion of a mixed methods research approach with
a single case study design to investigate PR employed during clinical
reasoning. The use of multiple sources of data is aimed at enhancing the
overall quality of the findings and to allow more confidence in the results.
Integrating quantitative and qualitative sources of data is an increasingly
utilised method (Creswell & Plano-Clark, 2007) that can enhance the
interpretation of the evidence within clinical reasoning research.
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CHAPTER 4. RESULTS
The new codes labelled as free nodes in NVivo 7 (section 4.3.3) and
subsequent themes identified (section 4.3.4) were condensed into five
additional topics of interest. These have been reported as ‘additional findings’
in section 4.7, which provide some interesting qualitative observations related
to clinical reasoning. Lastly, analysis of study location, case simulation and
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study equipment influences on participant behaviour are presented in section
4.8.
Throughout data collection each participant was labelled with either the letter
E for expert or N for novice followed by a consecutive number associated
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with recruitment (e.g. E4, N6, E9, N2). In line with confidentiality
requirements of the ethics approval, the participants were randomly assigned
a letter which replaced the number. The expert participants were randomly
assigned one of the first ten letters of the alphabet and the novice
participants the next nine letters, for example ‘Expert G’ or ‘Novice P’. This
format will be used to identify a participant in the results and discussion
chapters of this thesis.
The pre-determined (tree) codes listed in Table 3.2 have been included in
this section to offer real participant examples of each code to the reader. The
pre-determined codes of knowledge and self awareness were sub-coded
following completion of participant recruitment and transcript coding. This
subsequent process attempted to provide more depth to the understanding of
the clinical reasoning pathway and possible identification of PR. The free
nodes developed throughout the process of coding have been similarly
introduced, described and examples provided.
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within the hypothesis categories did occur and was important for accurate
storage and easy retrieval of data during analysis.
Data collection
‘Data collection’ coding occurred when a participant reported routine data
collection during the assessment without relating the clinical information to
any hypothesis of the case. ‘Data collection’ was included within coding due
to its negative impact on determining whether forwards reasoning was
evident. ‘Data collection’ unrelated to a hypothesis tended to suggest that
forwards reasoning or PR was not being utilised.
The ‘data collection’ code also highlighted that an element of routine always
existed during the client assessment, regardless of the reasoning process
utilised. For example:
Expert F: R: So were there any unexpected findings out of all the general
health questions?
P: No, no that was all fine. I always go through those with them.
Expert A: R: Are these fairly standard questions that you would normally
ask at the end of an assessment?
P: Yeah I ask every one there.
During the early stages of each participant interview, data collection was
often prompted by the student researcher / interviewer to initiate discussion
and facilitate more open dialogue relating to the thought process during the
client assessment. Any ‘data collection’ coded text that was prompted by the
researcher was noted for subsequent review.
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Expert I: R: At this stage were you more collecting data or were you
actually forming an understanding that you –
P: No still at this stage collecting data.
Hypothesis related
Hypothesis was coded when a participant stated an understanding of the
case in any of the hypothesis categories (Jones & Rivett, 2004). Any lay level
of response, where no interpretation was evident was not coded as a
hypothesis. For example, descriptive comments such as “the pain was fairly
strong” weren’t coded. Simultaneous sub-coding of hypotheses occurred into
the relevant category.
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Novice N: She hasn’t lost any time off work although she’s stopped playing
sport and it does hamper her ability to perform the normal things
that she needs to do.
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metastatic thing or bony, bony thing that would give unrelenting
night pain.
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Hypotheses that related to safety of the client relative to the type of pathology
/ disorder, stage of healing, irritability and patient’s perspectives are noted in
category 6. Precautions and contraindications were categorised as safety
related hypotheses with respect to both physical examination and treatment:
Expert H: she doesn’t like extension so I would need to be careful not to
leave her lying on her back or even leave her lying prone for
extended periods
Novice N: Just making sure that there’s, she doesn’t have any um --
symptoms like that which could indicate something more
insidious that was meant for further investigation by medical
officers rather than physio.
Category 8: Prognosis
Predicting a possible response to treatment intervention or an outcome for a
particular problem / pathology is a prognostic hypothesis. Any reference to a
feature of the case that may influence the outcome in a positive or negative
way was placed in this category:
Expert G: at that time I was um thinking this, this might not be someone I
am aiming to get pain free but maybe to get back to her, to her
preclinical levels perhaps.
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Expert D: I guess probably maybe that makes me think about if from a
prognostic sort of factor -- With just that information alone the
only estimation that I would make would be perhaps it’s going to
be more difficult to help her than someone who has really
intermittent sort of pain.
Category 9: Non-specific
This sub-code was added to the eight previously reported hypothesis
categories to place any hypothesis that the student researcher could not
clearly place into any other category. These were mostly descriptive
comments without a clear case understanding:
Expert H: I’m trying to work out the relationship of the pains, to make sure
they’re all connected, so I don’t so I’m not moving to, following
individual pains. So I’ve got, I’ve worked out, I’m pretty
convinced now that they’re all -- the leg one is a progression of
the back one
Novice Q: the time frame that she’d had the back pain, like, leaning towards
more of an acute on chronic condition rather than just an acute
Planning
Interview transcript comments from participants relating to planning were
divided into those relating to examination and those of management. Sub-
coding in both divisions provided an indication of the direction of participant’s
thought processes.
Examination:
Any participant statement relating to the physical examination of the client’s
condition was coded within examination ‘planning’:
Expert G: that’s going to make me look in the assessment when I check
her postural control through movement. When she sits up
straight how it, how is she doing that, where is that coming from
Novice M: I’m going to do a McKenzie, a McKenzie um assessment now to
go through the symptoms that make it better or worse
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Management:
Participant comments relating to management planning included any
comment relating to therapeutic intervention. The quotations found in this
sub-code included all of those in ‘Hypothesis category 7’ in addition to those
that did not have a clearly stated management hypothesis. Examples of the
quotations unique to this node only included:
Expert A: looking for interventions. Yeah like if she had some intervention
that had done something for her that would be a big clue for me
in which way to head treatment
Novice Q: I’m really exploring um treatment options, um pain management
options ah obviously she’s um reasonably in, in a lot of pain, so I
mean I guess the first priority trying to settle things down.
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physically walking for a couple of days that’s when I’m really
starting, start to head off down that way.
Knowledge
Knowledge coding was necessarily based on the clinical reasoning literature.
In this study, any participant reference to their knowledge in an attempt to
apply it to the problem at hand was knowledge coded.
Propositional
Knowledge Personal
Non-propositional
Professional
Experiential
Structured
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Separating propositional and non-propositional knowledge is reasonably
clear in theory, as outlined in section 2.7. However a practical separation was
more complex due to the overlap between knowledge types within a
clinician’s highly structured and integrated knowledge base. Importantly, the
sub-coding of knowledge into propositional and non-propositional knowledge
types was not necessary from a perspective of identifying PR as all
knowledge coded comments could offer insight into the reasoning process
when considered individually.
The following transcript quotes are all examples from the knowledge node.
They have been presented in their sub-codes to present the reader with a
view of the potential overlap between knowledge types. All knowledge coded
text was placed in either propositional or non-propositional sub-codes.
Similarly all non-propositional text was placed in either personal or
professional sub-sections. Lastly, all text placed in the professional sub-
section of non-propositional knowledge was then separated into either
experiential or structured. The definitions used for each sub-code are stated
prior to the examples.
Propositional knowledge
Identifying propositional knowledge required reference to research or
learning from textbooks, journal articles, conferences or specific structured
learning courses that would indicate use of public knowledge (section 2.7.1).
It was recognised that propositional knowledge most likely underlies a large
number of the coded transcript text segments but could not be clearly
identified. This code was only identified in expert transcripts:
Expert C: that’s based on the information we have collected over twelve
years on our back program … and those benchmarks have been
published
Expert I: there’s that extension aggravator, and flexion is a, a relieving um
factor. Um based on the last MPA conference in Brisbane where
they reported disc was aggravated by sitting -- that, that probably
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changed what I was thinking, traditionally thought about, discy
behaviour.
Non-propositional knowledge
Professional non-propositional knowledge
Non-propositional knowledge was reported in the literature to incorporate
several knowledge types including professional, personal and experiential
(section 2.7.1). The sub-coding of non-propositional knowledge depicted in
Figure 4.1 was created as a practical categorisation of such knowledge types
that often overlap or cannot clearly be separated. Sub-coding ‘experiential
knowledge’ was useful to monitor the use of participant’s own professional
experience, except those that were coded under propositional knowledge.
The ‘structured knowledge’ sub-code was developed as an alternate non-
propositional knowledge category to experiential.
Experiential knowledge
Experiential knowledge was coded with any reference to knowledge directly
attributed to clinical experience or clearly able to be inferred from experience:
Expert I: No I don’t see a lot of kids because kids typically don’t get, get
low back pain
Novice Q: you know usually when everything’s flared up, you know it mucks
up the tests and it cause everything hurts so I’m looking at some
treatment options to settle things down and then hopefully that
will present a clearer picture over the next few, few treatment
sessions
Structured knowledge
Any use of structured or a conceptual type of professional non-propositional
knowledge that could not be directly attributed to clinical experience was
coded within this category:
Expert J: if it’s equal left and right I’m usually thinking it’s a central problem
and therefore it could be the disc
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Expert G: I do tend to think of it more as a, as a motion segment rather
than a disc and joint.
Novice R: it’s still going to be one of you’re balls that you’re juggling, but
the 24 hour pattern doesn’t really fit
Novice P: when she was talking about the nursing um thing, it could, given
her age could be a possible discy type irritation.
Self-awareness
Self-awareness was created as a pre-determined code due to its importance
as an element of expert clinical practice. It was hypothesised that the expert
participants would display greater self-awareness during cognition than their
novice counterparts. The inclusion of the self-awareness code did not
however offer any direct evidence for the identification of PR.
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note of it. I put a star by it to make sure that I do chase it up … I
put it aside, I put in the slightly too hard at the moment basket
and then I’ll come back to it
Novice S: I don’t like to um to rush into decision-making at the end of my
subjective. Um so I, I try to, to piece together the information that
I’ve, I’ve collected and, and form an objective around that, and
sort of ah gradually um get to, get to an answer in my head.
Which is the way I normally go about it
The self-awareness coded text was reviewed following the complete coding
of all transcripts and separated into 11 sub-codes (Table 4.1). Although these
categories offered potential to provide insight into the cognitive process of
participants, these data were not seen by the researchers to be useful
towards the aims of the study. Examples of each of the self-awareness sub-
coded text have been provided in Appendix 14.
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Table 4.1 Self awareness sub-codes
Intra-rater reliability was considered given the sole coding process during the
majority of data analysis. The first two transcripts of each group were repeat
coded after complete coding of all transcripts. The duration between initial
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and repeat coding of each transcript was greater than 3 months to reduce the
likelihood of memory recall during repeat coding. The intra-rater reliability
was analysed via percentage agreement and kappa reliability coefficient
(Domholdt, 2005). This process was undertaken only for tree nodes which
included the six codes outlined in Table 3.2.
The reliability analysis indicated a very high level of agreement between the
two episodes of coding. Individual agreement percentage and kappa
coefficient statistics have been provided in Table 4.2.
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Table 4.3 Free nodes
Analytical reasoning
Data confirmation
Direction of reasoning
Goal setting
Hypothesis confirmation
Hypothesis elimination
Negative predictive
Pattern related
Predictive reasoning
Simulated assessment
Thinking after the event
Analytical reasoning
Definition: Any comment that could directly be seen to support HDR (and
thus potentially negate PR)
Purpose: Subsequent review of this free node attempted to provide
qualitative support to the quantitative interpretations regarding reasoning
process.
Examples:
Novice S: at that stage I didn’t have a clear cut diagnosis in my head. Um, I
had some areas and some structures that I, I was interested in
that I would have um been testing
Expert J: Cause I was still confused whether I really thought it was a disc
or the facet joints which is what I’m really trying to work out, and
it didn’t quite fit to me
Data confirmation
Definition: The participant repeated information back to client for
confirmation of accuracy in understanding a single piece or collective group
of data
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Purpose: Reiteration is potentially an interview method that increases
accuracy of data collection. Errors in reasoning may in part be related to data
collection. Identification of this free node was able to be compared with
overall accuracy.
Examples:
Novice M: I’m trying to make sure that I’ve got everything important and
haven’t missed anything and I’m also just trying to clarify in my
mind what’s going on and making sure that there’s no
discrepancies in the story
Expert I: trying to clarify that she’s telling me that it has been an 11 year
history of episodic low back pain. It’s always been there, um that
it’s been specifically this clinical placement, that, that’s brought it
to a head.
Direction of reasoning
Definition: During the retrospective recall interview the participant referred to
their direction of thought process from the client assessment.
Purpose: Direction of thoughts was directly related to the interpretation of
forwards or backwards reasoning process.
Examples:
Novice S: I think if I felt that I was thrown off a little bit, then I was just more
intent on getting more data, um to clear that up
Expert I: I generally tend to keep it as open as I can with the history so
that people could volunteer as much information and if they’re
not doing it, then I’ll prompt them a little bit more, but otherwise
let them go with it. Um when she said it started when she was
11, um I deliberately went into that in a lot more detail and asked
question about did it trouble you as a teenager because you
occasionally get patients who recall it to something that’s
happened in their birth or something completely random that
maybe irrelevant or may not be irrelevant
Goal setting
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Definition: The participant refers to the client’s goals within the interview.
This was either goals obtained from the client or reference to a question that
was attempting to investigate the client’s goals.
Purpose: Goal setting clearly involves the client collaboratively in the
assessment process which is an important part of clinical reasoning. It is not
known whether collaboration is particularly associated with any one type of
reasoning strategy.
Examples:
Novice P: a few of the questions getting back to see what does she want
out of life, where are we going from here, what’s important to
her, and are we just looking to get, get rid of the pain or are we
looking to get rid of the pain and then getting to play netball for
Australia
Expert G: looking at a goal of hers that you know she’s worried she’s got
another clinical placement starting to think about again goals or
treatment where we, what sort of goals we’re going to have for
her from that point of view
Hypothesis confirmation
Definition: Any direct or indirect reference towards a prior hypothesis being
confirmed.
Purpose: The grouping of text segments highlighting confirmation of a
hypothesis potentially added to the identification of a forwards reasoning
process.
Examples:
Novice Q: feels pretty good in the morning it’s less likely to be disc. Um and
tends to you know um support more that lumbopelvic instability
Expert I: it’s further adding to my um thoughts that there’s something
structural underlying the, and structural and permanent
underlying the, the problem
Hypothesis elimination
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Definition: Reference to removing a hypothesis from the overall
understanding following new information or data from the assessment.
Purpose: Hypothesis related data organised within the hypothesis tree node
were also placed in this free node if they related to eliminating any
hypotheses through ongoing data collection. This node was included to
monitor hypothesis elimination as a component of HDR.
Examples:
Novice R: Pattern really wasn’t that discy … you know most people say stiff
and sore, she said she’s usually pain free in the morning
Expert D: OK that starts to sort of in her case rule out some of the other
things that I was wondering about like you know, a lot of times
people with disc problems for example sitting might aggravate it
Negative predictive
Definition: Participant questions deliberately used during the assessment to
provide evidence that a clinical hypothesis is false.
Purpose: Process of elimination was observed in association with both
analytical and non-analytical reasoning types and monitored as a client
questioning strategy.
Examples:
Novice Q: I was just sort of you know chucking in a few questions to sort of
negate structures perhaps, and it sort of leads me towards more,
more that chronic um instability
Expert G: I was expecting that she would say um that she didn’t have any
pins and needles or numbness so definitely more to confirm what
I was thinking
Pattern related
Definition: Any data found during analysis that related to participant pattern
use, including recognition and elimination.
Purpose: Similarly to the analytical reasoning free node, the subsequent
review of this free node attempted to provide qualitative support to the
quantitative interpretations regarding reasoning process.
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Examples:
Novice Q: Even though it doesn’t seem likely given the pattern and the
description and aggravating, um or something ah maybe
something like a um stenosis or foramina or something like that.
Um which may, may relate given the area and that and that
extension
Expert C: the pattern is one that I recognise and looks mechanical
Predictive reasoning
Definition: The participant predicts a response to confirm a picture or
comments on a prediction after data is gathered. Any comments on the
therapist’s predictive strategies in clinical practice were also coded.
Purpose: Predictive reasoning is a strategy reported in the literature that was
noted during coding. It was monitored during qualitative analysis for thematic
purposes and comparison with PR users.
Examples:
Expert G: And what muscles is she using … she said sitting up straight
makes it worse, I was then getting in my head I’m guessing that
when she sits up straight she does it with the wrong pattern so
she uses her superficial muscles
Expert F: it hasn’t fitted into what I thought. And I mean I guess as you, I
mean that’s what makes your practice interesting. I mean I do
play games with myself at guessing what I think the problem is.
I’ll guess, I’ll try and guess what their answers are going to be
before they give me answers. Yeah and then I see whether I’m
right or wrong.
Only one participant using a PR process was also observed to use predictive
reasoning during the study.
Simulated assessment
Definition: Any comments that relate to the simulated patient’s realism or
performance.
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Purpose: Easy storage of participant comments relating to the research
method increases efficiency of analysing this information.
Examples:
Novice R: at one point I um I looked up at Michelle and I thought, gee she’s
a good actor (laugh) and that just sort of swayed me a bit but you
know other than that no not at all
Expert D: I started wondering I wonder if she’s actually got this problem.
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In particular, noting differences between expert and novice physiotherapists
relating to clinical reasoning.
The themes were common observations identified during coding. These have
been documented wherever a topic was noted in two or more participant
transcripts. The frequency of underlying observations of a theme (Table 4.4)
highlights the weakness or strength of that theme relative to the participants
in the study. Those findings identified in the responses of only a small
number of participants have been presented to offer a comprehensive view of
the complexity and variability of problem solving in practice.
In respect of the first intention of thematic analysis, only two of the themes
directly assisted identification of directional reasoning process. Analytical
reasoning and pattern related themes were utilised to further support the
quantitative study findings. This provided strength to the study via
triangulation using different types of data sources and analysis methods.
Section 4.5 details the qualitative data from these two themes.
The qualitative aspect of the study allowed for the identification of new
themes as outlined in section 3.5.5. All themes other than ‘analytical
reasoning’ and ‘pattern related’ have been analysed and reported as
additional study findings in section 4.7.
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Table 4.4 Themes identified
Theme Description Experts Novices
Analytical reasoning When hypothetico-deductive reasoning was determined to E,F,G,H,J K,L,M,N,O,P,Q,R,S
have taken place
Collect data now and Participant refers to their approach in this manner A,J R,M,L
think later
Focused on diagnosis Predominant focus on identifying a diagnosis J S
Importance of history Stated emphasis on client history information F,J
versus physical Stated emphasis on physical examination information E
examination information Stated emphasis on integration of all data G,H R,S
Open minded approach Participant refers to their desire to be open to other possible D,H,I
to problem solving hypotheses whether having a primary understanding or not
Outcome data search The search for data that can be used later as an outcome A,C,B,G K,L,Q
measure. Including reference to client goal setting
Pattern related It doesn’t ‘fit’ – pattern not recognised E,F
Disbelieving approach E
Differentiating from hypothetico-deductive reasoning G Q,R
Recognition C,D,I
Person centred A search for an understanding of the person is apparent A,B,C,D,F,G,H,I K,N,O,P
approach along with a problem based understanding
Predictive reasoning Participant is predicting the outcome of a question prior to D,F,G N,Q
asking it
Reference to recent Participant refers to formal education during interview A,F K,M
professional education
Reiterating information Participant was observed to repeat data collected back to D,I M,P,Q
back to client client during the assessment
Search for symmetry in Reference to searching for symmetry or asymmetry during C,E,F,H L
symptoms symptom location
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4.4 PATTERN RECOGNITION
The primary study aim was to determine whether PR is utilised by expert and
novice clinical physiotherapists in the musculoskeletal field. This section
provides quantitative results with respect to the research aims of identifying
PR and evaluating its relationship to accuracy and efficiency. Agreement
between all three researchers was achieved with respect to the reported
findings.
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Table 4.5 Overall participant scoring tool identifying pattern recognition for Expert D
Feature of pattern Present Evidence Comments
recognition
Central hypothesis Yes Time stop 3:50
formed “I’m really looking for is if she’s got any time signs of spinal cord Distinct point in time.
compression, cauda equina sort of issues”
Did you have those at this point in mind? “Yeah, yeah”
“one of the things that I sort of think about there would be say
spondylolisthesis”
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Time stop 7:50
“I know from personal experience, not that I’ve been a nursing student or
anything, but seeing nursing students in hospitals and things like that, they
spend a hell of a lot of time standing around. Standing, listening to people talk
to them, being shown things, doing pretty crappy sort of jobs … or they’re sort
of leaning over making beds and things like that, and I’m thinking OK it’s
upright postures, um maybe sort of sustained semi flexion, that sort of stuff
seems to be the thing that’s made her worse. It’s a significant sort of change
in her normal activities which if she’s a student normally she’d be sitting down
… if she’s got a spondylolisthesis or some sort of posterior sort of structural
issue, but now she’s upright and on her feet a lot more and it’s you know it’s
made her condition feel worse”
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Table 4.6 Overall participant scoring tool without evidence of pattern recognition for Novice S
Feature of pattern Present Evidence Comments
recognition
Central hypothesis No Time stop 5:30
formed “I was fairly certain at this point that um her, her pain level was very activity Initial hypothesis was
dependent. Um and that it was directly related to how much activity activity dependent and
specifically netball, she was doing as to how bad the pain got, and I also all pains were related to
wanted to know whether her thigh pains her knee pain, buttock pain and back the lower back.
pain were all related. And um from the way that she described that, each of
them came on fairly systematically with levels of activity. Um that made me
start to think that they were all related, to the one problem”
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Time stop 14:20
“a lumbar disc is one that is standing out um, more than others. Although it’s -
- just the lumbar spine specifically that is standing out some more, so I
wouldn’t, um, I wouldn’t rule out ah some Z joint involvement um or some,
some muscular involvement either. Um -- but that, those are probably my, my
top ones”
Management stated No
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The results of the two analysis tools were then summarised in Table 4.7. This
tabled information identified each feature of PR and provided an overall view
of the presence of PR within each participant interview. A central hypothesis
was necessary throughout the assessment for overall identification of PR
(section 3.6.1). Any alternative hypotheses in conflict with another indicated a
deductive process and opposed the identification of PR.
In all cases where PR use was determined, both a ‘central hypothesis’ and
associated ‘significant case features’ where identified. The ‘number of yes
responses’ did not determine whether PR was used however higher scores
provided greater support for utilisation of PR. The ‘number of yes responses’
formed a score from 0 to 5 for each participant. Those participants using PR
were found to have a score of 3 or above.
The numbers of participants clearly utilising PR during the study can be seen
in the final column of Table 4.7. In all five participants, four out of ten experts
and one out of nine novices, incorporated PR into their reasoning of the
clinical case. The overall novice score was 3 out of 5, whilst three of the
experts scored 4 and one scored 5 out of 5.
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Table 4.7 Summary of pattern recognition related results
Novice N N . N N N N 0 No
Novice R N . Y N N N 1 No
Novice L N . N N N N 0 No
Novice P Y 26% Y Y N N 3 Yes
Novice O N . N N N N 0 No
Novice S N . N N N N 0 No
Novice M N . N Y N N 1 No
Novice K N . N N N Y 1 No
Novice Q N . N N N N 0 No
Y = Yes; N = No
‘Time formed’ is the actual time at which the central hypothesis was formed as a percentage of the total assessment time
‘Number of yes responses’ is the total number of Y responses in each row (not including ‘Pattern recognition identified’)
‘Pattern recognition identified’ required the ‘central hypothesis’ and ‘significant case features’ to have a Y response
4.4.2 Comparison of expert and novice use of pattern recognition
Novice N No 0
Novice R No 0
Novice L No 0
Novice P Yes 1
Novice O No 0
Novice S No 0
Novice M No 0
Novice K No 0
Novice Q No 0
Total / 9 1
0 = No 1 = Yes
First, Fisher’s exact test was conducted using SPSS statistical program
(version 15) to determine group differences with respect to identifying PR.
This analysis produced a value of 0.303 when comparing experts to novices
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indicating no significant difference between groups based on a significance
level of 0.05.
The credible intervals for the identification of PR amongst all participants and
each group separately are displayed in Figure 4.2. These findings suggest
no significant difference between groups, but this is particularly related to the
small sample size and lack of power. Additional sample size calculations
determined that 42 participants would be required in each group to
demonstrate a statistically significant difference between expert and novice
participants. This sample size calculation used a proportion derived from a
Po of 0.111 (based on 1 of 9 novices utilising PR equating to 11.1% of this
group) and Pi of 0.4 (based on 4 of 10 experts utilising PR equating to 40%
of this group) with a type I error rate of 0.05 and power of 0.80.
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100
80
% Chance of PR use
60
40
20
0
All participants Expert group Novice group
Figure 4.2 Credible intervals for the identification of pattern recognition (PR)
4.4.3 Accuracy
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Table 4.9 Stated primary hypothesis relative to pattern recognition use
Pattern
Participant recognition Stated primary hypothesis
identified
Expert B Yes Spondylolisthesis
Expert I Yes Spondylolisthesis
Expert A No Instability
Expert G No Motion segment dysfunction / Neurogenic / Instability
Expert J No Disc vs Joint
Expert E No Instability
Expert C Yes Mechanical pelvic asymmetry
Expert H No Instability / Joints
Expert D Yes Spondylolisthesis
Expert F No Nil clearly stated
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Table 4.10 Pattern recognition accuracy between groups. Accuracy was
only considered as identification of spondylolisthesis
Pattern Pattern
recognition recognition
No Yes No Yes
No 6 1 No 8 1
Accuracy
Yes 0 3 Yes 0 0
Experts Novices
Pattern recognition
No Yes
No 14 2
Accuracy
Yes 0 3
Statistical analysis of the two by two tabled data was conducted using
Fishers’ exact test for all participants using PR regardless of group and for
126
the expert group alone. Analysis of PR users achieving a correct diagnosis
across all participants when compared with participants using analytical
reasoning strategies produced a significance value of 0.01. Relative to a
significance level of 0.05, this indicates that the use of the PR strategy was
significantly more likely to produce a correct diagnosis during a subjective
history than using analytical reasoning strategies.
4.4.4 Efficiency
The ‘time stop identification tool’ allowed for timing data to be easily obtained
relative to the formation of a predominant hypothesis. The timing data
collected per participant included the total amount of time taken to conduct
the client history and the time taken to the formation of a predominant
hypothesis. Due to the varying lengths of each participant assessment the
time for formation of a predominant hypothesis was compared as a
percentage of each overall assessment time. Table 4.12 provides the overall
assessment times for each participant and the timing data relating to
hypothesis formation.
The actual time elapsed when the central hypothesis was first mentioned
(formed) by the participant was calculated as a percentage of the total
assessment time. In gradually developing hypotheses this stated time was
when the final predominant hypothesis was stated and held above other
possibilities. The timing data was able to be confidently and clearly stated in
127
those cases where PR was identified but less so in those without. Therefore
the time to initial predominant hypothesis was more of an estimate in non-PR
cases and not an exactly defined point in time. As such, these times were not
deemed useful in the interpretation of efficiency.
Novice N 8:10
Novice R 10:08
Novice L 12:00
Novice P 19.35 5:25 26%
Novice O 15:10
Novice S 14:20
Novice M 18:50
Novice K 16:00
Novice Q 15:20
The results of timing data highlighted that when PR use was identified the
predominant hypothesis that was maintained throughout the entire
assessment was formed in the first 36% (range 21% - 36%; median 26%;
mean 27%) of the subjective client assessment.
The overall assessment time for those using identified PR as compared with
those using analytical reasoning strategies have been analysed and
compared via simple statistics (Table 4.13).
128
Table 4.13 Total assessment time relative to reasoning method and
participant group
Both participant groups Number Range Median Mean
Pattern recognition identified 5 9:55- 19:00 17:21
20:10
Analytical strategies without 14 8:10- 14:45 14:42
pattern recognition 22:05
Comparison of overall time taken for the assessment between experts and
novices was also analysed independently from reasoning strategy and
compared via simple statistics as shown in Table 4.14.
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Table 4.14 Total assessment time relative to participant group only
Participant Group Number Range Median Mean
Experts 10 9:55- 17:40 16:18
22:05
Novices 9 8:10- 15:10 14:25
19:35
130
Work related
University participation
Client beliefs
Age
The categories of questions were similar to the areas used in the training and
assessment of simulated client response accuracy. The primary purpose was
to provide a comparison of the order of questions posed with respect to
analytical versus non-analytical reasoning and between groups.
The primary benefit of collecting and analysing this observational data was
the potential for obtaining evidence for confirmation questions following the
identification of a pattern. Interestingly two of the experts using PR (Experts
D and I) formed their pattern immediately at the time of asking a special
question relating to bladder / bowel dysfunction. This question was
131
considered potentially related to a high grade spondylolisthesis condition.
The significance of this finding however was countered by the fact that two of
the experts using analytical reasoning and not considering spondylolisthesis
(Experts G and H) also asked the same question. It may therefore have been
an observation of question order based on undergraduate or postgraduate
training and has no relation to confirmation questioning post PR. No other
trends were observed in the data of those experts using PR or analytical
reasoning.
Transcript data from the free codes ‘analytical reasoning’ and ‘pattern related’
were utilised to provide qualitative support for the identification of a
diagnostic reasoning strategy. Clearly both analytical and non-analytical
strategies existed within quantitative data analysis (section 4.4). A qualitative
review of transcript quotations underlying these two themes offers an
element of triangulation to the prior reported study findings.
132
Novice O: I was initially thinking discy kind of pain but with the um sitting as
an easing factor usually not so much but then again prolonged
sitting ah but then sitting in extension, so I don’t know whether
there’s ah like a, I guess it’s a facet joint kind of thing going on
with the extension kind of or still maybe an SIJ kind of thing with
the extension
Five of the ten experts were coded with ‘analytical reasoning’ and none of
these were identified as using PR (section 4.4). Only Expert A of the
participants not using PR was absent from this code. Examples of the
‘analytical reasoning’ code in expert participants are:
Expert J: Cause I was still confused whether I really thought it was a disc
or the facet joints which is what I’m really trying to work out, and
it didn’t quite fit to me
Expert G she landed on her buttocks again that made me think oh maybe
it is, is an SIJ component and um -- or is it just sort of still a
lumbar spine motion segment getting that, that compression over
ten years you know if, if she’s had fairly significant trauma then
what sort of processes have been going on.
The ‘pattern related’ free code was separated into four sub-codes as listed:
1. It doesn’t fit – pattern not recognised
2. Disbelieving approach
3. Differentiating from HDR
4. Recognition.
The first two of these sub-codes related to pattern elimination (It doesn’t fit –
pattern not recognised) or the case data not fitting a known pattern
(disbelieving approach). These sub-codes could not qualitatively support PR
but had relevance to experts attempting to fit the presenting case findings
133
with prior known experiences. Examples of the first sub-code ‘It doesn’t fit –
pattern not recognised’ include:
Expert E: I’m thinking I’m eliminating the disc as the cause. The early
morning first thing is to get out of bed. And coughing and
sneezing there’s sometimes the two of them can go together.
Um and um it doesn’t sort of fit so I’ve gone onto something else
then
Expert F: I think it’s surprising that someone her age can say that she’s
like basically got constant pain there all the time ... I mean that
surprises me. It doesn’t, it still doesn’t seem to fit into a proper
pattern, to me. Yeah, usually someone her age, I mean you can
have intermittent back pain over a long period of time, but you’ll
usually have periods where you have no pain
The third sub-code of ‘pattern related’ had elements of pattern use but also
clear identifiable analytical strategies. These formed a ‘differentiating from
HDR’ sub-code. Novices Q and R were identified from this sub-code and
qualitatively analysed as developing patterns (section 4.5.3). The only expert
identified from this sub-code was Expert G who made reference to patterns
but during analysis via the ‘time stop identification tool’ (Section 4.4.1) was
found to develop an understanding of the case gradually. Expert G stated a
134
broad overall understanding of “motion segment dysfunction” with “less
muscle control” and referred to their clinical experience in “hearing patients
say”:
Expert G: just from a -- hearing patients say that over and over again, so I
guess from a pattern, pattern point of view, um yeah time on her
feet, bending over, so that can still, to me still fits in with um with
the motion segment dysfunction probably less muscle control
sort of standing being perhaps a, a weight bearing um bit of in
extension but then having that control of support into flexion
The last ‘pattern related’ sub-code included quotations from transcripts that
individually supported pattern ‘recognition’ as a non-analytical reasoning
strategy:
Expert C: the pattern is one that I recognise and looks mechanical
Expert D: that’s based on previous experience with people who are
describing a similar story to what she is
Expert I: I don’t see a lot of kids because kids typically don’t get, get low
back pain … but when we do we, we seem to get them with long
term symptoms but a lot of the time there’s structural reasons why
135
Novice R hypotheses:
Time stop 2:26 A previous injury and something reasonably serious and
the inability to walk for two days is indicative of
something fairly strong or fairly strong pain. Um so there
could be some previous instability or damage that’s
been re-aggravated
Time stop 3:34 the amount of referral is something that’s you know, a
fair degree of instability or something’s going on there.
She’s getting a fair bit of referral, so start to you know,
lean towards a, a more serious sort of thing
Time stop 3:34 Could be instability. Could be disc bulge, could be a few
things
Time stop 8:02 Pattern really wasn’t that discy
Time stop 10:55 that referral could be due to um sciatic impingement …
that was something that I was juggling. Um, but also
there could be you know she might have other things
going on. Um facet joint irritations or general instability,
global instability
136
Novice Q hypotheses:
Time stop 4:30 I’m starting to think disc, discogenic sort of given that it’s
radiating up into, into the glut’s. Um -- also you know I’m
looking at possibly from adverse neural tension
involvement as well. Um, but it, yeah likely you know
given the time frame and that I, I’d certainly start to think
discogenic, um overall and, and more, more likely like a
chronic ah a lumbopelvic instability
Time stop 6:19 It’s reasonably consistent um with what I’m thinking, with
the that lumbopelvic instability
Time stop 6:56 again it’s sort of, there is a, um there is some um some
support again for that, that lumbopelvic instability. But
then again it could be discogenic as well
Time stop 7:19 Um sort of confirmed it. There’s certainly an extension to
the aggravation um -- sitting with good posture is
obviously or reasonable posture is quite difficult for her
which would suggest instability. Um sort of takes away
that disc … I guess I mean there could be a more ah a
lesion anteriorly in the disc perhaps
Time stop 8:40 I think it does tend to support um (prior understanding of
instability). I guess the other, other structures particularly
with extension and that, you have to consider is a SIJ. But
not very likely given the area of pain um it’s my
understanding that SIJs rarely go beyond that you know,
that far around the groin and things like that
Time stop 10:10 tends to you know um support more that lumbopelvic
instability … there’s no, not a really inflammatory
response or anything like that with it. Um -- which there
tends to be at times you know with particularly with discs
you know they report stiff and sore in the mornings and
that sort of thing
137
Time stop 10:58 I’m still leaning towards um that, that instability um you
know lack of, lack of stability through that area
Time stop 15:25 I guess really there’s two possibilities. But I, that sort of sit
in my mind. Um that still that same, you know that
lumbopelvic instability in that area, um poor activation of
transversus, it certainly would be interested to see her
ability to activate um through there and see if there was
any alteration in her symptoms. Um, the other, other
possibility is ah like a stenosis compression of a nerve
root
138
me towards more, more that chronic um instability (Time stop
8:00)
A summary of each participant’s final hypothesis has been listed in Table 4.9.
The data associated with each summary has been provided as evidence
behind the student researcher’s interpretation of final hypothesis, along with
the breakdown of hypothesis categories (Appendix 15). This section provides
the analysis of participant’s hypothesis category use within the final stated
hypothesis (section 4.6.1) and during the entire participant interview (section
4.6.2).
139
Table 4.15 Final hypothesis extent of category use
Participant Categories Participant Categories
Expert A 4,5 Novice K 4,5
Expert B 4,6 Novice L 4
Expert C 4,5 Novice M 5
Expert D 2,4,5 Novice N 5
Expert E 4,5 Novice O 4
Expert G 3,4,5 Novice P 5
Expert H 4,5,6,7 Novice Q 4,5
Expert I 3,4,5,7 Novice R 4,5
Expert J 4,5,6 Novice S 4
140
100
90
80
Percentage of participants
70
60
Novice
50 Expert
40
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20
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The extent and frequency of hypothesis formation with respect to the eight
reported hypothesis categories (Jones & Rivett, 2004) outlined in Table 2.2
during a clinical assessment has not been previously reported. Analysis of
the frequency of hypothesis category use at any stage during the interview
was assessed to provide information pertaining to the extent of hypothesis
development by physiotherapy clinicians. This process notably differed from
the final hypothesis category use in Table 4.15 as it involved a review of any
hypothesis observed in the transcript data. Examples of each hypothesis
category observed in the transcripts have been provided in section 4.3.1.
141
The extent of use was assessed via review of the hypothesis coding and sub-
coding obtained during qualitative analysis. The overall extent of hypothesis
category use has been presented in Table 4.16, including the additional ‘non-
specific’ category for hypothesis types not indicated in the literature. These
data present the number of participants in each group and overall that utilised
each hypothesis category at any stage during their reasoning. The frequency
of use by each participant and the depth of content within each category
were not included in this analysis.
142
into any of the eight reported categories and were placed in the non-specific
group were used by 63% of all participants.
Table 4.16 also allows for comparison of each hypothesis category relative to
participant group. The stand out difference between groups occurred within
category 2 (patient’s perspective / psychosocial factors) where 80% of
experts described their understanding within this category as compared with
only 22% of novices. The percentage of participants per group (Table 4.16)
using each hypothesis category at any stage during problem solving is
displayed in Figure 4.4.
100
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80
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Expert
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143
The existence of any significant difference between groups was analysed
individually for each hypothesis category. Fisher’s exact test was utilised
given the small numbers in the groups and the results demonstrated that only
the second hypothesis category of ‘patient’s perspective / psychosocial
factors’ was found to be significantly different between the groups using a
significance level of 0.05 (Table 4.17). No calculation was possible for
categories 4 and 5 given no differences in frequency occurred between
groups.
Table 4.17 Group comparisons for the use of each hypothesis category
(using Fisher’s exact test)
Hypothesis Experts Novices p value
category n=10 n=9
1 6 4 0.656
2 8 2 0.023*
3 7 5 0.65
4 10 9 -
5 10 9 -
6 6 7 0.628
7 9 5 0.141
8 6 3 0.37
* ≤ 0.05 significance level
144
Table 4.18 Novice use of hypothesis categories
Participant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Total %
Novice P 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 7 87.5
Novice Q 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 6 75
Novice M 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 5 62.5
Novice O 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 5 62.5
Novice L 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 5 62.5
Novice N 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 5 62.5
Novice S 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 4 50
Novice R 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 4 50
Novice K 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 3 37.5
Median 5 62.5
The experts were notably higher than novices with their use of hypothesis
categories within the single case. The overall median number of categories
used by experts was 6 (75%) and the mean was 6.2 (77.5%). Table 4.19
presents the expert data.
Expert G 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 8 100
Expert A 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 8 100
Expert B 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 7 87.5
Expert I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 7 87.5
Expert F 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 6 75
Expert C 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 6 75
Expert H 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 6 75
Expert D 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 6 75
Expert J 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 5 62.5
Expert E 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 3 37.5
Median 6 75
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4.7 ADDITIONAL FINDINGS
146
stated by the participant during the interview or the student researcher may
have inferred the finding from the transcript data.
147
P: Mm.
R: And then you’ve just got a standard -- physical testing that
you do to confirm or further understand?
P: Yeah, yeah. Yeah I think I do pretty well a full assessment on
everyone.
Novice S: I don’t like to um to rush into decision-making at the end of my
subjective. Um so I, I try to, to piece together the information that
I’ve, I’ve collected and, and form an objective around that … I
think more often than not um I don’t, I have an answer to a
particular structure that might be causing pain at the end of the
subjective. Um I, I’m more often have an answer at the end of
my objective
Novice R: from pretty much the majority of the subjective I was just really
pooling information and formulating ideas and just waiting, I
usually just wait till after the objective before I, and even then I
still might have three different diagnoses. So yeah at this stage
it’s all pretty in the formative stage
The quality of the data are unable to lead to any specific conclusions relating
to a preference of one part of the clinical examination over another with
experts or novices, but rather highlights variability in each clinician’s
weighting of clinical findings. This area of findings was not requested of
participants but noted during coding of the interview transcripts.
148
Expert J: I usually take the history and then think what -- I just go through
the sheet I’ve got, and then at the end I really start thinking,
putting it together. I usually get all the facts before I start putting
it together … the objective assessment I do, is pretty standard …
I mean I just do everything and then at the end, decide what,
what the diagnosis was
Expert A: I think I tend to data gather and stash it in a big heap and use it
later … I’m pretty much in automatic mode asking questions … I
don’t try and bundle it too much at this stage, although I guess I
must do in my head.
Expert A stated their delayed integration approach but makes comment
somewhat to the contrary in the statement “I don’t try and bundle it too much
at this stage, although I guess I must do in my head”. This could be
interpreted as reflective of an automated approach without good awareness
of the problem solving processes employed.
149
the entire assessment. Novice M tended to revert to a delayed integration
approach later in the assessment, possibly when the clinical data was not
able to be interpreted as a clear case understanding. These results are not
unexpected for a novice physiotherapist with little exposure to such a case,
however only three of the nine novice participants referred to a delayed
integration approach. The remainder were clearly integrating the data during
the assessment even when their level of knowledge and clinical experience
arguably did not allow for effective assimilation.
150
Table 4.20 Total assessment time (minutes:seconds) relative to delayed
versus concurrent integration of data (all participants)
Number Range Median Mean
Delayed integration 5 10:08-18:50 13:45 13:44
(participants coded delayed
integration)
Concurrent integration 14 8:12-22:08 16:40 15:59
(participants not coded
delayed integration)
The data were not analysed statistically due to the possibility that the
presence of this code did not reflect the participant’s approach to the whole
assessment. Section 5.5.2 discusses this limitation further.
151
4.7.3 Awareness of errors
Experts D and I had attained a central hypothesis that was correct prior to
these statements, but both indicate they were still capable of discounting this
hypothesis if contradictory data were found.
152
Expert D: If my hypothesis of it being some sort of either structural
instability or like a dynamic instability or spondylolisthesis is
correct maybe she’ll be able to tell me that when she’s running
and then stops suddenly bang it will grab her
Novice Q: I was just sort of you know chucking in a few questions to sort of
negate structures perhaps, and it sort of leads me towards more,
more that chronic um instability
Novice N: based on the aggravating factors and the area of the pain I’d
expect it to be sore in to flexion … Well, in, in a way that if, if she
flexed all the way down to her toes I’d be surprised … Um, it
wouldn’t fit what I was going down
153
attempted to understand the client as a person. Eight of the ten expert
transcripts and four of the nine novice transcripts were found to contain some
evidence of a ‘person centred’ approach to the assessment (Table 4.4). This
theme was based on the student researcher’s notes during analysis of the
hypothesis sub-codes such as category 1 (activity and participation) and 2
(patient’s perspective / psychosocial factors), along with the ‘management’
tree node and the ‘goal setting’ free node. Transcript examples supporting a
person centred approach include:
Expert G: looking at a goal of hers that you know she’s worried she’s got
another clinical placement
Expert I: she’s still got a significant aggravating component to it and that,
that may be something what we needed to address as far as um
-- time off when she needed to. She may need time off uni. She
may need to look into special consideration and social factors
that might need to be addressed in relation to her pain
Novice N: She hasn’t lost any time off work although she’s stopped playing
sport and it does hamper her ability to perform the normal things
that she needs to do
Novice O: I was just trying to get a, a kind of idea of where she’s at like
with, cause it’s been going on for so long I don’t exactly know her
age but um she, her ah pain behaviours and how she deals with
the pain like she says rest is the best thing but she still, she’s still
playing netball despite the pain and so just trying to get an idea
of how she copes with the pain and that sort of thing
These quotations provide evidence that the participants were able to think
about the person within the problem solving process, which therefore adds
support to the realism of the clinical encounter and suggests the study design
had minimal effect on their reasoning behaviours.
154
4.8 STUDY DESIGN RELATED RESULTS
Any research relies on sound methodology for the validity of its overall
conclusions. This is particularly the case with clinical reasoning research due
to the complexity of investigating cognitive processes. Several aspects of the
current study method that could impact on the outcomes were monitored
during data collection and subsequently analysed. The results of the study
design on participant behaviour are presented hereafter.
The data obtained from the simulated client response checklist was
transferred to nominal data and analysed via proportions averaged over the
fifty-two response areas. A summary of the response data is provided in
Table 4.22. For each question response area the number of occasions it was
requested could be viewed in addition to the number of times it was
answered accurately and inaccurately. This resulted in a proportion of correct
responses out of the total number of times requested for each response area.
This basic method of analysing data accounted for the fact that not all
response areas were requested by every participant. The results found that
only two of the fifty two response areas had a proportion of below 1,
155
indicating fifty questions were answered correctly on 100% of occasions. The
average proportion of all fifty-two response areas was 0.99 equating to 99%
accuracy of overall responses to participant questions.
Accurate portrayal of the case by the actor was a critical part in achieving
valid and meaningful results. The participants were aware of the case being
portrayed by an actor via the study information statement (Appendix 7) as
ethically required. They were subsequently requested to comment on their
overall experience compared with a real clinical situation, including the
realism of the case and simulated client. Eight of the nineteen participants
directly commented on the actor, while others remarked on the study setup
as a whole without specifically making comment on the actor.
156
Table 4.22 Simulated client response data
Experts Novices Total Incorrect
Response area requested requested (out of 19) responses
Location of pain types (Pain A) 10 9 19 0
Location of pain types (Pain B) 10 9 19 0
Association of pains A & B 10 9 19 0
Location of pain types (Pain C) 10 9 19 0
Location of pain types (Pain D) 10 9 19 0
Location of pain types (Pain E) 10 9 19 0
Association of pains C, D & E 10 9 19 0
Severity of pain types (Pain A) 6 8 14 0
Severity of pain types (Pain B) 6 7 13 0
Severity of pain types (Pain C) 6 5 11 0
Severity of pain types (Pain D) 6 5 11 0
Severity of pain types (Pain E) 6 5 11 0
Description of pain types (Pain A) 9 7 16 0
Description of pain types (Pain B) 9 7 16 0
Description of pain types (Pain C) 9 7 16 0
Description of pain types (Pain D) 9 7 16 0
Description of pain types (Pain E) 8 7 15 0
Constancy of pain (Pain A) 10 9 19 0
Constancy of pain (Pain B) 10 9 19 0
Constancy of pain (Pain C) 10 9 19 0
Constancy of pain (Pain D) 10 9 19 0
Constancy of pain (Pain E) 9 8 17 0
History of current episode 10 9 19 0
Past history 10 9 19 0
Mechanism of injury 10 8 18 0
Primary aggravating activities 10 9 19 0
Standing tolerance 8 8 16 0
Walking tolerance 6 2 8 0
Sitting tolerance 9 6 15 0
Primary easing factors 10 9 19 0
Previous physiotherapy treatment 9 5 14 0
Other previous treatment 10 9 19 0
Morning pain / stiffness 10 8 18 0
Night pain / ability to sleep 10 9 19 0
Pain behaviour through day 10 9 19 0
Primary patient goals 8 7 15 0
Activity – netball participation 10 7 17 0
Anterior knee pain 6 3 9 0
Unsteadiness / giving way of legs 4 2 6 2
General health 10 9 19 0
Paraesthesia / numbness 10 9 19 0
Cough / sneeze 7 2 9 0
X-rays 10 9 19 0
Prior surgery 9 6 15 0
Weight loss 9 7 16 0
Medications 10 8 18 0
Investigations 10 9 19 0
Social history 6 1 7 0
Age of patient 8 6 14 1
Cord / cauda equina questions 8 6 14 0
Current employment 3 4 7 0
Nursing student – full time 10 9 19 0
157
The participant comments provide a qualitative view of the realism of the
case presentation:
Expert I: She was really good and certainly not enough things that
changed um the way you were thinking.
Expert D: She’s realistic to the point where I’m, I started wondering I
wonder if she’s actually got this problem.
Novice R: It seemed like an actual patient.
Novice M: Yeah, I forgot I was not seeing a real person.
158
really know -- And other than that I thought she knew it all well
and then I started to really believe that she had this problem.
When I asked her about what treatment – you know when she
was 11 and she went to the chir, going to the chiropractor when
he cracked her back. Oh when I come home, I’m at uni but when
I come home in the holidays I still go and see the chiropractor,
every two or three months and he cracks it. I started to think then
that she really had the problem.
The majority of participants did not think the context or study equipment
altered the process of conducting a subjective assessment in this case:
Expert A: R: what you did today with this particular case… do you think
that was fairly standard of what you would have done for the
subjective with the next person that walks in the door?
P: Yeah pretty standard.
R: So the video and the audio equipment didn’t interfere too
much with what you did?
P: Oh no, not at all.
159
Expert D: R: This environment do you think it changed how you went
about that assessment, the video camera?
P: No, no I think probably that’s pretty much as I would
Expert J: R: did you think the location of the assessment, the video
camera influenced the way you went about your subjective
assessment?
P: No not at all.
R: And do you think you conducted your assessment any more
or less thoroughly than normal?
P: No that’s standard.
Expert E: R: Did you think the, the video camera made you do the
assessment differently than what you would do normally?
P: No, no.
Novice P: R: Did the location of this assessment … influence the way you
went about your assessment?
P: Um being a subjective ah, not greatly.
R: Did the video camera um and the audio recorder influence?
P: No it didn’t bother me at all.
Novice K: R: In terms of the set up here, do you think the camera or just
being audio recorded actually changed or altered or influenced
the way you went about your subjective?
P: Ah not really. No.
R: You mentioned halfway through one of the questions you
asked you got a response that you thought was um an
impromptu response as opposed to a real response.
P: Um from the patient? Ah yeah that was I don’t think though
that that had anything to do with the camera or the audiotape. I
think that was ah something which ah I guess I, it’s quite a, I
guess I’d say just from my limited experience that would be quite
a funny um ah symptom to get.
Novice O: R: Did the recording equipment -- Or the environment influence
the way you went about it?
P: No, no didn’t even notice.
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R: Did you think that was reasonably -- normal to what you
would normally do.
P: Yeah absolutely. Yeah, yeah, yep. I didn’t, I didn’t feel like it
was invasive or anything like that, so.
161
R: And so did that affect you much in, in the end in terms of how
you went about it, or changed anything?
P: No, no I don’t think so.
Novice S: R: did the video affect do you think, the way you assessed the
patient in this case. The fact that you have a video in the
background or being audio recorded?
P: No
R: Being in this environment as opposed to in a clinic with a
plinth beside you, do you think that changed the way you went
about things at all?
P: Not the way that I went about things in any way. Um, it was, it
did feel a bit unfamiliar though, so I don’t know whether that
would have affected me. I don’t feel like it has.
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CHAPTER 5. DISCUSSION
The present study used a carefully designed high fidelity case study method
as outlined in Chapter 3. It is the first study of its type in physiotherapy that
has assessed diagnostic accuracy relative to reasoning process. In
particular, the study findings add to the physiotherapy clinical reasoning
literature with respect to our understanding of PR. The findings also
potentially impact on our understanding of pattern development from the
perspectives of both accuracy and education.
Following the discussion relating to the primary study aims, this chapter also
addresses:
The ‘makeup’ of a clinical pattern as the basis of recognition
Significant case feature use in PR
Observations of hypothesis category use in problem solving with respect
to differences between experts and novices
Relevant comparisons between novice and expert groups
Additional findings relating to different approaches to reasoning observed
during the study, and
Limitations of the study based around the retrospective recall
methodology and context specificity.
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5.1 NON-ANALYTICAL REASONING
164
The additional three components used in identifying PR in the present study
involved the use of professional knowledge, reference to prior clinical
experience, and a stated management plan. It was essential that these
components had to relate to the central hypothesis that was based on
significant case features. Including these additional criteria was intended to
strengthen the divide between analytical and non-analytical strategies, and
not rely just on a single feature of PR such as detection from prior clinical
experience.
The study has provided strong evidence for the existence of PR in current
musculoskeletal physiotherapy practice. The fact that four of ten expert
participants were clearly found to be using PR using the stringent
identification criteria indicates that it exists. This was supported by the
credible interval calculations (section 4.4.2; Figure 4.2) having a lowest
margin above zero.
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Prior clinical experience as a non-essential component of identification of
PR was supported in that it was present in the transcripts of only two of the
four experts utilising PR. Although it underpins the phenomenon, it was
considered insufficient alone as a feature for identifying PR and was not
stated at times when PR clearly existed. The two experts who did not refer
to their experience of a similar case may have utilised recognition based on
a conglomeration of propositional and non-propositional knowledge, rather
than a single prior experience. This will be further discussed in relation to
categorisation in section 5.3.1.
The relatively broad inclusion criteria for the expert group facilitated the
generalisability of the results to standard physiotherapy practice of
musculoskeletal therapists. In essence, it was considered that the
physiotherapists comprising the expert group had clinically practiced for a
sufficient time and completed a recognised postgraduate musculoskeletal or
manual therapy qualification that enabled the development of experience
based patterns. The pattern used in this simulated case (i.e.
spondylolisthesis) was considered likely to be familiar to at least some
expert participants in this group based on the prevalence of the condition.
This assumption was supported by the PR results.
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question of what type of and how much experience is required to develop
the use of this strategy was beyond the scope of this study. Arguably the
answer will lie with the integration of knowledge and experience relevant to
any specific condition.
Careful consideration was given to the study design relating to high fidelity
case methods. The study was developed with the purpose of not only being
able to identify PR, but also to shed light on the question of its accuracy. A
key element in interpreting diagnostic accuracy in clinical reasoning
research lies with the level of confidence in the clinical data leading to the
actual case diagnosis. The specific diagnosis for the real case used as the
basis for the simulated case study was that of a lumbar spine
spondylolisthesis pathology (section 3.2.2), a condition with a substantial
level of research evidence in the published literature. Thus the assessment
of accuracy was limited to the diagnosis of a structural pathology alone.
The study found positive results for the use of PR in identifying the case
diagnosis of spondylolisthesis. The 2X2 table relating to the expert group
(Table 4.10) demonstrated that PR appeared to facilitate accuracy but its
use did not guarantee accuracy. Three of the four experts adopting a PR
strategy identified the correct pattern based on case data from no more than
the initial 36% of the total client assessment time, which only included the
client history.
167
Statistical analyses (section 4.4.3) compared the accuracy of those
participants using PR to those using analytical reasoning. It was found that
the expert participants using PR were significantly more likely to achieve an
accurate outcome when compared with the experts using analytical
reasoning strategies (p=0.033). When the same statistical test was repeated
with both participant groups combined, PR remained significantly more likely
to achieve an accurate outcome (p=0.01). These findings support an
association between accuracy and the PR reasoning strategy. The statistical
assumption of these analyses is that all participants are aware of the
diagnostic condition of spondylolisthesis. Given the level of experience and
education of the expert group it is highly likely that this would be the case. It
is also likely that the novice physiotherapists had been exposed to this
condition during their education, although they may not have encountered it
clinically.
The presence of the spondylolisthesis pattern in only three of the ten expert
interview transcripts could be considered surprising. However PR relates to
experience with the case at hand and may have been identified in more
instances had more data from different cases been collected with the expert
group. At least two of the experts stated within the interview that they
predominantly practised in a sole body region other than the lumbar spine.
Obtaining further qualitative data relating to the participant’s awareness and
prior experience with high grade spondylolisthesis pathologies could have
provided more insight relating to the presence and makeup of such a
pattern.
168
the clinical symptoms but pelvic assessment data were not available from
the original case. The additional difficulty in including such a hypothesis in
the research investigation relates to the confirmation of pelvic dysfunctions.
The assessment of positional variations in pelvic position usually relies on
surface palpation during the physical examination which is known to have
poor reliability (Holmgren & Waling, 2008). Thus the only conclusion that
could be made relating to this expert’s understanding was that it was
incorrect with respect to identifying a spondylolisthesis pattern.
The only occasion of novice PR use in the present study led to a diagnosis
of neuromuscular instability. This case understanding was similarly identified
by two other novices and four experts who used analytical reasoning. A
clinical link between neuromuscular instability and spondylolisthesis is
supported by research that found the presence of neuromuscular
dysfunction in a sample of patient’s with grade 1 or 2 spondylolistheses and
chronic LBP (O'Sullivan, Twomey, Allison, Sinclair et al, 1997).
169
Neuromuscular instability, or clinical instability as it was originally termed
(Panjabi, 1992), is considered a contributing factor to LBP, however it lacks
a clear clinical presentation. Age, bilateral symptoms and history of trauma
were the significant case features (section 2.8.3) used by the experts in
obtaining the hypothesis of spondylolisthesis (section 3.2.2), whereas
consistent symptoms and case features for neuromuscular instability are not
defined within the literature. Consequently it could be argued that
neuromuscular instability is a contributing component of spondylolisthesis,
but neuromuscular instability alone cannot be considered accurate as a
case diagnosis.
170
physiotherapy studies (Doody & McAteer, 2002; King & Bithell, 1998). The
simple data analysis provided in Table 4.14 demonstrates the median and
mean time taken for novices was 15% and 12% respectively less than that
for the experts.
The identification of PR occurred in the first 36% of the client history (section
4.4.4). In relation to actual time, all the patterns were identified within the
first 7 minutes of the assessment. This gives an appearance of efficiency,
however the overall assessment times for expert participants relative to
reasoning strategy (Table 4.13) found that the identification of PR was
associated with a longer time taken to complete the client history. Similarly
the only novice to incorporate PR into their assessment took the greatest
amount of time out of the entire novice group. When placing all participants
into either PR or analytical reasoning groups irrespective of experience, the
outcome was the same.
171
A final consideration of efficiency relates to the outcome of the case used in
the present study (section 3.2.2). Best management of a high grade
spondylolisthesis case involves referral to medical specialist. Earlier
identification of the correct pathology would presumably improve efficiency
to the referral part of management. However this would not necessarily
equate to overall efficiency given the spondylolisthesis condition was
monitored by a medical specialist over a 12 month period. Identifying the
correct pathology could also increase the efficiency of appropriate
physiotherapy management but this would rely on knowing the appropriate
management for this client based on agreed best practice for this condition.
To consider efficiency based on the cost effectiveness of treatment services
is beyond the scope of this study but worthy of further research.
The nature of the high fidelity study allowed for unbiased collection of clinical
information at the discretion of each participant. It was anticipated that
retrospective inspection of the order of questions posed to the simulated
client would provide another means of gaining insight into the predominant
diagnostic reasoning strategy. A summary of the results relating to the
participant order of questions was provided in section 4.4.5.
During the design phase of the study, the order of questions were
considered a data source able to provide a form of data triangulation.
However, the results indicated that no firm conclusions could be made with
respect to identifying confirmation questions following the use of PR. No
evidence was found that opposed or supported the identification of PR from
the order of questioning. The only conclusion that could be taken from this
data source is that each participant took a unique pathway with respect to
the order of gathering clinical information.
5.2.1 Triangulation
172
The insufficient findings relating to the observational order of question data
precluded complete data triangulation as introduced in section 3.8. This type
of triangulation requires separate data sources all reaching the same
conclusions.
The methodology of this study did not use the student researcher’s own
interview notes as a data source to provide triangulation. Although this data
source is common with qualitative research, it has potential for introducing
personal bias to the results and consequently was not considered with
triangulation of this study.
Pattern
recognition
173
5.3 PATTERNS
174
Exemplar Prototype
Patterns Patterns
Of the five participants employing PR during the study, the knowledge code /
experiential sub-code data was analysed in an attempt to provide insight into
the type of patterns triggered by the simulated case. The experts correctly
identifying spondylolisthesis were found to use a ‘prototype’ model of the
case at hand. Several observations provided insight to this effect:
Expert I: I don’t see a lot of kids because kids typically don’t get, get low
back pain … but when we do we, we seem to get them with long
term symptoms but a lot of the time there’s structural reasons
why
Expert D: R: So does that fit with then what you’ve seen before?
P: Yeah, that’s based on previous experience with people who
are describing a similar story to what she is
R: Have you seen a case similar to this before?
P: Several times
R: Recently or over the years?
P: not recently, not immediately in short term memory but
certainly, several, several times previously I would have this story
being described
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Interestingly there was no evidence in the data that could support the use of
an ‘exemplar’ pattern in the participants employing PR. The only participant
employing PR and making reference to having seen this type of case before
was expert D who recognised the case on multiple occasions from prior
experience.
The overall accuracy of any pattern is likely far greater when knowledge
from clinical experience exists in conjunction with structured knowledge from
a public perspective (Figure 5.3). The continual comparison of individual /
personal knowledge to that of public / common knowledge (Higgs and
Titchen, 2000) in relation to a familiar case is likely to result in a more
integrated knowledge structure for that pattern. This is effectively integrating
experiential and propositional knowledge types via active reflection.
176
Knowledge
Agreed expert
views
Individual Public Research validated
personal common knowledge
perspective perspective
Pattern accuracy
177
improved outcomes. To develop a pattern within non-analytical reasoning
requires reflection on the knowledge structure that triggers its activation.
The coded data relating to knowledge were separated into propositional and
the various non-propositional types as outlined in section 4.3.1. Only one of
the three experts identifying the correct pathology and two of the five
participants using PR were coded using propositional knowledge. Out of all
the participants using analytical reasoning only one was similarly sub-coded
as using propositional knowledge. This review of the data does not offer
much support for integration of knowledge types with respect to reasoning
pathway or level of clinical experience. There may be several reasons for
these findings.
178
formed and continually refined with exposure to clinical cases and
information relevant to the specific pattern. An exemplar pattern may start as
a single case and remain so with frequent exposure to the same type of
case. Alternatively, exemplar patterns may develop into prototypes if
variations of the single case are encountered. From a research and
educational perspective it is interesting to ask whether we can actually
identify a developing pattern in a physiotherapist.
179
perhaps, and it sort of leads me towards more, more that chronic um
instability”. This qualitative data potentially provides an alternate view of a
developing pattern and an attempt to use it in practice.
The term ‘pattern specificity’ has been used in relation to the level of
intricacy or complexity of a clinical pattern. This is distinct from the term
‘specificity’ used within quantitative research. Considering the specific depth
of patterns may well be useful in understanding their development. For
example, a specific pattern may be a well known diagnosable condition such
as the case utilised in the present study.
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Broad Specific
Pattern Pattern
“Neuromuscular “Spondylolisthesis”
instability”
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5.3.5 Significant case features
There has been sufficient support in the literature to introduce the concept of
significant case features within a definition of PR (section 2.5.1). This study
used reference to significant case features (Groves et al, 2002), similar to
other terms such as salient cues (Coderre et al, 2003) and key features
(Groves et al, 2003). Based on the specificity of patterns discussed in
section 5.3.4, Figure 5.4 has been modified to include the input of clinical
data that leads to an end point or diagnosis (Figure 5.5). The clinical data
considered significant may allow for recognition of broad or specific patterns.
Broad Pattern
Clinical Significant case features Specific Pattern
Data
Figure 5.5 Input of clinical data into broad and specific patterns
182
associated with a history of minor trauma. The additional unmentioned
feature that could have influenced this pattern was potentially that of female
gender, however spondylolisthesis is not restricted to this gender (Earl,
2002).
The pattern related free code (section 4.3.3) made reference to the
possibility of pattern elimination being used during reasoning in the study.
Two experts (E & F) indicated on several occasions that the clinical case
data ‘did not fit’, which was inferred by the student researcher to be not
‘fitting’ when compared to previous experience and possibly familiar
patterns. These experts were not found in the primary study results to have
utilised PR due to the lack of a central hypothesis.
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On reflection of pattern elimination, it should be similar to the inclusion
features of PR. The key element to clearly identify PR was the reference to
a central hypothesis. Based on this perspective finding evidence of pattern
elimination would require participant statements that excluded a single case
hypothesis.
The predetermined coding schema of the study was such that it allowed for
observation of hypothesis category use. The two experience-separated
groups provided an interesting assessment of the extent of hypothesis use
learned via undergraduate physiotherapy programs as compared with
experienced clinicians. The obvious limitation of this section relates to the
numbers per group relative to the stated differences in observations.
However these observations may still be useful with respect to education
and further research relating to hypothesis development. This is in line with
previous research in earlier hypothesis classifications (Payton, 1985; Rivett
& Higgs, 1997). The classification of hypothesis types utilised in this study
follow the trend towards holistic healthcare of a person with their own
experiences and limitations (Jones & Rivett, 2004). No further reports of
hypothesis category use have been reported in the musculoskeletal
physiotherapy literature since 2004.
The hypothesis categories utilised in the study also allow for reporting on
use of hypotheses that are outside that of diagnostic reasoning. As
introduced in sections 2.1.3 and 2.3.2, the types of reasoning reported in the
literature can be separated into those associated predominantly with
diagnosis and those with management (Edwards & Jones, 2007). Although
this study was primarily focussed on identifying hypotheses developed via
diagnostic reasoning pathways, the extent of hypothesis categories utilised
by participants provides an indirect view of the other reasoning types in
action (Figure 5.6). The final understanding of a case, whether diagnostic or
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otherwise, should be a composite of the various hypothesis types (Edwards
& Jones, 2007).
Diagnostic
reasoning
Narrative
reasoning Hypothesis types:
1. Activity / participation
Procedural 2. Patient’s perspective / psychosocial
Data reasoning 3. Pathobiological mechanisms
4. Physical impairments / structural sources
collection Predictive 5. Contributing features
reasoning 6. Precautions and contraindications
7. Management and treatment
Ethical 8. Prognosis
reasoning
Collaborative
reasoning
Case
understanding
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The review of all hypotheses developed at any stage during the client history
was used to compare the two groups with respect to the extent of
hypothesis formation (Figure 4.4). A greater degree of hypothesis formation
was observed in the expert group as compared with the novices. However
statistical analysis of the results found the only category to be significantly
different in its use was that of Category 2 (patient’s perspective /
psychosocial factors). Although not statistically different, the use of
‘management’ and ‘prognosis’ hypothesis categories suggested that experts
tend to think ahead more so than novices when problem solving.
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5.5 OBSERVED APPROACHES TO REASONING
One reasoning strategy reported from the interpretive paradigm was that of
predictive reasoning (section 2.1.3). The present study findings include the
identification of predictions within the problem solving of some clinicians
(section 4.7.4). Interestingly, none of the predictive reasoning data identified
from transcripts related to predictions of management as previously
reported. Rather all predictions were based around the interpretation of
clinical assessment findings. This finding could have related to the fact the
study requested a case understanding during the assessment but did not
specifically seek management information from participants.
187
more accurate predictions of treatment outcomes or prognosis. This
relationship however was not found during analysis in this study. The direct
comparison of the data relating to predictive reasoning and PR found only
one participant to be utilising both within their assessment. Despite the small
numbers of participants, the study results do not support the hypothesis that
PR and predictive reasoning would be observed in conjunction.
5.5.2 Metacognition
The study findings identified the delayed integrative approach within both
participant groups but did not explore the reasons associated with its use.
The timing data related to the free code of ‘delayed versus concurrent data
integration’ (section 4.7.2) found those participants who stated their
approach to involve collecting the data then subsequently reasoning, took
less time to complete their client history (Table 4.21). This time data was
misleading with respect to efficiency because the time was stopped on
completion of client questions. Any potential reasoning time following data
collection was not taken into account.
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applicable to the entire client assessment. As such, it was not appropriate to
conduct a statistical analysis of the timing data. The primary insight
obtainable from this aspect of analysis was that the ‘collect now, think later’
approach did not appear associated with PR use and did not result in the
generation of the correct spondylolisthesis hypothesis. A more explorative
unstructured interview would be required to fully understand the potential
interaction between delayed integration of clinical data and metacognition.
Particularly insightful was the finding that two of the three participants who
used PR with a correct diagnostic outcome, also showed an open minded
approach to other possibilities. This suggests that it is possible to use non-
analytical reasoning strategies and avoid common errors made during the
data collection and interpretative phases of clinical assessment. These two
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participants confidently held their predominant case hypothesis throughout
the assessment but were willing to alter it if non-supportive information
became available. This open mindset that arguably is a desirable
accompaniment to PR is clearly displayed in the following transcript
quotation:
Expert D: That would be my working hypothesis that I would be wanting to
test with my examination … but I would be completely prepared
to find something completely different
The third participant showing a willingness to remain open minded did not
use a delayed integrative approach and was not found to have utilised PR.
They displayed an ‘error prevention’ approach within analytical reasoning
particularly associated with the case not fitting a known pattern:
Expert H: I do try and keep quite an open mind as far down the track as I
can because I know that you can get quite influenced and then,
and then find that it’s not really the case, so I try really to make
judgment ah, fairly far down the track
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participation capacity or limitations and the patient’s perspective and / or
psychosocial factors that may present. This creates a holistic understanding
of a person with a diagnosable pathology rather than just a medical label or
diagnosis. The person centred approach to assessment has been
introduced in section 4.7.5 of the study findings.
191
participants who were holistic in their approach and others who were
narrowly focussed on a specific impairment based understanding. Not
surprisingly the novices were more likely to lack the holistic approach (as
indicated by use of the various hypothesis categories), which has potential
educational implications at an undergraduate level. Interestingly one
participant from the expert group also adopted a slightly narrower approach
to problem solving during the study, not utilising either activity and
participation or patient’s perspective / psychosocial categories of
hypotheses. This participant utilised the five other hypothesis categories and
adopted the delayed integration approach as discussed in section 5.5.2.
The simulated nature of the study may well have impacted on the
participants and their reasoning. However given that 80% of the experts
considered ‘patient’s perspective / psychosocial’ hypotheses and 60% the
‘activity and participation’ hypothesis, it would suggest that the results are
reasonably valid. The participant reports of the realism of the client
encounter were also of a satisfactory level despite knowing the client was an
actor.
Several key elements of the study design were monitored due to their
potential impact on the results. This section considers participant
recruitment with respect to study numbers attained, and the influence of the
study conditions on participant behaviour. The accuracy and realism of the
actor role playing the simulated case is also discussed, and lastly the coding
process is examined in further detail.
The outcome of recruiting ten expert and nine novice participants was
acceptable to the study aims. The findings relative to the primary research
question and qualitative analysis methods were considered adequately
192
supported by the sample size. Although a greater number of participants in
each group could have potentially altered the results comparing PR use in
experts to novices (section 4.4.2), this did not detract from the primary study
finding that PR was evident.
The novice recruitment target number of ten participants was not quite
achieved but this is unlikely to have impacted on the overall results of the
study. The original number of ten was based on previous clinical reasoning
research as discussed in Chapter 3, however saturation of data was
achieved in the novice group with respect to PR as the primary focus of the
study. A final participant was not able to be recruited via the method as
outlined for this group in Chapter 4. Potential reasons included the method of
advertising, time available to participate and novice self-confidence relating
to the research task.
The influence of the location of the study (section 3.4.1) and the video /
audio recording equipment (section 3.4.2) were evaluated by questioning at
the end of the interview. The qualitative interview data reported in section
193
4.8.2 provided confidence that the behaviour of participants was minimally
affected by the study setting.
The effect of location could have been lessened by undertaking the data
collection process in each participant’s clinical practice. This was considered
during the study development phase but would have increased the overall
cost of conducting the study via actor employment and associated travel
costs. The recording equipment also required a closed and relatively quiet
room for effective recording and subsequent transcription accuracy. This
was considered difficult to ensure in some participants’ clinical
environments. Nevertheless, difficulty in recruiting experts was subsequently
managed by conducting the study in their usual clinical setting following
ethics variation approval (Appendix 8).
Critical to the study was the need for an actor who could roleplay a realistic
version of the case on repeated occasions. The time invested in this facet of
the study was described in section 3.2.3 and was consistent with prior
studies using simulated clients (Ladyshewsky et al, 2000). The results
relating to client simulation accuracy have been outlined in section 4.8.1 and
indicate a high level of response precision. This is consistent with prior
published results relating to case simulation in physiotherapy (Ladyshewsky
et al, 2000).
194
The qualitative responses from participants also indicated a high level of
case realism. The only two occasions where participants commented on the
case being simulated by an actor suggested the influence on participant
responses was brief and inconsequential (section 4.8.1). The ethical
requirement of making the participants aware of the simulated nature of the
case made it impossible to fully control this aspect of the study. Use of a real
client has significant ethical implications and raises other methodological
issues relating to diagnostic accuracy.
Coding was used to organise textual data and allow for meaningful analysis.
Given the research question aimed to investigate an existing phenomenon,
codes were developed to identify PR rather than emerging from the data.
These codes were developed into the predetermined codebook (section
3.5.1). It is generally quite difficult to ensure validity in qualitative coding,
however it is important that the codes have face validity (Sim & Wright,
2000). General agreement related to interpretations of the data and their
coding was obtained between researchers (section 3.5.1) as a means of
ensuring face validity of the codes.
The reliability of coding was another factor considered with respect to the
rigour of the data collection. Coding reliability is generally optimised if more
than one coder is involved and results compared. This process was
undertaken qualitatively between researchers (section 3.5.1) for the first two
interview transcripts of each group which provided general agreement on
the predetermined tree codes and the hypothesis sub-codes. Subsequently
the coding reliability of the student researcher was considered with respect
to repeated coding as outlined in section 3.5.3. Intra-coder reliability was
found to be very high (section 4.3.2) in relation to the predetermined codes.
195
It is possible that such an intra-coder reliability process could be biased by
the sole coder’s recall of the first occasion of coding analysis. Every attempt
was made to minimise this by the time frame between initial and repeat
coding being greater than 3 months. Despite this possible limitation the
reliability evaluation indicated that the majority of data available for coding
from each transcript had been obtained.
Several potential limitations of the study have been considered with regards
to the results. These can be separated into limitations of:
Retrospective recall data accuracy
Participant voice
Semi-structured interview, and
Case / context specificity.
It has been well reported that retrospective recall data may be limited in its
accuracy relating to actual cognition at the time of problem solving (Elstein
et al, 1990; Elstein & Schwartz, 2000). The basis for the chosen
methodology was reported in section 2.2.4, however it is recognised that this
remains an unavoidable limitation of the study method given the use of a
high fidelity case. This limitation was managed via the immediacy of the
retrospective recall and the stimulated form of recall using the videotaped
observation data.
196
retrospective observation of the clinical assessment remains a potential
limiting factor of this type of methodology.
The potential for participants to have unstated thoughts from the client
assessment (during the retrospective recall interview) is a possible limitation
of the study. The skill of the interviewer during the semi-structured interview
was essential in obtaining the necessary data but care was needed to not
influence the participant with leading prompts. The possibility existed though
that some participants were not able to articulate their thoughts or were less
willing to do so due to the nature of the study design. Similarly those with
less reflective ability may not have been able to fully describe their thought
processes. This potential limitation of participant voice relates back to the
chosen retrospective recall methodology. The alternative is to employ a
cognitive psychology approach of obtaining evidence via determining
relationships between observed responses and cognitive stimulus (Elstein et
al, 1990; Elstein & Schwartz, 2000). Such an approach relies on low fidelity
case types which were deemed not suited to this study. Further reading from
the literature relating to this consideration is summarised in section 2.2.
It is possible that the type of semi-structured interview used in the study did
not always elicit a participant’s comments relating to knowledge use during
problem solving. An example of this was introduced in section 5.1.1, where
197
additional data relating to the observed occasions of PR use could have
provided more insight into the presence and makeup of the patterns. This
potential limitation may have been managed by questions relating to the
participant’s awareness of spondylolisthesis pathology and their associated
prior clinical experience. Although such a discussion could have been
included following complete data collection relating to problem solving, this
was not included to minimise study bias due to participant contamination.
Even though participants were requested not to discuss the case study with
fellow professionals, the disclosure of the diagnosis would have increased
the chances of contamination and thus bias.
Chapter 5 has provided discussion on the study results with respect to the
primary research aims and several related clinical reasoning findings. Along
with considering several design features of the study and potential
limitations, this chapter leads to conclusions (Chapter 6) relating to the key
findings and possible future implications for education.
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CHAPTER 6. CONCLUSION
Research in clinical reasoning can adopt high or low fidelity study design
methods. Variations of both have been used extensively in the medical and
physiotherapy literature when attempting to answer questions associated with
problem solving in clinical practice. This study aimed to identify PR in
musculoskeletal physiotherapy using high fidelity research methods and
subsequently investigate its relationship to accuracy and efficiency.
Two participant groups with a large experience and knowledge divide were
included in the study. This was to evaluate whether PR use is associated with
greater domain specific and experiential knowledge. The results found that
four of ten experts used PR, as did one of nine novices. Closer inspection of
the PR identification data in all five participants using PR suggested that its
use by the single novice was weak when compared with the four experts.
Despite the lack of statistically significant difference between the groups, the
presence of PR as a predominant reasoning process in five of nineteen
participants supports its existence in musculoskeletal physiotherapy.
199
reported literature, to facilitate the examination of PR accuracy. It
demonstrated that PR was linked with accuracy but its use was not a
guarantee of success with only three of the four experts using this strategy
identifying the correct diagnosis. Nevertheless, statistical analysis found a
significantly greater likelihood of PR achieving an accurate diagnosis when
compared with the analytical process model of HDR. The results also suggest
that incorrect use of PR initially is not fatal and may still lead to a correct
diagnostic outcome if the clinician reverts to an analytical reasoning process.
PR use has been traditionally viewed as being a more efficient process when
compared with analytical reasoning. The present study monitored time as a
measure of efficiency during the clinical assessment (client history) but was
not able to determine whether PR is more or less efficient than analytical
reasoning strategies in physiotherapy. It was found that PR produced a
predominant hypothesis early in the clinical assessment (within the first 36% of
the client history time). However in these cases the total assessment time was
actually longer than for the participants not using PR. The present study also
demonstrated that experts took more time to conduct their client history than
novices which is in line with prior physiotherapy research (King & Bithell, 1998;
Doody & McAteer, 2002). The limitation of these results relates to the study
incorporating only one component of a physiotherapy assessment (i.e. client
history) and not the entire first clinical session which includes a physical
examination and management.
The final key area worth considering from the study findings relates to the use
of hypothesis categories amongst participants during problem solving.
Although this was not a primary study aim, monitoring the use of hypothesis
categories was particularly insightful in understanding differences in reasoning
between participant groups. The experts had a significantly greater use of the
‘patient’s perspective / psychosocial’ hypothesis category than novices during
problem solving. The expert group also utilised a larger number of hypothesis
categories in their descriptions of the final hypothesis. In this regard, all of the
200
novices were limited to hypotheses in the ‘physical impairments & associated
structure / tissue sources’ and / or ‘contributing factors’ categories.
The results of this study add to the increasing evidence for non-analytical
reasoning within healthcare. The inclusion of PR as a type of clinical reasoning
process in musculoskeletal physiotherapy is justified, however its use remains
highly dependent on the clinician’s knowledge and experience of similar cases.
This study is the first to investigate diagnostic accuracy of PR using a high
fidelity case method. The positive association between PR and accuracy
provides further support to the findings of recent low fidelity medical research
studies (Coderre et al, 2003) and the similarity of results between studies in
musculoskeletal physiotherapy and medicine.
Future research involving varied clinical cases would provide further insight
into the accuracy of PR in musculoskeletal physiotherapy. Additional data
collection regarding the expert participant’s level of knowledge and experience
with respect to the presenting case would add to the understanding of
developing patterns.
201
Whilst raising educational questions it should be considered that authors
advise against the use of PR by novices (Coderre et al, 2003; Norman et al,
2000; Norman, 2005). Certainly teaching the use of PR as a problem solving
strategy in isolation is not the answer, but facilitating physiotherapists to
recognise common conditions based on significant case features would
potentially assist pattern use and possibly improve diagnostic accuracy. This
notion is effectively stating that increased exposure to common clinical
presentations and their variations increases the clinician’s experiential
knowledge and based on the findings of this study, may potentially increase
diagnostic accuracy.
Clinicians with several years or more of experience but not enough to enable
expert practice are referred to as ‘intermediates’ in clinical reasoning research.
Physiotherapists at this level were not included in this study to clearly separate
groups from an experience and expertise perspective, however this is an area
with potential in PR research. Do intermediate physiotherapists accurately use
PR? The present study has introduced the notion of developing patterns
amongst novice physiotherapists. Continual development and refinement of
recognisable clinical patterns is arguably a characteristic of intermediates on
the road to expertise. Yet there is a lack of research based understanding in
this area.
202
clinical patterns can be facilitated through other educational activities is one
worth considering.
203
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217
PATTERN RECOGNITION IS A CLINICAL REASONING
PROCESS IN MUSCULOSKELETAL PHYSIOTHERAPY
APPENDICES
218
APPENDIX 1. ETHICS APPROVAL
219
APPENDIX 2. CASE SCENARIO
Pain B
I/M
ache
5/10
R L
Pain E I/M
Pain C I/M
ache / Pain D I/M
cramp like
cramp pain cramp like
pain 5/10
4 - 5 /10 pain 5/10
Primary Symptoms
Pain Relationship
220
Other Symptoms
Nil
Current Goals
24-Hour Pattern
Morning is better – usually no pain on waking then low back pain comes
on within 10-15 minutes of standing / getting up (but currently wakes with
2/10 pain following clinical placement)
No stiffness in mornings
Through day pain levels are activity dependant but generally worsen
In afternoons back and leg pains pain will come on more easily than
mornings with same precipitating activities
Night OK once got to sleep (not long to get to sleep – 15 min’s on
average) – mattress is OK (college mattress currently). No difference
between home and college mattresses.
Flat Walking > 30-40mins (Uphill and downhill walking are both about the
same as each other but both more difficult than walking on flat ground)
Standing > 10mins (6-7/10 low back pain; worse the longer the period of
time standing)
Carrying loads out in front or load off to side (e.g. one shopping bag to
side)
221
Lying face down (especially with knees bent up behind)
Clinical placement – bending over patients (5mins tolerance)
Sitting > 30-40mins (worse if sitting upright – 10mins tolerance)
Netball increases low back pain and mild leg pain (either side but R > L;
commonly both together and with posterior thigh pains)
Worst aggravating activity (Lower back pain 8-/10) is standing for
prolonged periods (e.g. shopping for few hours). Leg pain would be onset
after about half an hour of shopping
Irritability of Symptoms
Easing Factors
Eases over 10mins on lying down (side-ly) after sport but doesn’t go away
completely
Lying on back with knees bent (Lying with legs out straight can increase
pain)
Left side-ly with top leg (right) bent and bottom leg (left) out straight
Standing with hands on knees – bent forwards
Slouch sitting relative to sitting straight
Sitting eased pain compared with standing
Occasionally used heat for pain relief in past – not currently. Minimal
relief.
222
General Functional Activity
Sit to stand OK
Generally prefers to keep moving
Sits down whenever possible due to pains
Lifting was generally OK when done correctly and light to moderate loads
(avoided lifting heavy loads) – except as indicated in precipitating factors
Hanging washing – OK for limited time
Current History
Nursing student – pain has notably increased associated with first clinical
placement (6 weeks - ended last week). Therefore pain has gradually
increased over the last 7 weeks and has continued at same level since
the placement ended last week. Thus worsened over the first 4 weeks of
placement and been the same since then
Especially worsened (increased LBP) with bending over patients – as little
as 30 seconds endurance by end of shift; would have to stop assisting
patient after that time. Generally tried to avoid bending over patients.
Recently pain has increased in severity related to more time on feet and
moving related to patient care
More easily aggravated and more frequent pain. Harder to ease.
Since clinical placement, waking with 2/10 pain in lower back (never
wakes with leg pain). Prior to placement, can be pain free completely
after sleeping overnight
Legs give way occasionally (maximum 5 times in the last 12 months).
Never falls just feels like legs buckle under – into bending direction. Not
related to pain
Previous exercises – 100 sit ups 2-3 times / week on bed (unable to on
floor as direct pressure on lower back causes pain); self-initiated related
to netball competition; generally didn’t help reduce back pains
Past History
223
Intermittent pain since injury – has lived with pain associated with activity
and aggravating activities. Flare-ups are usually not this severe (as rest
can be utilised to reduce symptoms). Flare-ups are mostly related to
netball carnivals (lots of games over a weekend). This episode is the
worst it has been and is now interfering with potential career
Assessed by GP and sports medicine doctor in home town as 12 year old
– no Xrays taken; advised hamstring stretches (some improvement over
few months of stretches. Continued with routine of stretching with netball
training & games). Prescribed orthotics via podiatrist (no change in low
back pain
Social History
Plays competitive netball with 4hrs training / week & 1-2 games / week.
Played from age 10yrs to currently (8-9 yrs)
Swimming competitive for 7 years until 16 years old (no aggravation of
pain; no significant changes in pain levels)
School soccer
School golf (generally made low back pain worse – max 20 games)
Tennis – 2 seasons of once / week at age 16 –17 years
Current Work
Previous Treatment
Chiropractic at 14 years (self referral) 2-3 times / week for 8-12 wks
(improved)
Chiropractic every few months at home when on holidays (temporary
relief)
Orthotics as 12 year old from podiatrist
224
No previous physiotherapy
Medications
Nil currently
No prior cortisone / steroid medications
No NSAID’s (neurofen, voltaren etc) in past
Rarely would take paracetamol / panadol if pain at its worst (e.g. after
netball carnival)
Visual Cues
Nil Obvious
Walks in normally
Finished clinical placement last week – dressed in casual clothes
Not overweight
225
APPENDIX 3. ACTOR TRAINING INFORMATION
Occasional R L
ache / cramp Occasional
pain (4-5/10) cramp pain Occasional
(5/10) cramp pain
Primary Complaints (5/10)
Pain Relationships
Pain starts in lower back then spreads to both buttocks (as low back pain
worsens)
Outside leg pains (left and right legs) can occur together or separately but
always occur with lower back and buttock pains.
Right leg pain is generally more frequent than left leg
Posterior thigh pain only presents after onset of lateral (outside) leg pains
Overall pain tends to start in lower back then spread to buttocks before
commencing in either leg
226
Other Symptoms
Nil
Current Goals
24-Hour Pattern
Morning is better – usually no pain on waking then low back pain comes
on within 10-15 minutes of standing / getting up (but currently wakes with
2/10 pain following clinical placement).
No lower back or leg stiffness in mornings
Through day pain levels are dependant on amount of activity but
generally worsen
In afternoons back and leg pains pain will come on more easily than
mornings with same precipitating activities (see next section)
Sleeping at night is OK once asleep (doesn’t take long to get to sleep –
15 min’s on average). Mattress is OK (college mattress currently). No
difference between home and college mattresses.
Flat Walking > 30-40mins (Uphill and downhill walking are both about the
same as each other but both more difficult than walking on flat ground)
Standing > 10mins (low back pain score 6-7/10; severity of pain gets
worse the longer in standing)
227
Carrying loads out in front or load off to side (e.g. one shopping bag to
side)
Lying face down (especially with knees bent up behind)
Being on nursing clinical placement – bending over patients (5mins
tolerance)
Sitting > 30-40mins (worse if sitting upright – 10 mins tolerance)
Netball increases low back pain and mild leg pain (either side but R > L,
commonly both together and with posterior thigh pains
Worst aggravating activity (Lower back pain 8/10) is standing for
prolonged periods (e.g. shopping for few hours). Leg pain would be onset
after about half an hour of shopping.
Irritability of Symptoms
Easing Factors
Pain eases over a 10-minute period of lying down (side-ly) but doesn’t go
away completely (e.g. after sport)
Lying on back with knees bent up (lying with legs out straight can
increase pain)
Lying on left side with top leg (right) bent and bottom leg (left) out straight
Standing with hands on knees – bent forwards
Slouch sitting relative to sitting straight
228
Sitting eases pain compared with standing
Occasionally used heat for pain relief in past – not using currently
(generally gives minimal relief).
Current History
Nursing student – pain has notably increased associated with first clinical
placement (6 weeks - ended last week). Therefore pain has gradually
increased over the last 7 weeks and has continued at same level since
the placement ended last week. Thus worsened over the first 4 weeks of
placement and been the same since then
Especially worsened (increased low back pain) with bending over patients
– as little as 30 seconds endurance by end of shift; would have to stop
assisting patient after that time. Generally tried to avoid bending over
patients
Recently pain has increased in severity related to more time on feet and
moving related to patient care
More easily aggravated and more frequent pain. Harder to ease.
Since clinical placement, waking with 2/10 pain in lower back (never
wakes with leg pain). Prior to placement, can be pain free completely
after sleeping overnight.
Legs give way occasionally (maximum 5 times in the last 12 months).
Never falls, just feels like legs buckle under – into forwards bending
direction. Not related to pain.
229
Previous exercises – 100 sit ups 2-3 times / week on bed (unable to on
floor as direct pressure on lower back causes pain); self-initiated related
to netball competition; generally didn’t help reduce back pains.
Past History
Social History
Plays competitive netball with 4hrs training / week & 1-2 games / week.
Played from age 10yrs to currently (8-9 yrs)
Swimming competitive 7 years till 16 years old (no aggravation of pain; no
significant changes in pain levels)
School soccer
School golf (generally made low back pain worse – max 20 games)
Tennis – 2 seasons of once / week at age 16 –17 years
Current work
230
Previous Treatment
Chiropractic treatment when aged 14yrs (self referral) 2-3 times / week for
8-12 weeks (helped)
Now gets chiropractic every few months at home when on holidays
(temporary relief)
Orthotics as 12 year old from a podiatrist
No previous physiotherapy
Medications
Nil currently
No prior cortisone / steroid medications
No anti-inflammatory medications (neurofen, voltaren etc) in past
Rarely would take paracetamol / panadol if pain at its worst (e.g. after
netball carnival)
Visual Cues
Nil Obvious
Walks in normally
Finished clinical placement last week – dressed in casual clothes
231
Not overweight
Opening questions:
As far as you are concerned what do you feel is your main problem?
What is the problem today?
What brings you here today?
How can I help you today?
History questions:
When did it start? When did your lower back pain start? How long have
you had low back pain for?
How did it start?
When do you remember the leg pains starting? Were they at the same
time as the low back pain?
When did the pins and needles commence?
Has the pain been the same since it first began?
What has been happening with the pain more recently?
Has the pain / problem changed at all? (Over the prior years)
232
Questions related to what makes pain better or worse:
24-hour questions:
Other questions:
233
Pain scores are rated on a 0-10 scale where 0 is no pain and 10 is the
worst imaginable pain. Only provide the score out of 10 if requested by
the participant.
Primary or main problem is low back pain
Recent history relates to a nursing clinical placement
234
APPENDIX 4. SIMULATED CASE RESPONSE CHECKLIST
235
Previous physiotherapy treatment Yes No
Other previous treatment Yes No
Other Questions:
Additional Notes:
236
APPENDIX 5. EXPERT PARTICIPANT RECRUITMENT LETTERS
Date _________
Dear _______________,
I would like to invite you to participate in this research project. The project
requires two hours participation time on a single occasion. The study will be
located at the School of Health Sciences, The University of Newcastle, at the
Callaghan campus in Newcastle. The time available for participation is
flexible to fit with your current work schedule.
237
If you meet the above criteria and would like further information about this
study, please contact research higher degree student Peter Miller on
[email protected] or 02 4921 6879. Your assistance will be
gratefully received and will hopefully lead to a better understanding of the
physiotherapy clinical reasoning process and improved professional
physiotherapy education. 1
Yours Sincerely
Peter Miller
BPhty, GC HS (Educ)
Research Student
Rosemary Isles
BPhty(Hons); GradCertEduc(Tertiary)
Project Co-supervisor
1
Complaints about this research:
This project has been approved by the University’s Human Research Ethics
Committee (Approval No. H-149-1105). Should you have concerns about
your rights as a participant in this research, or you have a complaint about
the manner in which the research is conducted, it may be given to the
researcher, or, if an independent person is preferred, to the Human Research
Ethics Officer, Research Office, The Chancellery, The University of
Newcastle, University Drive, Callaghan NSW 2308, telephone (02)
49216333, email [email protected]
238
Associate Professor Darren A. Rivett
Head, Discipline of Physiotherapy
Dear _______________,
I would like to invite you to participate in this research project. The project
requires two hours participation time on a single occasion. The study will be
located at the School of Health Sciences, The University of Newcastle, at the
Callaghan campus in Newcastle. The time available for participation is
flexible to fit with your current work schedule.
If you meet the above criteria and would like further information about this
study, please contact research higher degree student Peter Miller on
239
[email protected] or 02 4921 6879. Your assistance will be
gratefully received and will hopefully lead to a better understanding of the
physiotherapy clinical reasoning process and improved professional
physiotherapy education.
If we have not received a response from you regarding this project, a follow
up phone call will be made two weeks after the above date to ensure you
have received this letter. If you do not wish to be contacted please ring
Shirley Parker (Discipline of Physiotherapy Administration) on 02 4921 7904
to prevent the call. 1
Yours Sincerely
Peter Miller
BPhty, GC HS (Educ)
Research Student
Rosemary Isles
BPhty(Hons), GradCertEduc(Tertiary)
Project Co-supervisor
1
Complaints about this research:
This project has been approved by the University’s Human Research Ethics
Committee (Approval No. H-149-1105). Should you have concerns about
your rights as a participant in this research, or you have a complaint about
the manner in which the research is conducted, it may be given to the
researcher, or, if an independent person is preferred, to the Human Research
Ethics Officer, Research Office, The Chancellery, The University of
Newcastle, University Drive, Callaghan NSW 2308, telephone (02)
49216333, email [email protected]
240
APPENDIX 6. ADVERTISEMENT FOR NOVICE PARTICIPANTS
The study requires two hours participation time on a single occasion. The
study will be conducted within the Discipline of Physiotherapy at The
University of Newcastle, Callaghan Campus. The times available to
participate are flexible to suit your schedule.
If you would like to know more about this study, please contact research
higher degree student Peter Miller on [email protected] or 02
4921 6879.
241
APPENDIX 7. INFORMATION STATEMENT & PARTICIPANT CONSENT FORM
You are invited to take part in the research project identified above which is being conducted
by Peter Miller, as part of his Master of Medical Science (Physiotherapy) under the
supervision of A/Prof Darren Rivett and Rosemary Isles from the Discipline of Physiotherapy
at The University of Newcastle.
The purpose of this research is to explore the clinical reasoning processes used by
physiotherapists in clinical practice. It aims to better understand the methods of decision-
making used by musculoskeletal physiotherapy clinicians with differing levels of experience.
The results could further enhance educational design within undergraduate and postgraduate
physiotherapy programs, in addition to further refining methods of self-directed learning and
professional development for clinicians.
Physiotherapists who are currently working in clinical practice are being recruited for this
study. Potential expert participants have been identified via the published directory of titled
members handbook for Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy Australia (2004-2005). To be eligible
to participate you must meet the criteria for one of the following groups.
242
Participation in this research is voluntary. There is no obligation for you to participate in this
research study. Only those people who give their informed consent will be included in the
project. Whether or not you decide to participate, your decision will not disadvantage you in
any way. If you decide to participate, you may withdraw from the study at any time. You are
not required to give any reasons for withdrawal.
You will be able to review the video and audio recording and / or interview transcripts from
your participation. You may edit or erase your contribution and withdraw from the study at any
stage.
Completing the study offers you the opportunity to reflect on your clinical reasoning process
within a physiotherapy assessment. The results will be available on completion of the study
via professional seminar locally. This will take place approximately 12 months from the
commencement of data collection. You may also request a written summary of the study
results.
Risks to participating in this research are minimal. The assessment involves a routine
subjective examination (history) consistent with your current clinical practice. The interview
process requires recall of your thoughts from the assessment and may take up to an hour.
This will be conducted whilst seated at a table, however you may stand at any time during the
interview.
The information collected during participation will be strictly confidential. Only the researchers
named on this information statement will have access to identifiable data during analysis. The
interview will be professionally transcribed in its de-identified form. Following analysis the
written data will be identifiable only by a study number. All data, including video and audio
recordings, will be securely stored during the project. The information is required to be kept
for a period of 5 years following the completion of the study, and will be destroyed after this
period.
The results of this study will form part of the thesis of the student researcher and will be
submitted for publication in scientific journals and presentation at professional conferences.
Individual participants will not be identified in any reports or presentations arising from the
project. Feedback on results of the study will also be presented locally at professional
seminars on completion of the final data analysis.
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What do you need to do to participate?
Please read this Information Statement and be sure you understand its contents before you
consent to participate. If there is anything you do not understand, or you have questions
regarding the project, please contact the researchers directly:
If you are willing to participate in this research, please complete the attached consent form
and return it to Peter Miller at The Discipline of Physiotherapy, School of Health Sciences,
The Faculty of Health, University Drive, Callaghan NSW 2308. I will then contact you to
arrange a convenient time for you to participate in the study.
Sincerely,
Peter Miller
BPhty, GC HS (Educ)
Research Student
Rosemary Isles
BPhty(Hons); GradCertEduc(Tertiary)
Project Co-supervisor
1
Complaints about this research:
This project has been approved by the University’s Human Research Ethics Committee
(Approval No. H-149-1105). Should you have concerns about your rights as a participant in
this research, or you have a complaint about the manner in which the research is conducted,
it may be given to the researcher, or, if an independent person is preferred, to the Human
Research Ethics Officer, Research Office, The Chancellery, The University of Newcastle,
University Drive, Callaghan NSW 2308, telephone (02) 49216333, email Human-
[email protected]
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Associate Professor Darren A. Rivett
Head, Discipline of Physiotherapy
I have read the information on the research project “The exploration of the
physiotherapy clinical reasoning process”, a study that involves taking the history of a
patient followed by an audio taped interview to recall my thought processes from the
assessment. Peter Miller, Master of Medical Science (Physiotherapy) Research
Candidate, is conducting this project under the supervision of Associate Professor
Darren Rivett (Principal Supervisor) and Rosemary Isles (Co-supervisor) from The
University of Newcastle.
All questions have been answered to my satisfaction. I understand that the study will
be carried out as described in the information statement, a copy of which I have
retained.
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APPENDIX 8. ETHICS VARIATION
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APPENDIX 9. STUDY SETUP PROCEDURES & EQUIPMENT
Audio Equipment:
Sony M727V microcassette recorder
Olympus XD60 and Sanyo MC-60 microcassettes (60 minutes)
Sanyo memo-scriber TRC-6030 (transcribing system)
Video Equipment:
Samsung digital video recorder VP-D21i
Canon MVX330i digital video camcorder
Video tripod
5 metre fire wire cable compatible with IEEE1394 Port
Sony & JVC mini digital video cassettes
Verbatim external microphone
Hardware:
Compaq 800 notebook
Dell inspiron 6400 notebook computer
Notebook computer compatible audio headsets (2 sets) with dual connector
Software:
Microsoft Windows XP
Windows Movie Maker version 5.1
Furniture:
One metre square table available for participant to make assessment notes
Two chairs
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Simulated Patient Assessment
Procedure
1. Preparation
Assessment room setup with 2 chairs and desk space if required
Video camera setup on tripod 2 metres from chairs
Video camera DC power supply attached
Video camera tape check
Microphone connected to video camera and placed 1 metre from chairs
Connecting cable attached from notebook computer to video camera
Laptop setup in adjacent room with DC power supply
USB mouse attached to laptop
Windows Movie Maker program open
Audio recorder with tape set to 1.2cm speed and placed on desk
3. On completion of recording
On completion of assessment, the laptop recording is stopped then saved
as file in ‘video files’ (participant 1, 2, 3, 4, etc)
The video camera is then stopped
The audio recorder is then stopped
Remove recording cassettes and label with participant number and date
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Audio Taped Interview
Procedure
1. Preparation
Interview room setup with two chairs and desk with notebook computer
New micro-cassettes placed in audio and video recorders
Audio tape recorder positioned in front of participant and researcher
Windows Movie Maker program open
Video clip of patient assessment opened and paused
Video camera setup on tripod 2 metres from chairs
Video camera DC power supply attached
Microphone connected to video camera and placed 1 metre from chairs
Headsets connected to notebook computer via dual adapter
3. On completion of recording
The video and audio tape recording devices are stopped
Remove recording cassettes and label with participant number and date
The video tape of the interview downloaded onto the notebook computer
The audio tape recording of the interview sent to the transcriptionist
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APPENDIX 10. PARTICIPANT ORIENTATION SHEETS (provided separately)
To further explore your clinical reasoning process, I will now ask you some
questions relating to the assessment you have undertaken. It is important to
understand that there is no correct answer to these questions. The
questions will explore your thinking at the time of the assessment.
You will be observing the video of your patient assessment to prompt recall
of your thoughts at different times during the assessment. Try to describe
what was going on in your mind at the actual time and not thoughts or
decisions from afterwards. In other words, it is important that you try to recall
your thinking at each step of the assessment and not to be influenced by
information you may have obtained later.
I can pause the video whenever you would like to discuss your thoughts or
observations from the assessment. There will also be times where I will
pause the video to ask you what you were thinking at that point in the
assessment.
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APPENDIX 11. INTERVIEW PROTOCOL SHEET
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Final Hypothesis and Wind-up Questions:
5. What is your final understanding or hypothesis of the presentation based
on all the information?
6. Were you thinking anything else during the assessment that we haven’t
discussed yet?
7. What physical examination tests are you planning to do at this stage?
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APPENDIX 12. FINAL CODEBOOK
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Code name Code Sub-code Examples of codes
Data Collection DC “just trying to gather information at this point”
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APPENDIX 13. PATTERN RECOGNITION IDENTIFICATION TOOLS
Key for use: Interview time stops are labelled in the time column as the exact assessment time stated in transcript data.
Hypotheses formed during each time stop of the participant interview are documented and hypothesis
category (Ho. Cat.) labelled relative to each hypothesis (numbered 1-9).
Information on features numbered 2 to 5 obtained via each specific code and quotations listed along with
researcher comments in ‘comments / quotes’ column. Yes or no placed in each column (2 to 5) for each
time stop.
SCF = Significant case feature Kn = Knowledge Exp = Experience Mx = Management
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Overall pattern recognition scoring tool
Participant number ________ Researcher initials _________
Feature of PR Yes / No Evidence Comments
1. Central hypothesis
formed
3. Professional craft
knowledge
4. Prior clinical
experience of this
case
5. Management stated
Key for use: A clear predominant and central hypothesis must be formed to state pattern recognition has been used.
For each ‘yes’ response beside numbered (1 – 5) items a score of one is provided.
Total score is the number of ‘yes’ responses out of a maximum total of five.
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APPENDIX 14. SELF-AWARENESS SUB-CODE EXAMPLES
These examples of the self-awareness coded text identify the sub-code name in bold
text within parentheses at the end of each quotation:
Expert F: I would have expected someone with this history at that stage to say they
had some stiffness in the morning (Prediction)
Expert B: there are some pieces of information which are just sort of like um which
are there sitting in the background and others which are really channelling
the flow through (Process)
Expert F: I just think it’s interesting to how people describe pain … I don’t really
know whether it makes any difference but I just think its interesting
(Interesting)
Expert J: So that doesn’t really tell me what the, what the cause is, what the
diagnosis is (Diagnosis)
Expert G: I’m perhaps a little bit surprised that she’s only taking Panadol every now
and then (Surprise)
Expert F: it hadn’t really fitted and I wasn’t really quite sure what I thought was
wrong with her and by this stage I normally have a very clear picture of
what I think’s wrong with someone whether it right or wrong (Uncertainty)
Expert J: I usually take the history and then … at the end I really start thinking,
putting it together. I usually get all the facts before I start putting it
together (Deferred integration)
Novice N: the way that it kind of panned out made me focus a lot more on the, the
structures of it as a source of the pain rather than anything else
(Direction)
Novice S: That threw me a bit. Um with the sitting um easing it. Um but with a, a
little bit more questioning I was able to sort it out a bit more.
(Uncertainty)
Novice M: when we started going into how long standing, she can stand for and then
when the pain comes on. I started thinking I really need to clarify this
cause it’s quite important. (Significance)
Novice R: I hadn’t really at this staged locked myself into any sort of hypothesis.
I was really just sort of pulling it all, just making a stew, just getting all
that information in there and some, seeing what I thought in the end.
(Deferred integration)
APPENDIX 15. FINAL PARTICIPANT HYPOTHESES
Expert B Spondylolisthesis I would still be concerned about a spondylolisthesis … it’s not a sort of 4 Physical impairments &
like a um ah a really irritable type problem associated structure /
tissue sources
6 Precautions and
contraindications
Expert C Mechanical pelvic I think there’s an underlying sort of asymmetry. An insidious history of the 4 Physical impairments &
asymmetry right pelvis I would expect to find on the assessment … a secondary associated structure /
pelvic asymmetry which is probably the underlying cause of the problem tissue sources
which makes it look like the pattern you’re seeing here … there’s a 5 Contributing features
mechanical aspect to it.
Expert D Spondylolisthesis she’s got a poor understanding of what her problem is, in fact probably 2 Patients perspective /
virtually no understanding of her problem … my hypothesis of it being psychosocial
some sort of either structural instability … spondylolisthesis 4 Physical impairments &
associated structure /
tissue sources
5 Contributing features
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Participant Summary Evidence Categories
Expert E Instability there’s certainly a few directions that I’d head into … I think I’d probably 4 Physical impairments &
go towards something sort of instability or canal stenosis or something associated structure /
that’s central … she could have scoliosis or leg length inequality tissue sources
5 Contributing features
Expert F Nil clear stated no I didn’t (have an understanding of the case), I’m still quite confused Nil
about her. I don’t thing she’s typical
Expert G Motion segment I think it’s um -- probably low lumbar spine, motion segment sort of I 3 Pathobiological
dysfunction / guess pathology. Um dysfunction um with a neurogenic component … mechanisms
neurogenic / with um a poor muscle, I guess poor stability system that’s contributing to 4 Physical impairments &
instability that associated structure /
tissue sources
5 Contributing features
Expert H Instability / joints I think probably ah more moderate to low irritability um so I can examine it 4 Physical impairments &
fairly fully um I think there’s prob um -- there’s probably an instability associated structure /
component that I need to address in terms of checking out her core tissue sources
stability um muscles. So that’s, yes I’m, I’m expecting that I’ll find that 5 Contributing features
there’s some um stiffness and painful joints at the back of her spin which I 6 Precautions and
suspect I would be able to treat. Um and then maybe give her stability contraindications
type exercises. 7 Management
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Participant Summary Evidence Categories
Expert I Spondylolisthesis Mechanically behaving back pain that has gone -- stemmed from an 3 Pathobiological
original injury as an 11 year old um that’s been symptomatically managed mechanisms
and in a period of a lot of a lot of overload with this recent clinical 4 Physical impairments &
placement … And structurally I’m thinking that there are enough, enough associated structure /
reasons to go and have it investigated, further. Um particularly looking for tissue sources
bony, bony changes where there was a bone injury originally … she’s not 5 Contributing features
getting discrete dermatomal symptoms and her aggravating factors aren’t 7 Management
consistent with nerve root type um problems. Um certainly in the back of
my mind I’m leaning strongly toward the possibility there may be some
kind of bony pathology there as well (Bony pathology was stated earlier in
the interview as spondylolisthesis)
Expert J Disc or joint I couldn’t say at this stage whether it’s more discy or facet, and I would 4 Physical impairments &
get back from my examination I would get more information from the associated structure /
examination about that. Whether it was extension, with her active tissue sources
movements, if it was extension that mainly brought on a pain. And if she 5 Contributing features
wasn’t very irritable, you know I could put her back in the quadrant 6 Precautions and
position and see if it’s really closing down the facet joints. contraindications
Novice K Disc / sacro-iliac I’m either thinking ah discogenic, or possibly SIJ … and ah postural as 4 Physical impairments &
joint / postural well associated structure /
tissue sources
5 Contributing features
Novice L Disc my yeah hypothesis is like a disc type injury which is aggravated by 4 Physical impairments &
loading … in a like standing position … Thinking a disc injury is impacting associated structure /
on the nerves and therefore causing some referring type things tissue sources
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Participant Summary Evidence Categories
Novice M Postural I think I’ve started to develop an understanding. I’m definitely thinking that 5 Contributing features
there’s a postural component, um to her pain and I guess I’m not really
thinking about so much about structurally what’s going on
Novice N Lack of support / I’d say that she’s ah she’s had a history, a long history of back pain, um 5 Contributing features
restriction possibly begun with a, ah with a, a fall down the stairs. Um but I’d say
she’s definitely got a -- ah lack of support around the area. Um there
could be some actual derangement or dysfunction in the actual structures
but um I’d be thinking that there’s just a lack of support for the areas that
is worse when she is weight bearing. I would be expecting restriction um
into flexion. Um -- and possibly … extension. I guess I would have
thought that there would be some restriction … if she flexed all the way
down to her toes I’d be surprised … it wouldn’t fit what I was going down
Novice O Sacro-iliac joint a few ideas, nothing really specific. Um probably looking at like a, an SIJ 4 Physical impairments &
(SIJ) kind of ah especially if standing for prolonged periods of time um and associated structure /
with the nature of having a fall as well, um with activities like netball um tissue sources
repeated jarring that sort of thing
Novice P Instability I still think it’s a, a instability of the lumbar spine … there wasn’t kind of 5 Contributing features
any particular movement or loading strategy in a particular direction
which, which um tend to flare it up. It was, there was multiple … well
basically what I’m kind of getting at there is just the inability of the
muscular control system to hold the, the lumbar spine within it’s neutral
position
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Participant Summary Evidence Categories
Novice Q Instability I guess really there’s two possibilities … that sort of sit in my mind … that 4 Physical impairments &
lumbopelvic instability in that area, um poor activation transversus associated structure /
abdominus, it certainly would be interested to see her ability to activate tissue sources
um to there and see if there was any alteration in her symptoms. Um, the 5 Contributing features
other, other possibility is ah like a stenosis compression of a nerve root.
Um given that her extension moments … especially with the sitting, sitting
in the slouched position, the opening up of the facet joints. Um, maybe a
little bit unusual in both sides at the same time
Novice R Instability you know she’s getting this hip and lumbar spine pain and that referral 4 Physical impairments &
could be due to um sciatic impingement through over performance or associated structure /
underperformance depending on her makeup. Um, so that was something tissue sources
that I was juggling. Um, but also there could be you know she might have 5 Contributing features
other things going on. Um facet joint irritations or general instability, global
instability, um that she can’t control along her spine and hence is getting
gross movements with her um increased load that she is putting under it
Novice S Disc > joint sort of chasing a lumbar disc as a possible structure. Um but also the, the 4 Physical impairments &
referral pain down both legs and into her knee I hadn’t um clearly associated structure /
determined whether that was, was coming from a structure in her lower tissue sources
back, or not. So I wanted to look at things like um her piriformis, her SIJ a
little bit more with some testing, um to try and determine whether I could
figure out if those all were referred pain into her buttocks and thighs and
just below the knee where it related to the one area … a lumbar disc is
one that is standing out um, more than others. Although it’s -- just the
lumbar spine specifically that is standing out some more, so I wouldn’t,
um, I wouldn’t rule out ah some Z joint involvement um or some, some
muscular involvement either
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