Physiotherapy
Volume 96, Issue 1 , Pages 30-37, March 2010

A comparison of the perceptions and aspirations of third-year physiotherapy students trained in three educational settings in Poland

  • Joanna Gotlib

      Affiliations

    • Division of Teaching and Outcomes of Education, Faculty of Health Science, Warsaw Medical University, Ul. Żwirki i Wigury 61, 02-091 Warsaw, Poland
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +48 22 57 20 490; fax: +48 22 57 20 491.
  • ,
  • Dariusz Białoszewski

      Affiliations

    • Division of Rehabilitation, Department of Physiotherapy, 2nd Medical Faculty, Warsaw Medical University, Warsaw, Poland
  • ,
  • Janusz Sierdziński

      Affiliations

    • Division of Computer Technology in Medicine and Telemedicine, Warsaw Medical University, Warsaw, Poland
  • ,
  • Mirosław J. Jarosz

      Affiliations

    • Division of Methods in Computer Technology and Epidemiology, Lublin Medical University, Lublin, Poland
  • ,
  • Piotr Majcher

      Affiliations

    • Division of Rehabilitation and Physiotherapy of Lublin Medical University, Puławy College, Lublin, Poland
  • ,
  • Katarzyna Barczyk

      Affiliations

    • University School of Physical Education, Wrocław, Poland
  • ,
  • Aleksandra Bauer

      Affiliations

    • College of Physiotherapy, Wrocław, Poland
  • ,
  • Anna Cabak

      Affiliations

    • University of Physical Education, Warsaw, Poland
  • ,
  • Joanna Grzegorczyk

      Affiliations

    • Department of Physiotherapy, University of Rzeszów, Poland
  • ,
  • Maciej Płaszewski

      Affiliations

    • Department of Physiotherapy, College of Administration in Bielsko-Biała, Poland
  • ,
  • Wojciech Kułak

      Affiliations

    • Clinic of Pediatric Rehabilitation, Department of Public Health, Białystok Medical University, Poland
  • ,
  • Olga Nowotny-Czupryna

      Affiliations

    • Division of Kinesiology, Department of Public Health, Silesian Medical University, Poland
  • ,
  • Katarzyna Prokopowicz

      Affiliations

    • Department of Physiotherapy, Olsztyn College, Poland

published online 23 October 2009.

Abstract 

Objectives

In Poland, physiotherapy is offered at three types of school: medical universities, universities of physical education, and schools that do not specialise in either the medical sciences or physical education. This study explored the knowledge of students who were completing their physiotherapy studies about working in Poland and other countries of the European Union (EU), and about their vocational plans. Students were asked, through self-assessment, about aspects of the professional skills they had gained.

Design

Quantitative questionnaire-based study of students in three university settings.

Setting

Eleven university-level schools in Poland offering studies in physiotherapy and representing three orientations: medical sciences (MS), physical education (PE) and other universities (OU).

Participants

The study sample comprised of 954 third-year Bachelor programme students.

Results

The differences in university profiles did not influence the vocational plans of the students, with more than 70% (668/954) declaring that they would look for work outside Poland: 76% (725/954) in the UK and 69% (658/954) in Germany. Most students stated that finding work as a physiotherapist is difficult in Poland (686/954,72%) and easy in other EU countries (763/954, 80%). Differences in university profiles had an effect on the students’ assessments of their professional skills, as students from universities without a long-standing tradition of training in physiotherapy declared that they were less well prepared to work as physiotherapists; the difference was statistically significant for 12 of the 16 domains examined (P<0.05).

Conclusions

In the light of these results, an increased influx of Polish physiotherapists, trained according to European standards, into EU countries, especially the UK and Germany, is to be expected in the near future. The physiotherapists will predominantly be graduates of medical and sports-oriented state universities. It appears advisable to launch, under the auspices of an EU programme, an integrated employment information system for physiotherapists that would offer updated information on current demand in individual EU countries.

Keywords: Physiotherapy, Student, Educational model, Self-assessment, Employment, European Union

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PII: S0031-9406(09)00095-9

doi:10.1016/j.physio.2009.08.005

Physiotherapy
Volume 96, Issue 1 , Pages 30-37, March 2010