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Area of Science:

  • Physical Therapy
  • Clinical Reasoning
  • Embodied Cognition

Background:

  • Current clinical reasoning models in physical therapy focus on cognition, neglecting movement and patient-therapist interaction.
  • There's a need for frameworks acknowledging the sensory-rich, bidirectional exchange in clinical practice.
  • Existing educational approaches require enhancement to foster embodied clinical reasoning skills.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose a new conceptualization of clinical reasoning in physical therapy.
  • To highlight the importance of embodied, adaptive, and collaborative aspects of practice.
  • To suggest educational strategies for developing these skills.

Main Methods:

  • Literature review and synthesis of contemporary clinical reasoning frameworks.
  • Application of complexity learning theory and Grossman's pedagogies of practice.
  • Conceptual development of an educational framework for embodied clinical reasoning.

Main Results:

  • A shift from purely cognitive models to an embodied, multisensory, and collaborative view of clinical reasoning.
  • Identification of key elements: embodied, adaptive, iterative, and collaborative.
  • Proposal of a novel educational framework integrating movement and complex reasoning.

Conclusions:

  • Physical therapist practice is best understood through an embodied, adaptive, iterative, and collaborative lens.
  • New educational approaches are essential for cultivating embodied clinical reasoning.
  • Complexity learning theory and pedagogies of practice offer a foundation for dynamic, nonlinear learning in physical therapy education.