ERIC Number: EJ1387168
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2023-Apr
Pages: 14
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: ISSN-2325-3193
EISSN: EISSN-2325-3215
The Path to Translating Focus of Attention Research into Canadian Physiotherapy, Part 1: Physiotherapists' Self-Reported Focus of Attention Use via a Study-Specific Questionnaire
Journal of Motor Learning and Development, v11 n1 p86-99 Apr 2023
The focus of attention literature has shown robust findings for the benefits of providing statements that focus on the movement effect or outcome (external focus of attention [EFOA]) as opposed to focusing on the movement kinematics (internal focus of attention). Observational studies, however, have revealed that physiotherapists use fewer EFOA statements than internal focus of attention statements in their practice. Most evidence in this regard has been from non-Canadian physiotherapists working in stroke rehabilitation; consequently, we sought to examine whether Canadian physiotherapists working with various rehabilitation populations also use EFOA statements to a lesser extent than internal focus of attention statements. The "Therapists' Perceptions of Motor Learning Principles Questionnaire (TPMLPQ)" was thus designed and data from 121 Canadian physiotherapists showed low relative frequencies of EFOA use (31.3% ± 14%) averaged across six hypothetical scenarios. A higher EFOA was reported, however, for two of the six scenarios: a functional reaching scenario (55.5% ± 37.0%) and pelvic floor task (65.6% ± 32.9%). This data suggest that the findings of EFOA benefits have not been widely translated into Canadian physiotherapy settings; furthermore, the findings of the scenario-dependency warrant future investigation into factors, such as task characteristics, that may influence physiotherapists' FOA use.
Descriptors: Attention, Physical Therapy, Foreign Countries, Rehabilitation, Perceptual Motor Learning, Allied Health Personnel, Knowledge Level, Questionnaires
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