• Annals of medicine · Dec 2024

    The struggle of dealing with uncertainty: a qualitative, phenomenological study about how Dutch novice physical therapists experience their transition from student to professional.

    • B L H Biemans, N Koenders, R A de Bie, J M Sieben, and T J Hoogeboom.
    • Allied Healthcare Department, Fontys University of Applied Sciences, Eindhoven, Netherlands.
    • Ann. Med. 2024 Dec 1; 56 (1): 23997552399755.

    ObjectiveTo explain how Dutch novice physical therapists experience their transition from student to physical therapist in private practice.MethodsA qualitative, phenomenological study was performed in The Netherlands to collect personal experiences from novice physical therapists who graduated <1 year ago. Data were collected with semi-structured interviews and analyzed using interpretative phenomenological analysis.ResultsThe transition experience from student to novice physical therapist is a personal, complex, and context-dependent phenomenon. Sixteen novice physical therapists (of whom 10 were still working in private practice) said their transition was liberating, stressful, insecure, unexpected, chaotic, and challenging. The variety in experiences occurred from the fact that the impact of an experience varies from one individual to the other, depending on their previous (life) experiences, uncertainty tolerance, coping, and personal and professional environment. Four overarching themes emerged: (1) 'Suddenly, I was on my own', (2) 'I was unprepared for the hassle and demands of clinical practice', (3) 'I couldn't make the impact I expected', and (4) 'I had to find a new me'.ConclusionsA novice physical therapist's transition is a context-related phenomenon, unique for each individual and determined by individual experiences and coping strategies. Novice physical therapists described a feeling of 'faking': they had to pretend to know what they were doing [while treating a patient] while in reality, they felt like they did not. For some novice physical therapists, a primary reason to leave the profession.

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