Preceptorship for the newly-qualified practitioner (NQP) in Allied Health Professions (AHP): A systematic review of perspectives on AHP preceptorship programmes

Physiotherapy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 113 ◽  
pp. e33-e34
Author(s):  
S. Dean ◽  
G. Cornell
Author(s):  
Mojtaba Khaksarian ◽  
Masoud Behzadifar ◽  
Meysam Behzadifar ◽  
Firuzeh Jahanpanah ◽  
Ottavia Guglielmi ◽  
...  

Medicine and healthcare professions are prestigious and valued careers and, at the same time, demanding, challenging, and arduous jobs. Medical and allied health professions students, experiencing a stressful academic and clinical workload, may suffer from sleep disturbances. In Iran, several studies have been conducted to explore the prevalence rate among medical and healthcare professions students. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to quantitatively and rigorously summarize the existing scholarly literature, providing the decision- and policy-makers and educators with an updated, evidence-based synthesis. Only studies utilizing a reliable psychometric instrument, such as the Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI), were included, in order to have comparable measurements and estimates. Seventeen investigations were retained in the present systematic review and meta-analysis, totaling a sample of 3586 students. Studies were conducted between 2008 and 2018 and reported an overall rate of sleep disturbances of 58% (95% confidence interval or CI 45–70). No evidence of publication bias could be found, but formal analyses on determinants of sleep disturbances could not be run due to the dearth of information that could be extracted from studies. Poor sleep is highly prevalent among Iranian medical and healthcare professions students. Based on the limitations of the present study, high-quality investigations are urgently needed to better capture the determinants of poor sleep quality among medical and healthcare professions students, given the importance and the implications of such a topic.


2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon D Scott ◽  
Lauren Albrecht ◽  
Kathy O’Leary ◽  
Geoff DC Ball ◽  
Lisa Hartling ◽  
...  

1973 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 435-444 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carol A. Brown

As health services have become hospital-centered, many specialized health occupations have been created. The author maintains that these allied health occupations conflict with the medical profession for occupational territory, and that the development of these subordinate occupations has been controlled by the medical profession to its own benefit. This control is achieved through domination of professional societies, education and training, industrial rules and regulations, and government licenses. Detailed examples of the process of control are provided from the fields of radiology and pathology.


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