School of Allied Health Science and Practice, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia.
College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia.
BMC Med Educ. 2023 Feb 6;23(1):95. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-04065-y.
Health, disability, and community services are increasingly transitioning from government-led to participant-led funding models, which intend to increase choice and control for service users. Allied health practitioners, who provide many frontline services within the resultant marketised environment, must adjust their knowledge and skills to meet participants' expectations. However, future workforce strategies to address allied health student capabilities to provide these services have received limited attention. This study explored shifting understandings and practices related to allied health student placements during the implementation of a participant-led funding model within the Australian disability sector: the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS).
Data for this study came from a two-year disability workforce project exploring allied health placements. Service providers, participants, university representatives, disability advocates and students participated in 48 interviews and two focus groups to provide perspectives on allied health workforce and student placements. The findings result from secondary deductive analysis undertaken following project completion that used Gidden's (1984) Structuration Theory as a conceptual lens to identify structures and actions related to the marketised service environment that influenced how allied health student placements were undertaken.
The findings were organised using two Structuration concepts: knowledgeability, and duality of structure. These described how service providers, supervisors and students understood, legitimised and prioritised placement activities, and how these structures influenced and were influenced by the actions of stakeholders across NDIS settings, contexts and time. Initially, existing placement structures were not compatible with new structures emerging in the disrupted NDIS service environment. However, over time, and responding to new knowledgeability of service providers, supervisors and students, placement structures were identified, monitored and adjusted to reflect perspectives of all stakeholders.
Participant-led funding invoked structural changes in disability service provision that transformed how stakeholders understood placements and the role of students in service provision. Whilst there were new opportunities for placement, tensions were identified in how learning activities can be enacted within a marketised system in which resources are aligned to participant needs, and structures for workforce development and learning activities are less visible. Further conceptualisation of how student learning and workforce development activities can fit with contemporary funding models is necessary to meet participant, service provider and student needs.
健康、残疾和社区服务正逐渐从政府主导的模式向参与者主导的模式转变,这旨在增加服务使用者的选择和控制权。在由此产生的市场化环境中提供许多前线服务的联合健康从业者必须调整他们的知识和技能以满足参与者的期望。然而,解决联合健康学生提供这些服务的能力的未来劳动力战略,受到了有限的关注。本研究探讨了在澳大利亚残疾部门实施参与者主导的资金模式(国家残疾保险计划(NDIS))过程中,与联合健康学生实习相关的观念和实践的转变。
本研究的数据来自一个为期两年的残疾劳动力项目,该项目探索了联合健康实习。服务提供者、参与者、大学代表、残疾倡导者和学生参加了 48 次访谈和两次焦点小组,就联合健康劳动力和学生实习提供了观点。研究结果来自于项目完成后的二次演绎分析,该分析使用吉登斯(1984 年)的结构化理论作为概念框架,以确定与市场化服务环境相关的结构和行动,这些结构和行动影响了联合健康学生实习的开展方式。
研究结果采用了两个结构化概念组织:知识和结构的二元性。这些概念描述了服务提供者、主管和学生如何理解、合法化和优先考虑实习活动,以及这些结构如何受到 NDIS 环境、背景和时间中利益相关者的行动的影响,以及如何反过来受到这些行动的影响。最初,现有的实习结构与新出现的在中断的 NDIS 服务环境中的结构不兼容。然而,随着时间的推移,以及服务提供者、主管和学生对新知识的了解,确定、监测和调整了实习结构,以反映所有利益相关者的观点。
参与者主导的资金引发了残疾服务提供的结构性变化,改变了利益相关者对实习和学生在服务提供中的角色的理解。虽然有新的实习机会,但在资源与参与者需求相匹配的市场化系统中,如何实施学习活动的紧张关系,以及劳动力发展和学习活动的结构不太明显。需要进一步概念化学生学习和劳动力发展活动如何适应当代资金模式,以满足参与者、服务提供者和学生的需求。