Perception of chiropractic students in their preparedness in the diagnoses and management of headache disorders at a selected University of Technology
Date
2024
Authors
Abrahams, Tamia
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Abstract
A headache is defined as “pain found in the head above the orbito-meatal line and or nuchal
ridge” and widely affects both males and females globally. Chiropractic treatment and the
management of headaches is substantial, with one in five new patients’ chief complaint being
a headache and, thus, the use of chiropractic care in the management and treatment of
headaches is popular. The term “self-perceived preparedness” refers to how people view
themselves in terms of confidence and competency with regard to certain skills. Self-perceived
preparedness is essential as it relates to one’s confidence and the ability to accurately
diagnose and manage headache disorders. There is a definite scarcity in South African
literature as to the self-perceived preparedness of students in the diagnosis and management
of headache disorders. In a South African chiropractic context, the literature, with regard to
students’ confidence, awareness and self-assessment of skills is lacking.
There are a number of advantages that can come from exploring the concept of self-perceived
preparedness. The benefits include, but are not limited to, the assessment of whether or not
the curricula goals have been achieved, the readiness of chiropractic students to confidently
and correctly diagnose and manage patients sufficiently, and the different aspects that can
lead to one feeling unprepared.
Aim
The aim of this study was to explore and describe the self-perceived preparedness of the
chiropractic students’ in the diagnosis and management of headache disorders.
Methodology
This study design employed a qualitative, explorative and descriptive design. Purposeful
sampling was utilised and individual, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 13
Master’s degree students in the chiropractic programme. These interviews took place “in person” and an interview guide was utilised in each interview. The interviews were conducted
over a week from the 18th to the 23rd of September 2023. The questions surrounded the topics
of self-perceived preparedness, confidence, challenges (whether educational or personal) and
the effect of clinical exposure on one’s confidence and skills. The interviews were analysed
and themes were extracted utilising Tesch’s eight-step approach of data analysis.
Results
The chief themes that emerged from the data collection included the level of preparedness,
educational and environmental challenges, as well as the positive role that clinical exposure
had on students’ views of their self-perceived preparedness. The participants felt largely
unprepared to deal clinically with headache disorders. This stemmed from the feeling of
isolation within academia, lack of support from staff and clinicians, lack of practical aspects
within the curriculum and the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in a lack of in-person
interaction.
Conclusion
The findings of this study highlighted the lack of confidence and feeling of under-preparedness
to deal with headache disorders within a clinic setting by chiropractic Master’s students. This
was mainly attributed to educational and environmental challenges. However, the exposure
students gained within a clinical environment greatly improved their feeling of overall self-perceived preparedness
Description
Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Master of Health Sciences Degree in Chiropractic, at the Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2024.
Keywords
Headache disorders, Chiropractic students, Preparedness, Management
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/5384