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Preparing for Professional Practice in Health and Social Care


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skills needed to work in teams. It reflects on some of the common challenges and considers best practice, particularly in the sharing of information. It is important to stress that AHPs cannot, and do not, work in silos, and it is expected that you will collaborate with other professionals for the benefit of service users and carers.

      Chapter 8 refocuses on the concept of professionalism. It reflects on what it means to be a professional, and on the expectations on individual AHPs within professional practice.

      References

      1 Cahn, E.S. (2000). No More Throw-away People: The Co-production Imperative. Washington: Essential Books.

      Keith Walker & Alison Warren

      Chapter Overview

      This chapter discusses the mechanisms Allied Health Professionals (AHPs) use to assess the relevance of knowledge to their practice. The Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC), in their standards of proficiency for regulated AHPs (HCPC 2013a, 2013b, 2014, 2018), demand that they are able to demonstrate that they can critically reflect on practice, as well as being able to draw on relevant information to guide practice.

      Professionalism

      Professionalism has been difficult to define. It has many attributes claimed, and these attributes often change given the author and the times. There are however common themes; professionals are expected to demonstrate a key set of behaviours that reflect the values, knowledge base, and attributes of the profession in which they work. These standards are usually explicit within in each profession and appear as a code of standards, proficiency, or conduct. They are informed by more than the law of the land but also by ethical considerations. Integrity and altruism are expected and this is particularly important in healthcare.

      Clinical reasoning and decision-making feature consistently. AHPs are expected to have a specialised, bounded, and privileged bank of knowledge. It is, by its very nature, not easily understood by others and thus professionals are expected to interpret that knowledge base for the betterment of others. To summarise, a professional is asked to behave to a set of standards and interpret a specific bank of knowledge, delivering that interpretation in the best interests of their clients or patients.

      The acquisition and maintenance of a knowledge base therefore is a key characteristic of a professional. Moreover, society places a trust in professionals to interpret this knowledge for them (van Mook et al. 2009). It is this interpretation that is the subject of this chapter.

      Knowledge

      In the last section, the relationship between professionalism and knowledge was outlined. In this section, knowledge and its definitions and characterisation will be explored. There are several critical theories of knowledge, but knowledge should not be taken simply as a series of facts strung together like beads. There is an element of interpretation involved whenever and whatever professional knowledge is used. Once we have determined what sort of knowledge is being used, we have to decide how we judge its authenticity.

      Higgs and Titchen (1995) refer to three important types of knowledge – propositional, professional, and personal knowledge. Propositional knowledge is acquired through the study of books, articles, teaching, etc. Professional knowledge is that which practitioners develop in respect of their craft. It is generally difficult to source or describe to others. Personal knowledge comes from theoretical insight and an examination of values and ethics.

      Conceptions of Practice

      The connection between how healthcare practitioners deal with knowledge in their practice lives has been characterised in the past as a continuum between technical rationality and professional artistry. Technical rationality is instrumental problem solving made rigorous by the application of scientific theory and technique (Schön 1983, p. 21). It is placing theory and the learning that is needed as a necessary step before practice can be mastered. Technical rationality assumes that theory is an essential precursor to practice; without it practice is impossible. It relies on the practitioner ‘receiving knowledge from others to enable them to practice’ (Rolfe et al. 2001, p. 11).

      On the other hand, professional artistry are clinicians that are challenging knowledge and its currency. They are creative and are happy to embrace uncertainty. Theory emerges from practice. Post graduate study is one means to promote critical thinking (Thomson et al. 2014).

      If we understand that theory is not simply the precursor to knowledge and therefore practice but an important ingredient in how care is delivered, then we have to begin to engage with it as something that is alive and adaptable whilst we practice. Learning the skills of reflection and becoming a reflective practitioner are important steps to achieving this.

      Evidence-Based Practice

      Acquiring knowledge and keeping it up to date requires an understanding about how practitioners gather