Inappropriate Patient Sexual Behavior in Physiotherapy: A Systematic Review

Publication date

2022-01-07T09:33:42Z

2022-01-07T09:33:42Z

2021-12-15

2022-01-07T09:33:42Z



Abstract

A behavior which is increasing in prevalence is sexual harassment initiated by a client and displayed towards the healthcare professionals and students of these healthcare‐related professions. This is termed inappropriate patient sexual behaviour (IPSB). The consequences of IPSB can be significant, including decreased academic and work performance, decreased attention/concentration, reductions in work satisfaction, and a loss of confidence. The primary aim is to evaluate the literature on sexual harassment in physiotherapy. The secondary aim is to report on the incidence, situational factors, and suggested strategies. The databases Pubmed, Ovid MEDLINE, CINAHL Plus, Embase via OVID, ProQuest, and EBM Reviews were searched from inception up to 5 November 2021. Data on the incidence, situations, and strategies were extracted by at least two independent researchers. The quality of included articles was assessed. Nine studies of cohort and crosssectional design were included. The incidence of IPSB was reported to be between 48-100% of the samples of physiotherapy students and/or therapists. The situational factors are reported, and the recommended educational strategies are discussed. Articles suggest that educating physiotherapists and/or students about sexual harassment would be beneficial. This will help predict potential issues and highlight strategies to empower therapists in the workplace and in training.

Document Type

Article


publishedVersion

Language

English

Publisher

MDPI

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413876

Sustainability, 2021, vol. 13, núm. 24, p. 13876

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cc-by (c) authors, 2021

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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