Dysphagia education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: student self-competency ratings during their dysphagia course

Abstract Purpose Training programs focused on dysphagia have been identified as an area needing improvement due to the specialized skills required to provide clinical care to patients with dysphagia. Globally, a lack of standardized training has been recognized and has led to the introduction of com...

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Main Authors: Sana Smaoui, Sandhya Ganesan, Trish Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-05-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-025-07365-7
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author Sana Smaoui
Sandhya Ganesan
Trish Williams
author_facet Sana Smaoui
Sandhya Ganesan
Trish Williams
author_sort Sana Smaoui
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Purpose Training programs focused on dysphagia have been identified as an area needing improvement due to the specialized skills required to provide clinical care to patients with dysphagia. Globally, a lack of standardized training has been recognized and has led to the introduction of competency and training frameworks in the clinical practice of dysphagia. Previous studies have explored the experiences of students in training programs and their self-perceived competency; however, none have explored this in the Ethiopian context due to the infancy of the Speech Language Therapy (SLT) profession within this region. The objectives of this study were to explore patterns in self-perceived competency ratings for SLT students at AAU and determine the impact of clinical experiences during student training. Methods First- and second-year students enrolled in the two-year SLT Master's program in Ethiopia were taught the dysphagia course in a combined class in English by visiting faculty. A modified Dysphagia Competency Verification Tool (DCVT) was used to assess self-perception of competency in dysphagia. The tool was administered in April 2024, before any dysphagia-related clinical exposure occurred and once again in May 2024, after clinical exposure to patients with dysphagia occurred. Generalized estimating equations (GEE) models were used for the General Skills (DCVT-GS) and Direct Patient Care (DCVT-DPC) subtests to study variations in responses for self-perceived competency. The models included covariates of sex, background in SLT, dysphagia-specific patient exposure and a repeated factor of survey timepoint. Results In total, 38 responses were collected across two time points and from all 19 participants. The SLT students were mostly female (n = 16; 84%) with ages ranging from 21 to 46 years. The GEE model for DCVT-GS identified significant main effects of background in SLT (p = 0.018), dysphagia patient exposure (p = 0.019), and survey timepoint (p < 0.001). The GEE model for DCVT-DPC demonstrated significance for background in SLT (p < 0.001), dysphagia patient exposure (p = 0.009), and sex (p = 0.031). Conclusion Regardless of DCVT domain, SLT graduate student clinicians were more likely to perceive themselves as “adequate” in their ratings at the second timepoint following clinical interactions, if they had prior SLT experience, including prior dysphagia experience. Training programs exploring dysphagia competency are encouraged to provide increased exposure to patients with dysphagia to support increased self-perceived competency scores.
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spelling doaj-art-32bd0057e7d74cada6b98a894aeda6ff2025-08-20T03:48:18ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202025-05-0125111510.1186/s12909-025-07365-7Dysphagia education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: student self-competency ratings during their dysphagia courseSana Smaoui0Sandhya Ganesan1Trish Williams2Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Kuwait UniversityDivision of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, The George Washington University School of Medicine & Health SciencesDepartment of Speech-Language Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of TorontoAbstract Purpose Training programs focused on dysphagia have been identified as an area needing improvement due to the specialized skills required to provide clinical care to patients with dysphagia. Globally, a lack of standardized training has been recognized and has led to the introduction of competency and training frameworks in the clinical practice of dysphagia. Previous studies have explored the experiences of students in training programs and their self-perceived competency; however, none have explored this in the Ethiopian context due to the infancy of the Speech Language Therapy (SLT) profession within this region. The objectives of this study were to explore patterns in self-perceived competency ratings for SLT students at AAU and determine the impact of clinical experiences during student training. Methods First- and second-year students enrolled in the two-year SLT Master's program in Ethiopia were taught the dysphagia course in a combined class in English by visiting faculty. A modified Dysphagia Competency Verification Tool (DCVT) was used to assess self-perception of competency in dysphagia. The tool was administered in April 2024, before any dysphagia-related clinical exposure occurred and once again in May 2024, after clinical exposure to patients with dysphagia occurred. Generalized estimating equations (GEE) models were used for the General Skills (DCVT-GS) and Direct Patient Care (DCVT-DPC) subtests to study variations in responses for self-perceived competency. The models included covariates of sex, background in SLT, dysphagia-specific patient exposure and a repeated factor of survey timepoint. Results In total, 38 responses were collected across two time points and from all 19 participants. The SLT students were mostly female (n = 16; 84%) with ages ranging from 21 to 46 years. The GEE model for DCVT-GS identified significant main effects of background in SLT (p = 0.018), dysphagia patient exposure (p = 0.019), and survey timepoint (p < 0.001). The GEE model for DCVT-DPC demonstrated significance for background in SLT (p < 0.001), dysphagia patient exposure (p = 0.009), and sex (p = 0.031). Conclusion Regardless of DCVT domain, SLT graduate student clinicians were more likely to perceive themselves as “adequate” in their ratings at the second timepoint following clinical interactions, if they had prior SLT experience, including prior dysphagia experience. Training programs exploring dysphagia competency are encouraged to provide increased exposure to patients with dysphagia to support increased self-perceived competency scores.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-025-07365-7DysphagiaEthiopiaSpeech-language therapy
spellingShingle Sana Smaoui
Sandhya Ganesan
Trish Williams
Dysphagia education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: student self-competency ratings during their dysphagia course
BMC Medical Education
Dysphagia
Ethiopia
Speech-language therapy
title Dysphagia education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: student self-competency ratings during their dysphagia course
title_full Dysphagia education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: student self-competency ratings during their dysphagia course
title_fullStr Dysphagia education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: student self-competency ratings during their dysphagia course
title_full_unstemmed Dysphagia education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: student self-competency ratings during their dysphagia course
title_short Dysphagia education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: student self-competency ratings during their dysphagia course
title_sort dysphagia education in addis ababa ethiopia student self competency ratings during their dysphagia course
topic Dysphagia
Ethiopia
Speech-language therapy
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-025-07365-7
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