# Perceived facilitators and barriers to routine utilisation of standardised outcome measures among physiotherapists in Namibia

**Authors:** Matthew Chiwaridzo, Farirai Kamba, Zenra Buys, Munyaradzi Chimara, Marius van der Merwe, Witness Mudzi

PMC · DOI: 10.4314/gmj.v59i4.9 · Ghana Medical Journal · 2025-12-01

## TL;DR

This study explores why physiotherapists in Namibia do not regularly use standardized outcome measures, finding that language and time barriers are significant.

## Contribution

The study identifies context-specific facilitators and barriers to the routine use of standardized outcome measures by physiotherapists in Namibia.

## Key findings

- About half of the physiotherapists in Namibia routinely use standardized outcome measures.
- Language and reading proficiency of tools are major barriers to their use.
- Time-related barriers also discourage routine use of these measures.

## Abstract

To determine the context-specific perceived facilitators and barriers to routine utilisation of standardised outcome measures (SOMs) by physiotherapists (PTs) in Namibia.

Questionnaire-based cross-sectional survey.

Private or public clinics/hospitals in Namibia

Practising physiotherapists

The study evaluated “routine” utilisation of SOMs operationally defined as using SOMs for 70% to 100% of the time in clinical practice. The study also determined the perceived facilitators and barriers to the routine utilisation.

Of the 99 respondents, 96 (96.9%) had complete questionnaires. The majority of participants were female (n=64, 66.7%), had a Bachelor's degree (n=86, 89.6%), trained outside Namibia (n=82, 85.4%), and were practising as private practitioners (n=74, 77.1%). About half of the participants (n=47, 49.0%) “routinely” used SOMs, especially impairment-based tools. The most common reasons for SOMs utilisation were tool affordability and availability. However, about a quarter (n=41, 43.6%) were strongly deterred from using SOMs because of the language of construction of the tool, whilst 36.2% (n=34) highlighted that most SOMs had a higher reading proficiency than the patient population. Time-related barriers were also perceived by 34.0% (n=32) of the participants.

Routine utilisation of SOMs by PTs is below average in Namibia, primarily due to tool-related factors, such as the language of construction.

None declared

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12877710/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12877710