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Invited Articles

Elizabeth Usher memorial lecture: Expanding scope of practice - inspiring practice change and raising new considerations

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Pages 228-239 | Received 21 May 2018, Accepted 16 Jan 2019, Published online: 21 Mar 2019
 

Abstract

As the speech-language pathology (SLP) profession matures and evolves, there will continue to be an ongoing need for practice change. Practice change has many drivers: consumer need; an advancing evidence base; clinical innovations; financial efficiency; local service needs; population change; government policy etc. If we are to continue to have a profession with a strong identity and the capacity to make meaningful contributions to the modern education and healthcare landscape, then practice change is a necessity. To achieve practice change we must step away from long-held traditional paradigms and service delivery models. We need a workforce that is ready, committed and willing to accept change. We need organisations that are willing and open to adopt new service models, and we must have the evidence base to support these new roles and responsibilities. Making change to ensure clinicians are working to full scope or considering extended scope models (when appropriate) is actively encouraged to help achieve a more client-centred, cost-effective health service. In this discussion paper, the benefits, issues and impacts of expanding scope of practice are discussed, and ways that individual clinicians, services, training institutions, and researchers can help support the future growth of our profession are highlighted.

Acknowledgements

I wish to acknowledge all my current and past collaborators - our shared experiences exploring practice change informed this manuscript. I also wish to acknowledge the funding support from the Allied Health Professions Office of Queensland supporting many of the practice change initiatives in Queensland. Finally, I thank Dr Clare Burns, A/Prof Petrea Cornwell, Maria Schwarz, Stacey Baldac, Lynell Bassett, and Anne Coccetti for sharing their own thoughts on this topic in their considered review of this manuscript.

Disclosure statement

The author reports no conflicts of interest.

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