Double Bachelor's degree: Bachelor's degree in Physical Activity and Sports Sciences and in Bachelor's degree in Physiotherapy

Objectives and competences

Bachelor's degree in Physical Activity and Sports Sciences’s objectives and skills

Objectives are to train professionals with the knowledge, skills and abilities necessary to take on responsibilities related to the tasks of the specific activities of the sports world.

This profession can focus specifically on a variety of sports fields, by applying the knowledge and techniques characteristic of physical activity and sports sciences and adapting one's behaviour to the circumstances at hand in order to resolve problems that may arise.

Skills: 

  •          Identification and analysis of the structural and functional traits of physical activity and sport (PAS).
  •          Development of motor skills and the execution of physical activity and sport practices.
  •          Recognition and comprehension of the different factors conditioning physical activity and sport.
  •          Interpretation of the factors, effects and risks conditioning the practice of physical activity and sport in different fields.
  •          Application of knowledge acquired on physical activity and sport to professional practice.
  •          Planning and evaluation of physical activity and sport processes and programmes in teaching, training, health, management and leisure.

 

Bachelor's degree in Physiotherapy’s objectives and skills

Objectives are to train general physiotherapists with the scientific training and skill necessary to describe, identify, treat and compare health problems that physiotherapy can help.

To this end, students must be able to use a series of methods, procedures, models, techniques and actions which, by means of applying physical mediums, can treat and aid the recovery and adaptation of people who are suffering from deterioration, functional limitations, disabilities or changes in their physical functions and state of health, whether the result of a lesion, illness or other cause. They must also be able to use the aforementioned mediums in health promotion and maintenance, and in preventing illness and its consequences. Furthermore, they must consider the individual in his three dimensions, that is, biological, psychological and social.

Professional skills:

  •  Possess knowledge and understanding of human morphology, physiology, pathology and behaviour in both healthy and sick people in the general and social context.
  •  Possess knowledge and understanding of the sciences, models, techniques, and instruments on which physiotherapy is based and practised.
  •  Possess knowledge and understanding of physiotherapeutic methods, procedures and actions, both in therapy as such applied in clinical conditions in order to re-train or recover functionality, and in the performance of activities intended to promote and maintain health.
  •  Acquire clinical experience to obtain the necessary intellectual abilities and technical and manual skills, to facilitate the incorporation of ethical and professional values and to develop the ability to assimilate the knowledge acquired so that, at the end of their studies, the students know how to apply them both to specific clinical cases in a hospital or non-hospital context and to primary and community healthcare activities.
  •  Evaluate the functional state of the patient, taking into account physical, psychological and social aspects.
  •  Perform a diagnostic evaluation of physiotherapeutic care in accordance with standards and internationally recognised instruments of validation.
  •  Design a physiotherapy treatment plan according to criteria of appropriateness, validity and efficiency.
  •  Implement, manage and coordinate the physiotherapy treatment plan, using appropriate therapeutic tools and taking into account the user's individual situation.
  •  Evaluate the progress of the results obtained from the treatment in relation to the defined objectives.
  •  Prepare the physiotherapy discharge report once the objectives have been attained.
  •  Provide effective physiotherapy care, ensuring patients receive overall care.
  •  Participate in the fields of health promotion, preventive medicine, protection and recovery.
  •  Know how to work with professional teams as a basic unit in which professionals and other staff in healthcare organisations are structured along single- or multi-disciplinary and inter-disciplinary lines.
  •  Incorporate the profession's ethical and legal principles into professional practice and include social and community considerations in decision-making processes.
  •  Participate in the preparation of physiotherapy care protocols based on scientific evidence, promoting professional activities that boost research in the field of physiotherapy.
  •  Carry out physiotherapy treatments based on integrated healthcare principles, involving multi-professional cooperation, process integration and continuity of care.
  •  Recognise the importance of updating the knowledge, abilities, skills and attitudes that make up the professional competences of the physiotherapist.
  •  Acquire clinical management skills, including the efficient use of healthcare resources and carry out planning, management and control activities in the care units where physiotherapy care is provided, paying attention to their links with other healthcare services.
  •  Be able to communicate effectively and clearly, both orally and in writing, with health system users and with other professionals.

 

Career opportunities

  • Sports
    • Competitive sports clubs
    • Sports facilities
  • Dependency
    • Evaluation of the degree of dependence
    • Apart from healthcare, the assessment and use of the appropriate technical aids and the correct adaptation of surroundings is an important task, and carers must be trained in this; they must also be trained to provide comprehensive care to the dependent person, promoting personal autonomy and preventing dependency
  • Physical and/or mental disability:
    • Assisted living centres
    • Day centres.
    • Educational and occupational therapy centres
    • Occupational therapy workshops
  • Physical education teacher (with university master's degree in Teacher Training)
  • Professional sports monitor and cheerleader
  • Professional coach (in a specific sport)
  • Sports director
  • Medical specialties in different fields of action:
    • Primary care and outpatient physiotherapy services
    • Home visit physiotherapy
    • Hospital physiotherapy (acute care hospitals; socio health and day hospitals
  • Geriatrics, in geriatric facilities:
    • Assisted living facilities
    • Day centres
  • The workplace
    • Promotion and teaching of occupational health
    • Prevention of work-related risks in the services for this purpose, carrying out risk assessment and employee training
  • Prevention:
    • Health promotion and education
  • Training/teaching and research
  • Management