Kinésithérapeutes

Risque Minimal
11%
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RISQUE D'AUTOMATISATION
CALCULÉ
0,0%
(Risque Minimal)
SONDAGE
22%
(Risque Faible)
Average: 11%
DEMANDE DE TRAVAIL
CROISSANCE
14,2%
par l'année 2033
SALAIRES
99 710 $
ou 47,93 $ par heure
Volume
240 820
à partir du 2023
RÉSUMÉ
SCORE DE TRAVAIL
9,0/10

Les gens ont également vu

Risque d'automatisation calculé

0,0% (Risque Minimal)

Risque Minimal (0-20%) : Les professions dans cette catégorie ont une faible probabilité d'être automatisées, car elles exigent généralement une résolution complexe de problèmes, de la créativité, de solides compétences interpersonnelles et un haut degré de dextérité manuelle. Ces emplois impliquent souvent des mouvements de main complexes et une coordination précise, rendant difficile pour les machines de reproduire les tâches requises.

Plus d'informations sur ce que représente ce score et comment il est calculé sont disponibles ici.

Certaines qualités très importantes du travail sont difficiles à automatiser :

  • Aider et Prendre Soin des Autres

  • Perceptivité Sociale

Certaines qualités assez importantes du travail sont difficiles à automatiser :

  • Dextérité des Doigts

  • Dextérité manuelle

  • Négociation

  • Originalité

  • Persuasion

Sondage utilisateur

22% chance de pleine automatisation au cours des deux prochaines décennies

Nos visiteurs ont voté qu'il y a peu de chances que cette profession soit automatisée. Cette évaluation est davantage soutenue par le niveau de risque d'automatisation calculé, qui estime 0,0% de chances d'automatisation.

Que pensez-vous du risque de l'automatisation?

Quelle est la probabilité que Kinésithérapeutes soit remplacé par des robots ou l'intelligence artificielle dans les 20 prochaines années ?






Sentiment

Le graphique suivant est inclus chaque fois qu'il y a un nombre substantiel de votes pour rendre les données significatives. Ces représentations visuelles affichent les résultats des sondages utilisateurs au fil du temps, fournissant une indication significative des tendances de sentiment.

Sentiment au fil du temps (annuellement)

Croissance

Une croissance très rapide par rapport à d'autres professions

On s'attend à ce que le nombre de postes vacants pour 'Physical Therapists' augmente 14,2% d'ici 2033

Emploi total, et estimations des offres d'emploi

* Données de la Bureau of Labor Statistics pour la période entre 2021 et 2031
Les prévisions mises à jour sont attendues 09-2024.

Salaires

Très bien rémunéré par rapport à d'autres professions

En 2023, le salaire annuel médian pour 'Physical Therapists' était de 99 710 $, soit 47 $ par heure.

'Physical Therapists' ont été payés 107,5% de plus que le salaire médian national, qui était de 48 060 $

Salaires au fil du temps

* Données provenant du Bureau des Statistiques du Travail

Volume

Une plus grande gamme d'opportunités d'emploi comparée à d'autres professions

À partir de 2023, il y avait 240 820 personnes employées en tant que 'Physical Therapists' aux États-Unis.

Cela représente environ 0,16% de la main-d'œuvre employée à travers le pays

Autrement dit, environ 1 personne sur 630 est employée en tant que 'Physical Therapists'.

Description du poste

Évaluez, planifiez, organisez et participez à des programmes de rééducation visant à améliorer la mobilité, soulager la douleur, augmenter la force et améliorer ou corriger les conditions invalidantes résultant de maladies ou de blessures.

SOC Code: 29-1123.00

Ressources

Si vous envisagez de commencer une nouvelle carrière ou de changer de travail, nous avons créé un outil de recherche d'emploi pratique qui pourrait vous aider à décrocher ce nouveau poste parfait.

Recherchez des emplois dans votre région locale

Commentaires

Leave a comment

Fakiha Arshad (Aucune chance) 4 months ago
This profession involves too much thinking, on your feet, catering to client needs, and making exercise plans according to a patient's needs and levels. There's a very small likelihood it will ever get replaced by AI in coming years.
1 0 Reply
RR (Aucune chance) 5 months ago
AI doesn't have feelings.

0 0 Reply
Pluto (Très probable) 5 months ago
ai can provide better advices by the amount of data they have
2 3 Reply
(Aucune chance) 11 months ago
Physical therapists understand how the body feels manually and sensation wise in a way machines can't replicate.
3 0 Reply
D Dourney (Aucune chance) 1 year ago
Hands on soft tissue mobilization to patient tolerance is that something AI can feel? Joint mobility with contract relax techniques is that something AI can be used for
2 0 Reply
John B. (Faible) 1 year ago
This is interesting to think about. Short answer - I say no.

Long answer - while I agree with the previous commenters that 'Someone needs to be there', who is that someone? Is it just a PT Assistant and a chatbot that comes up with the plans and the assistant guides the exercises? You need to consider reduction in job scale (thus salary) here not just elimination.

I say no overall because the way I think about it is people will pay for this service (mainly the care/psychological aspect and not just the exercises that they could find on google already). I have been in this situation myself. This isn't a fast food restaurant where people just want their food and don't care how it is made. I think if the therapist is good at the care, patient management, psychology, and any additional 'experience' aspects in addition to knowing the technical stuff they will be fine.
2 0 Reply
John (Aucune chance) 1 year ago
Yes, there are apps developed that provide exercise protocols. However, these exercise protocols are superficial. These treatment protocols aren't magic bullets that fit every single patient with the same diagnosis.

I am a physical therapist. We don't treat injuries based solely on reported impairments. We view each injury holistically. If AI can treat chronic pain patients better than us therapists, then that would be a nice day.

Plus, would you rather have a robot treating and instructing you to exercise? I don't think so. Physical therapists also face patients who are in their worst state. Imagine being treated by robots like Darth Vader. Yes, that might sound profitable for some hospitals, but ask any patient if they would like to be handled solely by robots.

We're not just patting your backs or asking you to lift some weights. We see you as more than just your back problem. We don't just zap or pat your backs.
2 0 Reply
Jenis (Modéré) 2 years ago
It would be physios doing the diagnosis and robots doing the techniques
1 1 Reply
Nada wael (Faible) 2 years ago
Because it is a medical field that needs diagnostic skills, understanding and communication with the patient
1 0 Reply
Physiotherapy Clinics Edmonton 2 years ago
Robots are not new to the medical environment. They are used in a variety of ways, such as telepresence, surgical assistance, rehabilitation, medical transportation, sanitation, and disinfection, and dispensing prescriptions.
0 0 Reply
Anonymous 3 years ago
Frederick is right, physical therapists do more than just pat someone on the back a bunch. They also have to diagnose the problem. And the pat on the back is a really important procedure where that pat on the back does something special to the body to maybe recover or relieve some pain. The procedures they have to use in some instances can be very difficult.
0 0 Reply
Pablo Santurbano (Faible) 4 years ago
I think that there is a small risk, because it is possible to develop an app with the best treatment protocols evidence based.

Furthermore, in most health problems that physios treats, exercise is the most recommended intervention. And many exercises can be done without a professional supervision. This scenario could allow a patient to download an app that facilitates to conduct a self treatment.
0 0 Reply
mike 4 years ago
physios are just a pat on the shoulder isn't it? Robots can do that
0 0 Reply
To (Incertain) 4 years ago
There are already algorithm based apps being used in sports rehabilitation, nothing is impossible
0 0 Reply
Frederik (Aucune chance) 4 years ago
I've had the chance to meet several physiotherapists with whom I've had in-depth discussions (not personal injury-related). I'm a prospective physiotherapy student myself.

If all physiotherapy was, was prescribing exercises, then it would definitely have a huge chance of being replaced by automation soon. Look at the field of radiology for a good example of this phenomenon—technology is getting exceedingly good at finding and diagnosing illnesses without human help. But the work physios do is diverse. Yes, prescribing exercises is a part of the job, but hands-on manual therapy is just as important. The variety of work within the field of physiotherapy is enormous as well. Physios may specialise in everything from working with athletes to patients with neurological disorders.

Physiotherapists undergo training in tangential fields, such as psychology, in order to be better able to understand their clients. After all, the goal is really to help patients in the best possible manner! Great physios also act as psychologists, guiding their patients through the mental challenges of rehabilitation and overcoming injury or illness (which may take place over the course of several months). Just like in occupational therapy (physiotherapy's sister), human-to-human interaction is a huge part of the job. This isn't something that can be replaced by a robot, at least not easily...

You never know fifty, one hundred years down the line. Just look at the difference between 2020 and 1970, 2020 and 1920. Honestly though, physiotherapy is absolutely safe considering the current situation of technological development. It will be one of the fastest growing, in-demand occupations in the next few decades.
0 0 Reply
jeff (Aucune chance) 5 years ago
no chance
0 0 Reply
Sarah (Aucune chance) 5 years ago
Physical therapists can't always be replaced by robots. Someone has to be there to help out.
0 0 Reply

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