“Professional Identity at the Crossroads: Italian Healthcare Technologists navigating Technology and Human Care”
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Healthcare Technologists (HTs) represent a crucial yet understudied group within modern healthcare systems. Operating at the intersection of advanced technologies and patient care, HTs face the dual challenge of mastering complex technical procedures while sustaining ethically grounded, relational engagement. This study investigates how professional identity is constructed within HT education in Italy, combining conceptual analysis and empirical data. Drawing on the philosophy of technology and theories of professional identity, the research critiques the traditional technocentric orientation of HT training and advocates for pedagogical models that integrate emotional, ethical, and reflective dimensions.
The empirical component includes 55 semi-structured interviews with 40 HT educators (clinical tutors and adjunct lecturers) and 15 undergraduate students from various HTs academic programs. Using inductive content analysis, the study identifies four macro-categories shaping professional identity: career motivation and background; identity-building processes; relational and ethical values; and educational strategies. Participants describe identity formation as a dynamic, reflective process shaped by real-world practice, relational interactions, and motivational drivers. Both students and educators emphasize the hybrid nature of their role, blending technical mastery with interpersonal care. Relational competence, adaptability, and a commitment to quality emerge as defining features.
The study highlights systemic challenges, including limited recognition of HTs’ roles, pedagogical challenges for educators, and documents strong intrinsic motivations and ethical commitment among participants. HT educators express the need for greater support in transitioning from clinical to teaching roles, and students reveal a desire for more hands-on and reflective learning experiences.
This research contributes a conceptual and practical framework for rethinking HTs education, embedding humanistic, ethical, and relational competencies into curricula. It positions HTs not as peripheral technicians, but as integral professionals in technologically mediated, patient-centered care systems.