Model of Task-oriented practice Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the fundamental unit of therapist

A
  • the task
  • learning is goal oriented
  • PTs are teachers of movement skills
  • primary model of intervention should be manipulation of tasks
  • produces activity-dependent neuroplasticity (changes the brain and SC)
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2
Q

What does teaching movement skills involve

A
  • task selection
  • structuring the task context and environment
  • task variation/changing difficulty and complexity
  • switching to new tasks
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3
Q

What does true attainment of a motor skill imply the movement has?

A
  • consistency
  • flexibility
  • efficiency
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4
Q

How to organize a task

A
  • choose one task/functional movement
  • list constraints and resources
  • describe the components of the task
  • how will you organize the environment and structure/change the task to work on consistency, efficiency and flexibility
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5
Q

Assessing consistency uses a skill based framework

A
  • rate of goal achievement
  • accuracy
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6
Q

assessing efficiency using a skill based frame work

A
  • time (faster is generally more efficient)
  • speed
  • duration (longer periods of time increases efficiency)
  • distance
  • dual-task performance
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7
Q

flexibility using a skill based frame work

A
  • different conditions or environments
  • predictable vs unpredictable conditions
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8
Q

Measuring outcomes for task oriented practice

A
  • patient-specific functional scale
  • developed for pts with primary MSK dysfunction
  • validity tested for pt with chronic pain, UE/LE dysfunction, amputation, MS
  • can be used at initial exam, re-eval, dishcarge
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9
Q

what are other ways to measure skill acquisition

A
  • level of assistance (min/mod/max)
  • components of a skill
  • benchmark task: walking and holding something = more functional
  • retention: do they retain a skill from 1 session to another; related to practice at home
  • transfer: can they take the skills learned and apply it to another (STS to getting out of a car)
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10
Q

Practice considerations

A
  • dosing
  • timing
  • accessibility
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11
Q

Dosing

A
  • considerations: reps, intensity, duration
  • effective dosing = neuromuscular changes, changes in brain/sc, changes in muscle function
  • doing a functional task with proper function will cause long term neuromuscular changes
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12
Q

Reaching example with dosing

A
  • in infants 3-5 months is a critical period for developing reaching skills
  • an infant with a stroke do not experience same early skills esp. bilaterally
  • this can affect gross motor development
  • more reaching practice is important
  • dosage: 90 hours
  • timing: as early as 8 weeks are associated with better outcomes
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13
Q

Importance of participation and practice

A
  • contextual interventions: change the task or child but not impairments
  • examples: adapting a bike, climbing a wall with assistance, supported crawling device
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14
Q

Participation and accessibility: when does participation start and why is it important

A
  • participation starts the day you are born
  • should continue throughout lifespan
  • need to improve participation for those with greatest impairments in body structure and function (children who are unable to walk, adults with chronic conditions that limit participation)
  • long term cost for them and society (they need to work/have more medical conditions that society will end up paying for)
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