Relationship Between Occupational Science & Occupational Therapy Flashcards
Occupation is..
1. Adressed…
2. Central…
3. Defined…
- Addressed peripherally (or implicitly) in many fields
- Central to occupational science and occupational therapy
- Defined differently (compared with social sciences or government statistics)
Occupational Therapy: Background?
- Roots in the 19th century
- Modern OT founded in US in 1917
- Influenced by reductionist view of medical profession
- Reengagement with occupation as central focus
- After the military
- Current tension between philosophy and practice of OT
- Less narrow focus seeking more than the medical model, looking beyond just the person seeing structural barriers
Core assumptions of current paradigm of Occupational Therapy?
- Humans have an occupational nature
- Humans may experience occupational dysfunction
- Missing the means, physical ability, or mental
- Idiosyncratic occupations = unique that happens one time (raising children) and more tasks you’ll do throughout your life (cooking)
- Occupation can be used as a therapeutic agent
Occupational Therapy
OT as defined by the WFOT International Advisory Group
“[…] a profession concerned with promoting health and well-being though occupation. The primary goal of occupational therapy is to assist people to participate in the activities of everyday life.”
- Excluding Idiosyncratic occupations
- More than a health profession
Occupational Therapy: Practice
- Practice has an occupation-based approach
- Collaborative-relational approach
- Shared design-making between the client and the therapist
- Example, a client goal is to smoke again after burning his hands -> Should I be enabling this unhealthily occupation? It is a conversation and negation between the therapist and the client
- Working between different sectors
- Moved away from a client centred practice to a collaborative approach -> acknowledging structural barriers
- Expanding beyond just the client and rehabilitation’s more towards meeting a broader group’s needs
- Shared design-making between the client and the therapist
Person-Environment-Occupation Model?
- Person
- Intrinsic factors, scriptural, motivations, interests, abilities etc.
- Environment
- Physical environment, social space, institutional space, political-, cultural- (norms etc)
- Occupation
- Activities or tasks that people do to manage themselves in a daily life, to find meaning and purposed, patterned by completely (micro level and micro level), responsibilities that we have
Venndiagram
Sometimes one aspect can be completely separate from the other -> try to bring them closer together.
You can change the person, occupation, or environment
Key stages of occupational therapy practice?
- Assessment
- A structured report
- A conversation
- Therapeutic planning
- Start building the relationship
- Implementation and evaluation
- The outcome
Two Approaches to OT + the middle way?
Improve/maintain clients capacities & capabilities
- Improvements in capacities and abilities likely
Modify occupation and/or environment(s)
- Improvements in capacities and abilities not likely
Middle way, it is a spectrum
- Some improvements in capacities and abilities likely, but probable residual effects
Practice Areas of Occupational Therapists?
- School
- Leaning disabilities, physical disabilities, or other challenges, provide extra support. Provide guidance, follow up on the implementation
- Mental health
- Neurodivergence, mental illness. Mental health and physical health are connected
- Acute
- Hospital, post-surgery education, only seeing their client once, a lot of assessments -> discharge planning
- Rehabilitation
- Typical 3 step basic evalutaion
- Community
- Advocacy
- Private
- Work
- Centre for Accessibility
Scholarly Practice of OT:s?
“As a Scholarly Practitioners, occupational therapists routinely evaluate their work from multiple perspectives and demonstrate a lifelong commitment to evidence based practice, encompassing reflective learning, critical appraisal of practice, and quality improvement.”
Occupational Science: Background?
- Normally recognised as discipline in late 1980s
- Began as doctoral program at USC
- Viewed the science of occupation as a field of study
- Conceptualised as separate from OT
- Basic ‘vs.’ Applied science
Being an occupational being means that we have a need to engage in occupation in order to thrive. Occupation occur in a particular context, in a time and space. Example?
A spinal cord injury in your mid twenties disturbs the timeline of future occupations
Occupational Science?
- Provides…
- Declares…
- Articulates
- Sharpens…
- Provides the essential foundational knowledge for occupational therapy
- Declares a unique professional perspective
- Articulates an occupational framework for research and evidence-based practice
- Sharpens practitioners’ occupational lens on clients and society
Making Occupation Central?
- Expands thinking beyond a biopyschosocial to an occupational perspective
- Expands practice beyond the therapeutic use of activity to enabling occupation
Expanding thinking about occupation
- Biopsychosocial moving towards Occupational?
- Biopsychosocial
- Impairment and disability
- Reducing individuals to their components: biological, psychological, social
Moving towards
- Occupational
- Occupation and participation focused
- Assess and address occupational performance and occupational justice