The experiences of occupational therapists supporting children with self-regulation needs: A qualitative descriptive study.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 REHABILITATION
Kelsey Philpott-Robinson, Kirsti Haracz, Dianne Blackwell, Carly Mallise, Carl Leonard, Alison Lane, Kylie Wales
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Occupational therapists support children with self-regulation needs to engage in meaningful occupations at home, school, and in the community. However, little is known about how Australian practitioners perceive their role working with children with self-regulation needs in the Australian healthcare context. Therefore, we explored the contemporary practice experiences of Australian occupational therapists working with children 4-12 years referred for self-regulation support, to better understand elements constituting efficacious service delivery to enhance occupational engagement.

Methods: A qualitative descriptive design, underpinned by constructivism and relativism, was implemented to address the research aim. Occupational therapists were recruited online to participate in audio-recorded focus groups and interviews. The audio recordings were anonymised, transcribed verbatim, and analysed through reflexive thematic analysis.

Consumer and community involvement: No consumers were involved in the study design or analysis.

Findings: Four themes were generated, encapsulating the experience of 13 occupational therapists working with children with self-regulation needs: (1) navigating the complexities of self-regulation, (2) intervening to support the child and surrounding systems, (3) bringing the occupational therapy perspective to the self-regulation puzzle, and (4) working within an evolving practice context. Themes 1-3 describe specific processes that all occurred within the context of Theme 4. Overall, participants detailed successful practice to support children with self-regulation needs to participate in meaningful occupations that required person-centredness, collaboration, coaching, and adaptability of therapists responding to different stakeholder demands.

Conclusion: Self-regulation is a complex area of practice, and occupational therapists have a key role in supporting occupational engagement by balancing the child's needs with those of family, other stakeholders, and funding bodies. Findings support occupational therapists and decision-makers advocating for the unique role of occupational therapy in supporting self-regulation in childhood as part of a collaborative, multi-disciplinary approach. Specific consideration must also be given to ways that current funding schemes in Australia enable occupational therapy services for children with self-regulation needs.

Plain language summary: Controlling emotions and behaviours is sometimes called 'self-regulation'. Some children find this hard and need help from an occupational therapist, who knows a lot about the body and the systems within it. A lot of occupational therapists in Australia help children with their self-regulation. There is not much known about how these therapists see their role in working with these children. We wanted to understand what it is like for occupational therapists who help children, between 4 and 12 years old, with their self-regulation. We interviewed 13 occupational therapists from across Australia and analysed what they said. The data showed four main points: (1) understanding the challenges of self-regulation, (2) helping the child and their environment, (3) using an occupational therapy approach to solve self-regulation issues, and (4) working in a changing practice environment. The therapists described how important it is to focus on the child, work together with many people like caregivers and teachers, and being flexible. They talked about how they balance the needs of the child, family, and funding bodies, which could sometimes be tricky. The study shows the things that therapists are doing when working with children who need help with their self-regulation and the things that therapists find hard working in this space. The results of the study can be used by people who advocate for services that help children and by people who make decisions about Australia's healthcare. One way the study can be used is to think about how current funding schemes do or do not allow different people and professions to work together to support children's self-regulation. Even though there were some limitations, such as a low response rate due to the stress of the COVID-19 pandemic, we did interview therapists from different parts of Australia who work in different settings to each other.

职业治疗师为有自我调节需求的儿童提供支持的经验:定性描述研究。
简介:职业治疗师帮助有自我调节需求的儿童在家中、学校和社区从事有意义的职业。然而,人们对澳大利亚从业人员如何看待他们在澳大利亚医疗保健环境中为有自我调节需求的儿童所做的工作知之甚少。因此,我们探讨了澳大利亚职业治疗师在为 4-12 岁儿童提供自我调节支持时的当代实践经验,以更好地了解构成有效服务的要素,从而提高职业参与度:为实现研究目标,我们采用了以建构主义和相对主义为基础的定性描述设计。研究人员通过网络招募职业治疗师,让他们参与录制音频的焦点小组和访谈。录音经过匿名处理、逐字转录,并通过反思性专题分析进行分析:消费者和社区参与:没有消费者参与研究设计或分析:研究产生了四个主题,概括了 13 名职业治疗师与有自我调节需求的儿童合作的经验:(1)驾驭自我调节的复杂性,(2)干预以支持儿童和周围系统,(3)将职业治疗的视角引入自我调节难题,以及(4)在不断变化的实践环境中工作。主题 1-3 描述了都发生在主题 4 背景下的具体过程。总之,参与者详细介绍了支持有自我调节需求的儿童参与有意义职业的成功实践,这需要治疗师以人为本、合作、指导和适应能力,以应对不同利益相关者的需求:自我调节是一个复杂的实践领域,职业治疗师在通过平衡儿童需求与家庭、其他利益相关者和资助机构的需求来支持职业参与方面发挥着关键作用。研究结果支持职业治疗师和决策者倡导职业治疗在支持儿童自我调节方面发挥独特作用,将其作为多学科协作方法的一部分。此外,还必须具体考虑澳大利亚目前的资助计划如何为有自我调节需求的儿童提供职业治疗服务。有些儿童发现这很难做到,需要职业治疗师的帮助,因为职业治疗师对身体及其内部系统非常了解。澳大利亚有很多职业治疗师帮助儿童进行自我调节。关于这些治疗师如何看待他们在帮助这些儿童时所扮演的角色,我们了解得并不多。我们希望了解帮助 4 到 12 岁儿童进行自我调节的职业治疗师是怎样工作的。我们采访了来自澳大利亚各地的 13 名职业治疗师,并对他们的发言进行了分析。数据显示了四个要点:(1)了解自我调节所面临的挑战;(2)帮助儿童和他们所处的环境;(3)使用职业治疗方法解决自我调节问题;(4)在不断变化的实践环境中工作。治疗师们介绍了以儿童为中心、与照顾者和教师等多方合作以及灵活应变的重要性。他们谈到了如何平衡儿童、家庭和资助机构的需求,这有时会很棘手。这项研究显示了治疗师在与需要自我调节帮助的儿童合作时正在做的事情,以及治疗师在这一领域工作时感到困难的事情。这项研究的结果可用于倡导为儿童提供帮助的服务,也可用于为澳大利亚医疗保健做出决策的人员。利用研究结果的一种方式是思考当前的资助计划如何允许或不允许不同的人和不同的专业共同支持儿童的自我调节。尽管存在一些局限性,例如由于 COVID-19 大流行造成的压力而导致回复率较低,但我们确实采访了来自澳大利亚不同地区的治疗师,他们在彼此不同的环境中工作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
16.70%
发文量
69
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Australian Occupational Therapy Journal is a leading international peer reviewed publication presenting influential, high quality innovative scholarship and research relevant to occupational therapy. The aim of the journal is to be a leader in the dissemination of scholarship and evidence to substantiate, influence and shape policy and occupational therapy practice locally and globally. The journal publishes empirical studies, theoretical papers, and reviews. Preference will be given to manuscripts that have a sound theoretical basis, methodological rigour with sufficient scope and scale to make important new contributions to the occupational therapy body of knowledge. AOTJ does not publish protocols for any study design The journal will consider multidisciplinary or interprofessional studies that include occupational therapy, occupational therapists or occupational therapy students, so long as ‘key points’ highlight the specific implications for occupational therapy, occupational therapists and/or occupational therapy students and/or consumers.
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