交叉性如何影响职业治疗实践、教育和研究:范围回顾。

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q1 REHABILITATION
Diane L Smith, Alesia Ford, Helina Samson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重要性:职业治疗从业者、教师和研究人员缺乏对交叉性的考虑,可能导致学生和服务对象经历不公平。目的:确定交叉性是如何在学术文献中表现出来的,用于告知职业治疗的实践、研究和教育。数据来源:包括CINAHL、MEDLINE和PsycINFO的综合数据库。研究选择和数据收集:纳入标准是发表于2013年至2023年之间的同行评审文章,用英文撰写,并与研究问题相关。该综述使用了冠状病毒数据库和首选报告项目进行系统评价和范围评估扩展元分析(PRISMA-ScR)指南,结果有36篇文章被确定符合所有标准。任何差异都是通过作者之间的讨论解决的。研究结果:开发了一个数据抽象图表,并通过分析得出了教育、实践和研究的主题以及具体的子主题。调查结果显示,在教育中缺乏交叉方法往往被不同的学生视为负面的,他们缺乏归属感。建议的战略侧重于减少孤立和修订课程以反映学生的多样性。实践中的交叉问题显示了不同客户的访问差异和缺乏职业参与。建议的策略包括考虑客户的多层次身份,使用文化谦逊和考虑背景。研究策略侧重于使用协作方法来代表不同人群的交叉生活经验。结论和相关性:尽管研究有限,但交叉性被认为是职业治疗教育者、从业者和研究人员的一个视角,也是解决不同学生面临的问题的重要策略,从而产生更有效的以客户为中心的护理。摘要:本研究回顾了职业治疗和其他健康专业的文献,以确定交叉性的概念如何用于实践、教育和研究。这项研究是必要的,因为西方常见的做法是基于个人、白人、中上层阶级、健全、顺性别的视角,这与人口统计数据或客户需求不符。结果表明,学生和客户的交叉身份往往没有被考虑。通过识别和考虑多重和交叉的身份以及环境的影响,文献正在涌现,以提供教育,实践和研究策略来解决职业治疗学生和客户的不同需求。研究结果对职业治疗教育者、从业者和研究人员提出了挑战,要求他们考虑使用交叉性来提供整体的、以客户为中心的护理。定位声明:黛安·史密斯是一名顺性别、白人、健全的职业治疗教授,拥有研究生学位,并发表了许多关于残疾人权利和交叉性的文章。阿莱西亚·福特(Alesia Ford)是一名顺性别、黑人、神经发散性职业治疗从业者,拥有研究生学位,并发表了专注于增加职业多样性的出版物。海丽娜·萨姆森是一名顺性别黑人,拥有研究生学位,身体健全。这些镜头影响并可能潜在地影响我们对当前教育、实践和研究策略批判的解释。为了本综述的目的,请注意LGBTQIA+不是一个标准化术语,将使用原始研究者使用的术语(例如,LGBTQ, LGBT)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How Intersectionality Informs Occupational Therapy Practice, Education, and Research: A Scoping Review.

Importance: Lack of consideration of intersectionality by occupational therapy practitioners, faculty, and researchers can result in inequities experienced by students and clients served.

Objective: To determine how intersectionality is represented in the scholarly literature used to inform occupational therapy practice, research, and education.

Data sources: A comprehensive database that includes CINAHL, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO.

Study selection and data collection: Inclusion criteria were peer-reviewed articles published between 2013 and 2023, written in English, and pertinent to the research question. The review used Covidence database and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines, resulting in 36 articles identified as meeting all criteria. Any discrepancies were resolved through discussion among the authors.

Findings: A data abstraction chart was developed, and analysis resulted in themes of education, practice, and research with specific subthemes. Findings revealed that the lack of an intersectional approach in education is often viewed negatively by diverse students, who experience a lack of belonging. Suggested strategies focused on reducing isolation and revising curricula to reflect student diversity. Intersectional issues in practice showed access disparities and a lack of occupational participation for diverse clients. Suggested strategies included consideration of the multilayered identities of clients using cultural humility and consideration of context. Strategies for research focused on using a collaborative approach to represent the intersectional lived experience of diverse populations.

Conclusions and relevance: Despite limited studies, intersectionality was identified as a lens for occupational therapy educators, practitioners, and researchers and as an important strategy to address issues faced by diverse students, resulting in more effective client-centered care. Plain-Language Summary: This study reviewed literature from occupational therapy and other health professions to determine how the concept of intersectionality is used to inform practice, education, and research. The study is needed because common Western-based practice is based on an individual, White, upper-middle class, able-bodied, cisgender perspective, which does not match the demographics or needs of clients. Results show that the intersectional identities of students and clients are often not being considered. Literature is emerging to provide educational, practice, and research strategies to address the diverse needs of occupational therapy students and clients by identifying and considering multiple and intersectional identities and the effect of context. The results challenge occupational therapy educators, practitioners, and researchers to consider the use of intersectionality moving forward to provide holistic, client-centered care. Positionality Statement: Diane Smith is a cisgender, White, able-bodied occupational therapy professor with a graduate degree and numerous publications regarding disability rights and intersectionality. Alesia Ford is a cisgender, Black, neurodivergent occupational therapy practitioner with a graduate degree and publications focused on increased diversity within the profession. Helina Samson is a cisgender, Black, able-bodied occupational therapy practitioner with a graduate degree. These lenses influence and may potentially bias our interpretation regarding critique of current strategies in education, practice, and research. For the purposes of this review, please note that LGBTQIA+ is not a standardized term, and the term used by the original researchers will be used (e.g., LGBTQ, LGBT).

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
10.30%
发文量
406
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Occupational Therapy (AJOT) is an official publication of the American Occupational Therapy Association, Inc. and is published 6 times per year. This peer reviewed journal focuses on research, practice, and health care issues in the field of occupational therapy. AOTA members receive 6 issues of AJOT per year and have online access to archived abstracts and full-text articles. Nonmembers may view abstracts online but must purchase full-text articles.
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