职业治疗师在急性成人身体环境中实施以职业为中心的实践:一项地区和农村卫生服务的混合方法研究

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 REHABILITATION
Marguerite Bennetts, Linda Furness, Anna Tynan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

职业疗法的基础是相信职业有助于健康和幸福。然而,有证据表明,职业治疗师在实施以职业为中心的实践时遇到了挑战。本研究的目的是调查旨在加强职业治疗师在急性成人身体环境中以职业为中心的实践的工作场所干预的吸收,可接受性和影响。方法采用前后设计并行混合方法进行研究。实验地点是昆士兰州的一个区域和农村卫生服务机构。通过在线调查职业治疗师对职业治疗模式的知识、态度和信心、审核医疗图表、焦点小组讨论和深度访谈来收集数据。定量数据采用描述性统计,并对讨论进行了主题分析。消费者和社区参与没有参与。结果调查结果显示,干预前(n = 8)和干预后(n = 8)差异极小。医疗图表审计(前= 40,后= 28)显示,职业语言比医学语言增加。从定性数据中确定了四个主题(前= 5,后= 6):理论意识和接受职业治疗模型的变化;促进在急性环境中采用职业治疗模式;条件:个人需要具备的品质和努力;增强职业认同。研究主题显示,参与者在以职业为中心的预干预实践的知识和实施方面各不相同,并且可能受到工作场所环境的限制。后参与者认识到,积极实践以职业为中心对他们的实践有积极的影响。在本研究中,参与一项增加以职业为中心的实践的倡议导致职业治疗师的行为和信念的改变。参与者认识到,他们的个人贡献和他们的职业治疗同行的共同努力,增加了职业认同和理解职业治疗在急性成人物理环境中的贡献。职业治疗师通过与各种能力的人一起参与日常生活,促进健康和幸福。然而,在一些医院环境中,由于时间限制和其他专业的主导地位,职业治疗师在实施他们期望的方法时面临许多挑战。正因为如此,消费者和医院的卫生同事对职业治疗师的作用或价值不清楚,职业治疗师感到被误解。这可能会影响工作满意度,在这种情况下保留员工,并失去识别消费者需求的机会。在地区和农村环境中,由于职业治疗师在与直接专业支持隔绝的情况下工作,情况可能会进一步复杂化。在这个项目中,一个地区和农村保健服务机构的职业治疗师参加了一项活动,目的是加强他们对自己独特方法的沟通和信心。该活动涉及为医院环境开发和使用“以职业为中心”或基于“职业治疗模式”的工具和资源。尽管职业治疗师报告说,做出这种改变需要努力,但他们认识到,通过坚持不懈和合作,人们对职业治疗在环境中的贡献有了更好的理解,职业治疗师的工作满意度也有所提高。开发的工具和资源可以很容易地被其他组织采用。这些发现表明,在医院工作的职业治疗师可以改变他们的行为和信念,使其更忠于职业。这有利于职业治疗师、消费者和更广泛的医疗团队。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Implementation of occupation-centred practice by occupational therapists in acute adult physical settings: A mixed method study in a regional and rural health service

Introduction

Occupational therapy is underpinned by the belief that occupation facilitates health and wellbeing. However, evidence suggests that occupational therapists encounter challenges to implementing occupation-centred practice. The aim of this study was to investigate the uptake, acceptability and impact of a workplace intervention designed to enhance occupation-centred practice of occupational therapists in an acute adult physical context.

Methods

A concurrent mixed methods study using a pre–post design was employed. The setting was a regional and rural health service in Queensland. Data were collected using an online survey of occupational therapists' knowledge, attitude and confidence regarding occupational therapy models, an audit of medical charts and focus group discussion and in-depth interviews. Quantitative data were presented using descriptive statistics, and discussions were thematically analysed.

Consumer and Community Involvement

No involvement.

Results

Survey results revealed minimal difference between pre- (n = 8) and post- (n = 8) interventions. The medical chart audit (pre = 40, post = 28) revealed an increase in occupational language over medically based language. Four themes were identified from the qualitative data (pre = 5, post = 6): change in theoretical awareness and acceptance of occupational therapy models; facilitators for adoption of occupational therapy models in the acute setting; what it takes: the qualities and efforts required of individuals; and enhanced professional identity. The themes revealed that participants varied in their knowledge and implementation of occupation-centred practice pre-intervention and could feel constrained by the workplace context. Post-participants recognised that actively practising occupation centredness impacted positively on their practice.

Conclusion

Participation in an initiative to increase occupation-centred practice resulted in changed behaviours and beliefs for occupational therapists in this study. Participants recognised that their individual contribution and the concerted efforts of their occupational therapy peers led to increased professional identity and understanding of occupational therapy contribution in the acute adult physical setting.

PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY

Occupational therapists promote health and wellbeing by working with people of all abilities to participate in the everyday occupations of life. However, within some hospital settings, occupational therapists face a number of challenges to implementing their desired approach due to time restrictions and dominance of other professions. Because of this, consumers and health colleagues in hospitals are unclear on the role or value of occupational therapists, and occupational therapists feel misunderstood. This may impact on job satisfaction, retention of staff in this setting and missed opportunities for identifying needs for consumers. In a regional and rural setting, this may be further complicated by occupational therapists working in isolation from direct professional support.

In this project, occupational therapists in a regional and rural health service participated in an activity aimed to enhance their communication and confidence in their unique approach. The activity involved developing and using tools and resources for a hospital context that were ‘occupation-centred’ or were based on ‘occupational therapy models’. Despite occupational therapists reporting that making this change required effort, they recognised that with persistence and collaboration, there was an improved understanding of occupational therapy contribution in the setting and better job satisfaction for occupational therapists. The tools and resources that were developed can be easily adopted by other organisations. These findings show that occupational therapists working in hospitals can alter their behaviours and beliefs to be more true to the profession. And that this benefits occupational therapists, consumers and the broader health-care team.

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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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