用健康促进的方法来构建家庭日常活动的父母经验及其对健康和幸福的意义

Jennifer S. Pitonyak, K. Souza, Caroline Umeda, T. Jirikowic
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在早期干预环境中为幼儿及其家庭工作的职业治疗提供者经常提供干预,以支持与社会参与、健康管理和家庭和社区相关职业相关的家庭常规。家庭惯例与个人和家庭的健康和福祉有着千丝万缕的联系,但环境影响可能影响对惯例的满意度和表现,从而导致健康和职业结果的差异。健康促进干预方法旨在解决自然环境中职业表现的环境方面问题,因此,在早期干预环境中提供以家庭为中心、基于常规的干预可能是一种有用的方法。本研究采用访谈法,收集两位家长对家庭日常生活的看法。参与者来自一个更广泛的家庭心理健康干预试点项目,该项目在8个家庭中实施,是仅有的两位自愿完成额外访谈的父母。采用生命历程健康发展框架指导研究设计和数据分析。使用传统的定性内容分析对访谈进行录音、转录和编码。主题通过专家和成员的检查进行验证。来自加拿大职业表现测量的参与者数据也可以从更广泛的项目中获得,并用于三角测量结果。由此产生的主题说明了家庭惯例的复杂性,价值观的影响和通常隐藏的父母决策对惯例的影响,惯例与家庭健康和福祉的联系,以及环境对惯例的影响。研究结果表明,在提供以家庭为中心、以常规为基础的干预措施时,考虑到环境因素的重要性,并建议考虑到家庭常规与健康和福祉等结果的相互关系,采用健康促进方法进行干预。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Using a Health Promotion Approach to Frame Parent Experiences of Family Routines and Their Significance for Health and Well-being
ABSTRACT Occupational therapy providers working with young children and their families in early intervention settings frequently provide interventions to support family routines related to social participation, health management, and related occupations at home and in the community. Family routines are inextricably tied to individual and family health and well-being, yet contextual influences can impact satisfaction with and performance of routines resulting in disparities in health and occupational outcomes. A health promotion approach to intervention is intended to address contextual aspects of occupational performance in natural settings, and therefore, may be a useful approach for providing family-centered, routines-based intervention in early intervention settings. This basic qualitative study used interview methods to collect perspectives about family routines from two parent participants. The participants were from a broader pilot project on family mental health intervention that was implemented with eight families and were the only two parents who volunteered to complete additional interviews. The life course health development framework was used to guide study design and data analysis. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and coded using conventional qualitative content analysis. Themes were validated through expert and member checks. Participant data from the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure was also available from the broader project and was used to triangulate findings. Resulting themes illustrated the complexity of family routines, influence of values and often hidden parental decision making on routines, connectedness of routines with family health and well-being, and impact of contextual influences on routines. Findings inform the importance of considering contextual factors when providing family-centered, routines-based intervention and suggest the fit for a health promotion approach to intervention given the inter-relatedness of family routines with outcomes such as health and well-being.
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