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The Occupational Therapy Practice Framework:

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Describe our DOMAIN ... Frame client concerns and issues within the domain of occupational therapy ... constructs to the domain & updates terms throughout to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Occupational Therapy Practice Framework:


1
The Occupational Therapy Practice Framework
  • Domain Process
  • Prepared by AOTAs
  • Commission on Practice
  • Presented by
  • Mary Jane Youngstrom MS,OTR, FAOTA


2
What is the OT Practice Framework?
  • A richer more focused description of occupational
    therapya new document
  • Adopted by the RA in May 2002
  • Replaces UT III

3
Why is it important?
  • Reflects changes in knowledge
  • Emphasizes the professions focus on occupation
  • Reflects updated language. Provides links to
    World Health Organizations International
    Classification of Functioning (ICF) language

4
The ICF
  • A classification which provides common language
    to describe health and health related states

5
ICF Components
Body Functions Structures
Activities Participation
Environmental Factors
Barriers Facilitators
Functions Structures
Capacity Performance
6
How does OT fit into this classification?
  • OT considers all aspects of classification when
    delivering services
  • OT strength lies in linking activities to
    participation within context

7
Purpose of the Framework
  • ... A two fold purpose

8
Purpose of the Framework
  • Describe our DOMAIN
  • More clearly articulate OTs unique focus on
    daily life activities and interventions that
    promote engagement in occupations to support
    participation in context.
  • Outline an occupation based OT PROCESS
  • Give practitioners a way to think about, talk
    about and apply occupation across the OT process

9
Relationship of the domain and the process
  • Domain outlines the area in which we provide
    services
  • Process describes the structural pieces (i.e.
    evaluation, intervention outcomes) we use when
    delivering services
  • They are interdependent

10
Why is it important to be clear about our domain
and process
  • ?????

11
Domain of Occupational Therapy
Engagement in Occupation to Support
Participation in Context
Performance in Areas of Occupation
Performance Skills
Performance Patterns
Context
Activity Demands
Client Factors
12
Our domain
  • The area of human experience in which we offer
    assistance to others.
  • We help others to engage in everyday life
    activitiesor.
    OCCUPATIONS

13
Occupation
  • Defined as
  • Activities.. of everyday life, named,
    organized, and given value and meaning by
    individual and a culture. Occupation is
    everything people do to occupy themselves,
    including looking after themselves,enjoying
    life,and contributing to the social and economic
    fabric of their communities(Law, Polatajko,
    Baptiste, Townsend, 1997, p. 32)

14
Domain of Occupational Therapy
Engagement in Occupation to Support
Participation in Context
Performance in Areas of Occupation
Performance Skills
Performance Patterns
Context
Activity Demands
Client Factors
15
Engagement in Occupation to support Participation
in Context
  • The overarching phrase that describes the domain

16
Why was this phrase chosen?
  • Engagementrecognizes choice, personal meaning,
    psychological/emotional and physical aspects of
    performance
  • Occupationa vital force in regaining and
    promoting health
  • Participationan aspect of health in the ICF
    model. By facilitating engagement in occupations
    OTs link activities to participation
  • Contextsupports and mediates engagement

17
Performance inAreas of Occupation
  • Categories of occupation in which people engage
  • Called performance areas in UT III
  • Resorted and expanded from UT III

18
Performance in Areas of Occupation
  • Activities of Daily Living (ADL)
  • Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL)
  • Education
  • Work
  • Play
  • Leisure
  • Social Participation (new)

19
Performance SkillsNEW!
  • Describes observed actionslifts, chooses, asks
  • 3 kinds of skills
  • Motor skills
  • Process skills
  • Communication /Interaction skills

20
Performance Skills
  • Performance skill terms differentiate skilled
    action from underlying body functionsa different
    vocabulary. Provide a language link to engaging
    in occupations.
  • Effective skill performance is not ensured by
    adequate underlying body functions or structures.

21
Performance PatternsNEW!
  • Habits
  • Routines
  • Roles
  • Performance patterns are recurring behaviors
    related to daily routines

22
Context
  • Cultural (retained)
  • Physical (retained)
  • Social (retained)
  • Personal (resorted from UT III Temporal
    contextrefers to age, gender, educational
    socio-economic status)
  • Spiritual (new)
  • Temporal (resorted from UT III Temporal
    contextrefers to time of day, year, stage of
    life etc.)
  • Virtual (new)

23
Activity DemandsNEW!
  • Objects used and their properties
  • Space Demands
  • Social Demands
  • Sequencing and Timing
  • Required actions
  • Required body functions
  • Required body structures

24
Activity Demands
  • Relate to a specific activity
  • Different than physical context and social context

25
Client Factorsbody functions body structures
  • Underlying physiological abilities or structures
    that reside in the person
  • Includes mental (affective, cognitive,
    perceptual), sensory, physical and physiological
    abilities
  • Used classification from ICFaligned with body
    systems
  • Many included in UT as performance components

26
O.T. Practice Framework Process
Intervention Plan
Occupational Profile
Outcomes Engagement in Occupation to
support Participation
Intervention Review
Analysis of Occupational Performance
Intervention Implementation
27
What makes this process unique to OT?
  • What is evaluated occupational needs, problems,
    risks and concerns
  • How the problem is framed occupational
    performancerisks or difficulties with daily life
    tasks
  • Type of intervention use of selected therapeutic
    activities and occupations to facilitate
    engagement in occupation
  • Outcome directed toward facilitating engagement
    in occupation to support participation

28
Key points about the process
  • Client-centered
  • Clients may be individuals, groups or populations
  • Dynamic and interactive
  • Broad inclusive of all practice areas
  • Context an embedded influence on the process of
    service delivery
  • Grounded in occupation

29
The Occupational Profilethe initial step
  • Describes clients occupational history, patterns
    of living, interests, values, and needs
  • Identify clients priorities. What are clients
    needs, wants and concerns re engaging in
    occupations
  • Frame client concerns and issues within the
    domain of occupational therapy

30
Analysis of Occupational Performance
  • More specifically identify underlying factors
    which support and hinder performance
  • --observe performance
  • --perform selected specific assessments
    if needed
  • --consider context, activity
  • demands and client factors

31
Intervention Plan
  • Develop plan in collaboration with client
  • Base plan on
  • --Selected theory and/or practice
    framework
  • --Evidence
  • Select intervention approach create/promote,
    establish/restore, maintain, modify, prevent
  • Target desired outcomes

32
Intervention
  • Action to influence and support performance
  • Types of interventions
  • -Therapeutic use of self
  • -Therapeutic use of occupations/activities
  • Occupation-based activity, purposeful
  • activity, preparatory methods
  • -Consultation process
  • -Education process

33
Intervention Review
  • Review plan, process and progress toward outcomes
  • Modify plan if needed
  • Determine future action

34
Outcomesengagement in occupation to support
participation
  • Describes the broad outcome of the OT
    intervention process
  • Links the outcome to the domain

35
Outcomesengagement in occupation to support
participation
  • Types of outcomes
  • --Occupational performance
  • --Client satisfaction
  • --Role competence
  • --Adaptation
  • --Health and wellness
  • --Prevention
  • --Quality of life

36
Integrating the domain and processapplying the
framework (in practice)
  • Focus on the client as an occupational
    beingstart your eval with the occupational
    profile. Document it
  • When thinking about performance look at all
    facilitators and barriers i.e. perf skills,
    patterns, context, activity demands and client
    factors
  • Describe performance with skill language. Do not
    confuse skills with client factors in either your
    evaluation or intervention actions

37
Integrating the domain and the process
  • CASES

38
Brandipediatric early intervention
  • Age2 years, 6 months
  • Reason for referraldetermine if OT services are
    needed
  • Medical historyhealth
  • Family history--unremarkable

39
BrandiEvaluation and impressions
  • Impression
  • Performance skills ?
  • Performance patterns ?
  • Context ?
  • Activity demands ?
  • Client factors
  • Slight speech and language delays
  • Age appropriate fine and gross motor skills
  • Age appropriate cognitive skills
  • CONCLUSIONno therapy needed
  • Assessments
  • Bayley Scale of Infant Developmentscored 30-32
    months

40
BrandiEvaluation at 3 yr 3 mo
  • Assessments
  • Classroom and playground observation
  • Teacher interview
  • Sensory history
  • Occupational profile
  • Peabody Development Motor Scales
  • Impression
  • --Perf patternssticks to familiar activities
  • -- Context--Difficulty in multisensory
    environment. Social demands often overwhelming
  • --Activity demandsdifficulty with new tasks
  • --Client factorssensory sensitivities, language
    delays, dyspraxia, vestibular-proprioceptive
    process difficulties

41
Concerns regarding PARTICIPATION
  • Mothers stated concerns
  • I wish she could play more easily with her
    sister
  • Teachers stated concerns
  • I wish her peers could be more accepting,
    support her, and play with her more.

42
Brandi--Intervention
  • Approachmodify context and activity demands to
    support performance at home and school.
    Create/promote opportunities for play
  • Contextprovide quiet calm social context. Make
    physical context clutter free. Minimize
    environmental changes i.e. seat assignments
  • Activity demandsuse visual cues. Break down into
    steps. Select activities with deep pressure and
    proprioceptive properties

43
BrandiEngagement in occupations to support
participation--OUTCOMES
  • Mom states that Brandi is fine now. She plays
    very well with her sister
  • Teacher states that Brandi performs better in
    classroom when activities match her needs.
    Interacting more appropriately with peers.

44
  • What did you notice?

45
Integrating the domain and processapplying the
framework
  • Focus on the client as an occupational
    beinginclude an occupational profile in your
    evaluation. Document it
  • When thinking about performance issues look at
    all facilitators and barriers i.e. Perf. Skills
    patterns, context, activity demands and client
    factors
  • Differentiate between performance skills and
    client body functions or capacities

46
Integrating the domain and processapplying the
framework
  • Observe performance
  • Target goals towards outcomes that will lead to
    participation in daily life contexts

47
In summaryThe Occupational Therapy Practice
Framework Domain and Process
  • Affirms the professions focus on engagement in
    occupation to support participation as an
    important aspect of health
  • Describes and links the professions domain and
    process

48
In summaryThe Occupational Therapy Practice
Framework Domain and Process
  • Incorporates terms more commonly used by other
    disciplines
  • Adds constructs to the domain updates terms
    throughout to reflect current knowledge and
    thinking

49
Using the framework can help you to.
  • Shift the focus of your practice and clarify your
    special contribution
  • Add to your vocabulary new and updated
    terminology and language! (i.e. performance
    patterns, performance skills)
  • Change what you document to make your
    contribution more occupation based
  • Make your practice more client centered
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