Title: Larry Davidson, Ph.D.
1Participation Analysis How Occupational Therapy
can Promote a Life in the Community
- Larry Davidson, Ph.D.
- Professor of Psychiatry
- Director, Program for Recovery and Community
Health - School of Medicine and
- Institution for Social and Policy Studies
- Yale University
- www.yale.edu/prch
2Main Points
- Occupational therapy, since its founding as a
discipline, has been very closely aligned to what
is now being referred to as recovery-oriented
practice in behavioral health - There are a few ways in which occupational
science and therapy could be expanded and
enriched to provide a comprehensive conceptual
framework for psychiatric rehabilitation - These include incorporating experiential, social,
and contextual dimensions into activity
analysis and utilizing this expanded form of
activity analysis (which we call participation
analysis) as a key tool within a collaborative
relationship between the practitioner and the
person in recovery
3Another Take on the Issue
What occupational therapy can learn from
psychiatric rehabilitation
Reciprocal Enrichment
What psychiatric rehabilitation can learn from
occupational therapy
4A Final Take on the Issue
- How can we, what can we do to, promote the life
in the community envisioned by the Presidents
2003 New Freedom Commission on Mental Health? - Significance of New Freedom designationpart
of disability rights movement that led to passage
of ADA in 1990 by the first Bush - New Freedom refers to ways to enhance the
autonomy of persons with disabilitieshow to do
this for persons with serious mental illnesses?
5Roots of Occupational Therapy
- Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934)
- Adolf (and Mary) Meyer (1866-1950)
Future of Occupational Therapy?
6Activity Theory
- Psychological processes have long been
understood within a reactive context we must
find a new methodology - All functions of consciousness originally
arise from action - Example of Kindergarten
7Learning through Internalization
- Vygotsky describes the process of
internalization as consisting of a series of
transformations a) An operation that initially
represents an external activity is reconstructed
and begins to occur internally b) An
interpersonal process is transformed into an
intrapersonal one and c) The transformation of
an interpersonal process into an intrapersonal
one is the result of a long series of
developmental events.
8Example of Internalization
- We call the internal reconstruction of an
external operation internalization. A good
example of this process may be found in the
development of pointing. Initially, this gesture
is nothing more than an unsuccessful attempt to
grasp something, a movement aimed at a certain
object which designates forthcoming activity. The
child attempts to grasp an object placed beyond
his reach his hands, stretched toward that
object, remain poised in the air. His fingers
make grasping movements. At this initial stage
pointing is represented by the childs movement,
which seems to be pointing to an objectthat and
nothing more.
9- When the mother comes to the childs aid and
realizes his movement indicates something, the
situation changes fundamentally. Pointing becomes
a gesture for others. The childs unsuccessful
attempt engenders a reaction not from the object
he seeks but from another person. Consequently,
the primary meaning of that unsuccessful grasping
movement is established by others. Only later,
when the child can link his unsuccessful grasping
movement to the objective situation as a whole,
does he begin to understand this movement as
pointing. At this juncture there occurs a change
in that movements function from an
object-oriented movement it becomes a movement
aimed at another person, a means of establishing
relations. The grasping movement changes to the
act of pointing. As a result of this change, the
movement itself is then physically simplified,
and what results is the form of pointing that we
may call a true gesture. It becomes a true
gesture only after it objectively manifests all
the functions of pointing for others and is
understood by others as such a gesture.
10Zone of Proximal Development
- The zone of proximal development is the
distance between the actual developmental level
as determined by independent problem solving and
the level of potential development as determined
through problem solving under adult guidance or
in collaboration with more capable peers
11- The zone of proximal development defines those
functions that have not yet matured but are in
the process of maturation, functions that will
mature tomorrow but are currently in an embryonic
state. These functions could be termed the buds
or flowers of development rather than the
fruits of development. The actual developmental
level characterizes mental development
retrospectively, while the zone of proximal
development characterizes mental development
prospectively
12Implications
- A full understanding of the concept of the zone
of proximal development must result in
re-evaluation of the role of imitation in
learning a person can imitate only that which
is within her developmental level Using
imitation, children are capable of doing much
more in collective activity or under the guidance
of adults. This fact, which seems to be of little
significance in itself, is of fundamental
importance in that it demands a radical
alteration of the entire doctrine concerning the
relation between learning and development.
13Zone of Proximal Development(and the art of
care/recovery planning)
The Possible
The Not Yet Possible
14Activity Analysis
- Definition
- Analysis of the steps involved in performing and
acquiring a new behavior. Should address what
the activity is (the act), where it is to be
performed (the scene), how it is to be performed
(agency), and why it is to be performed
(purpose). - Implication
- If an adult with a serious mental illness
appears to be stuck, appears not to be learning
anything new, then perhaps that is in part a
result of the fact that no one is showing him or
her how to do new things that he or she is
interested in learning.
15Zone of Proximal Development
Steps involved in performing new behavior
Participation in meaningful activity (not one
that only leads to desired outcome further down
the road!)
16Scaffolding
- Scaffolding is the process by which one person
supports another person to acquire new behaviors,
skills, and habits through use of the zone of
proximal development. The person who facilitates
the new learning may be a parent, teacher,
mentor, coach, or simply a more capable peer
(from Vygotskys original definition above)
basically anyone who has already learned the
particular action to be learned by the other.
This person carries out two inter-related and
essential functions that facilitate the others
learning. These include 1) providing
non-intrusive instruction or demonstration while
encouraging the learner to carry out those parts
of the tasks that are within his or her capacity,
and, at the same 2) carrying out the remaining
parts of the task him or herself. It is the
others presence and performance of those aspects
of the task that the learner cannot yet do that
is referred to as scaffolding.
17Scaffolding
- Often requires the presence of another, more
capable, person - (more capable in terms of already knowing how to
perform the targeted behaviorsnot in a global
sense) - Also can be facilitated by the provision of
needed resources (such as transportation,
security deposits, micro-loans, equipment, and,
perhaps most importantly, emotional/social
support) - Examples range from paint-by-the-numbers, to
learning to tie knots in boy scouts, to
precepting new professional staff in medical
/clinical settings
18A Psychiatric Example
When asked about his own goals, Dorian tells the
staff that he would like to open a checking
account. What do you do?
a. tell Dorian that you will start a skills group
on how to open a checking account to which you
hope he will come, or
b. say Great, we can do that. Lets go to the
bank. and then do just that
19- Hold that thought,
- we will return a
- after brief excursion
- into psychiatry
20Meyers Common Sense Psychiatry
- The proper use of time in some helpful and
gratifying activity appeared to be a
fundamental issue in the treatment of any
neuro-psychiatric patient - A pleasure in achievement, a real pleasure in
the use and activity of ones hands and muscles
and a happy appreciation of time began to be used
an incentives in the management of our patients,
instead of abstract exhortations to cheer up and
to behave according to abstract or repressive
rules. The main advance of the new scheme was the
blending of work and pleasure.
21Occupation as Central
- Occupation covers not only what one does to
earn a living, or to have a career, but also all
of the other things people do to have a life. The
emphasis is on human activity, whether that
activity produces something tangible or not. In
performing an activity, people are to find the
intrinsic meaning and enjoyment that make the
activity worthwhile. To capture this broader
notion, Meyer took what he described as a new
step to introduce a freer conception of work
a concept of free and pleasant and profitable
occupationincluding recreation and any form of
helpful enjoyment as the leading principle
22Opportunities
- Our rôle consists in giving opportunities rather
than prescriptions from the first article in
the first issue of the first volume of the
Archives of Occupational Therapy (1922) - It is not a question of specific prescriptions,
but of opportunities, except perhaps where
suggestions can be derived from the history of
the patient and a minute study of the trends of
fancy and even delusions reveals the lines of
predilections and native longingsyet even here
the physician would only exert his ingenuity to
adapt opportunities.
23Building on Strengths
- Obligation on physician to assess strengths and
other positive elements and events as well as
problems and deficits - It takes, above all, resourcefulness and an
ability to respect at the same time the native
capacities and interests of the patient. Freedom
from premature meddling, and tact in avoiding
false comparisons or undue expectations fostering
disappointment, orderliness without pedantry,
cheer and praise without sloppiness and without
surrender of standard these may be the rewards
of a good use of personal gifts and of good
training
24Occupation and Opportunity
- Activity Analysis for role of recovery-oriented
practitioner - Help the person to identify his or her native
capacities and interests -- passions, sources
of meaning and pleasure, and innate and acquired
strength and assets to build on - Help the person to identify meaningful activities
that also can be short-term steps toward longer
term goals (if possible, but not necessary) - Provide or arrange for scaffolding and in vivo
role modeling and problem solving in relation to
engagement in desired activity
25Example of Activity Analysis
What if she hangs up on me?
Why am I calling her?
Who am I calling?
- Sequence of major steps
- Sit in chair comfortably.
- Find phone number in address book accurately.
- Pick up receiver carefully.
- Listen for dial tone attentively.
- Press phone number correctly.
- Wait for an answer patiently.
- Talk to person clearly.
- Conclude conversation courteously.
- Put receiver down firmly (Hersch et al., 2005,
p.48).
What will I say?
Whats she going to say?
What if she says yes?
Who else is going to know?
What will she want from me?
26Substantially Different Experience if
- Calling potential employer
- Calling ones elderly parents
- Calling ones children
- Calling a friend
- Calling for information
- Calling for dinner reservation
- Calling exterminator for bug infestation
- Calling 911
- Etc.
27As a result
- Activity analysis needs to incorporate
experiential, social, and contextual dimensions
of human behavior - In doing so, we shift from activity per se to
participation in meaningful (everyday)
activities - And we shift from primarily technical expertise
to a collaborative relationship in which the
persons own desires and aspirations drive the
process
28Participation Analysis
- the systematic consideration of an
individuals possibilities for positive,
self-directed engagement in personally meaningful
everyday activities within naturally-occurring or
real life contexts - carried out by practitioner and person in
recovery as part of a collaborative relationship
driven by the persons own hopes, dreams, and
aspirations and building on his or her innate and
acquired strengths
29- But what if the person has no goals?
30Top 10 Reasons to do Something rather than Nothing
- For participation to be meaningful, it should
offer the person access to opportunities - For becoming better at something and/or
accomplishment - For affiliation and/or connection with others
- For affinity
- For exercising agency and/or authority
- For experiencing pleasure and/or joy
- For connecting to something larger than oneself
- For reflection, quietude, and/or self-expression
- For caring for and being good to ones self
- For caring for/helping others out (and being
cared for by others) - For prospering
31Conversation Tips
- A helpful conversational structure might be to
begin with talking about the persons everyday
activities in the present, then move to
reflecting on his or her ways of participating in
everyday activities from the past that were
different, and then to what the person might like
to add or change in the future if it were to
become possible. - Consider it a conversation, not an interview,
that may possibly occur across several encounters
or over time, rather than as a checklist of
topics to be covered or completed.
32- Some examples of opening questions that might be
used as starting points in creating a
conversation about the persons everyday life and
activity participation include - What are your days like at the moment? How do you
spend your days at the moment? - What kinds of activities are you involved in?
- Who do you spend time with? What kinds of
activities do you do together? - What kinds of activities did you used to do?
- What have you done that gave you a sense of
enjoyment or achievement? - Whats been helpful in getting to do these
things? - What is important to you in your life now?
- What would you like to be doing in the future if
it were to become possible? - What could be the issues or obstacles to
overcome? And what might help to make it happen?
33- Helpful approaches to phrasing questions so as to
elaborate your understanding of the persons
everyday activities include - Practice phrasing questions using what and
how to facilitate conversation (e.g., What is
your work like? How do you get to your friends
place?) - Practice phrasing subsequent questions so that
they explicitly build on what the other persons
been saying (e.g., You just mentioned doing
nothing much, what is doing nothing like? You
spoke earlier of visiting your family sometimes,
what kinds of things do you do when you visit
them?) - Everyday activities can seem familiar to us, even
a taken for granted part of life, and so this
makes it easier for us to assume we know what
someone else means when talking about his or her
everyday activities. Being open to the
possibility that your ideas may be different from
the other persons ideas about everyday
activities makes this less likely.
34Two Examples
- Anthony and the ER
- Considering social and contextual issues
- A case of fossilized behavior
- Mira and the eyeglasses
- When someone doesnt do something that he or she
wants to do - Considering the multitude of taken for granted
steps involved in everyday activities
35Mira
- Working backwards from desired activity
- Does Mira know how she is going to pay for the
glasses? - Health insurance, Medicaid, out of pocket,
accessing reimbursement, whats covered and
whats not, etc. - Will Mira be able to pick out and try on frames?
- Having preferences, looking in a mirror, being
touched by a stranger, making decisions, etc. - Will Mira be able to answer the salespersons
questions? - Understanding and conversing, being accompanied
by her mother, being seen as a mental patient,
etc. -
36- How will Mira get to the store?
- Asking parents or friends for a ride, taking the
bus, who will she see at the mall, etc. - Has Mira ever worn glasses before?
- What was that like? Has she lost glasses in the
past? What does she associate with wearing
glasses? Who does she know who wears glasses? - How will wearing glasses change Miras life?
- Will having glasses increase her familys
expectations of her? Will wearing glasses make
her less likely to get married?
37Why the focus on the everyday?
- Because, really, thats all there is
- Because that is where recovery happens
- Because that is the realm of the taken for
granted that really can no longer be so - Capabilities and the role of the self
38The Need for a New Framework
- Moral Treatment (1790-1840)
- Institutionalization (1840-1954)
- De-Institutionalization (1954-1976)
- Community Support Movement (1976-1996)
- Recovery Movement (1996- ?)
39Underlying Assumptions
- Treatment (and cure) are provided by mental
health professionals to the person - The person has to be treated and recover first
before reclaiming an ordinary life in the
community - Only normal people can live their own lives in
a self-determined, autonomous way in community
settings
40Alternative of Disability Model
- Person has to learn how to live with and despite
the disability - Supports and accommodations may be needed, but
they are used by the person to live his or her
own life - People have aspirations and talents as well as
disabilities and needs (person can be both sick
and well at the same time)
41Two Different Forms of Recoveryin relation to
Serious Mental Illnesses
Clinical, Symptomatic, or Functional Recovery (or
remission)
- Recovery from refers to eradicating the symptoms
and ameliorating the deficits caused by serious
mental illnesses. - Being in recovery refers to learning how to live
a self-determined life in the face of the
enduring disability which may be associated with
serious mental illnesses.
Civil and Disability Rights, Independent Living
Movement (self-determination)
42Capabilities Framework
- People are what they do in each moment, not what
they have now or in the future - Freedom is only real when people have both the
opportunities and the resources to do what they
value - Unfreedoms have to be removed as well as
opportunities and resources being offered (i.e.,
discrimination is materially limiting there are
often obstacles in peoples ways that need to be
removed)
43Social-Political Analogy
Deus ex Machina
Customary view
Resources ()
Developing Country
Political Freedoms Participation
Economic Growth
44- Not enough money leads to . . .
- Not enough economic growth . . .
- Political freedoms delayed indefinitely
(and thus denied)
45Sens Upside Down World
Reduce Unfreedoms
External Resources
Economic Growth
Developing Country
Increase Freedoms Participation
Internal Resources
46As Applied to Recovery
Deus ex Machina
Customary view
Treatment
Normality?
Person with Mental Illness
Reduce Symptoms
47- Not enough treatment leads to . . .
- (not enough compliance, etc.)
- Not yet normal enough
- Recovery delayed indefinitely
(and thus denied)
48Turning Psychiatry Upside Down
Reduce Stigma Discrimination
Treatment Supports
Recovery
Person with Mental Illness
Increase Agency Participation
Persons own resources
49Implications
- Now that people are outside of institutions, many
(45-65) will recover from serious mental
illnesses over time - Among those who do not recover fully from the
disorder, most will be able to craft a meaningful
and gratifying life for themselves, as long as
they are afforded opportunities, resources, and
supports
50This is how Recovery becomes possible for
everyone
- A person can be in recovery regardless of the
duration and severity of the disability. - Being in recovery only makes sense for people
who have not yet recovered because it involves a
process of restoring or developing a meaningful
sense of belonging and positive sense of identity
apart from ones disability while rebuilding a
life in the broader community despite or within
the limitations imposed by that disability.
-- Connecticut Department of Mental Health
and Addiction Services, 2002
51How to Promote Being in Recovery?
- Not necessarily the same as how you promote
recovery from the disorder (e.g., employment,
housing) - By removing unfreedoms that block or impede
progress (e.g., discrimination) - By focusing on the persons own efforts to have
(or rebuild) a life, and by encouraging and
supporting those efforts
52Key Issues
- People take for granted that you just do things.
A person with mental illness, its sometimes hard
its like youre distracted, you cant get
involved because youre not sort of all there. - Basically, if you know recoveryit is more about
taking control of your life and what you are
going to do.
53 A Main Task
- Once a person comes to believe that he or she
is an illness, there is no one left inside to
take a stand toward the illness. Once you and the
illness become one, then there is no one left
inside of you to take on the work of recovering,
of healing, of rebuilding the life you want to
live (Deegan, 1993, p. 9).
54Woman with schizophrenia(Esso Leete, 1993)
- What makes life valuable for those of us with
mental illness? Exactly what is necessary for
other people. We need to feel wanted, accepted,
and loved We need support from friends and
family We need to feel a part of the human
race, to have friends. We need to give and
receive love.
55What Love Does
- I feel important. I feel like Pinocchio. I was
only a dead wooden puppet. You gave me time, a
listening ear, compassion, and love. You made me
feel heard. You did not walk away in frustration
when I kicked and screamed against my own
limitations. You were/are patient with me. I have
thus concluded I am not a monster. Â I can see
both sides. I can understand and hold both sides,
both sides of myself. I know I will not be healed
from my past in one day, and I am willing to hang
in there and work at it, slowly chip away at a
problem until I can fashion a solution tailored
for me But I can tailor a solution for me. You
listened to me. Now, I listen to me. That's the
difference.
56Wresting Back Control from the Illness
- I'm in a contest of will with the world, with
nature ... and I say to myself Well, damn it,
you just calm down and drink your coffee. And I
say to myself You'll just have to wait five
minutes. So I wait. And then the roommate's
still bugging me out but then I have the
control, the self-esteem, the confidence, and
it's manageable. Then I just proudly walk to my
room and take space. I mean, it's successful.
57- There is this wicked side of me that can stop
me. Just like when Im looking for a job and see
a job that would suit me, there is a voice that
says, Ah, thats no job for you, and stuff like
that. And so I have to work a lot with that
voice, Oh, shut up, Im going to apply for that
job anyway Its a struggle going on inside me
all the time.
58Regaining a sense of personal efficacy
- It is being active, and I take pride and Im
independent to a certain extent . . . like in my
jazz music, like I'll turn on my jazz radio, and
Ill love it . . . its my interest. I turn the
radio on myself, no one had it going to nourish
themselves, to enter-tain themselves, like
parents would at a house. I turn it on, Im
responsible, I enjoy the music, I make notes and
draw while Im hearing it . . . Then I turn it
off, then I have some evidence, Ive got
something done, Ive been productive, I have the
drawings to look at. . . It was for me and by me.
My own nurturing. So Im proud of this effort.
59Regaining Confidence
- I have a good will, it just takes the right
amount, the um, the kitchen has to be right, so
to speak, before I do the endeavors. The
feeling has to be right. Everything has to be
right before you can make a cake If you dont
feel like buying the flour for six months then
you dont feel like it. Then you get your flour,
and then you notice you dont have enough
cinnamon, so you wait a while longer.
60Recovery happens in the present (as
opposed to later)
- Before everything was in the long term
Instead, having to hang on, to find strength, I
live small moments more intensely. Now were
here, you and I, and my whole life is all here,
only here. It doesnt matter what else happens
This moment here is more important than anything
that might happen tomorrow. -
- This was definitely decisive for me, this fact
of living intensely what Im doing instead of
worrying about the future or other things was a
cornerstone for everything a very difficult
awareness, a difficult position to take, but
living intensely whatever Im doing, being very
concentrated, for me personally I did this and
no one told me to do it. I did it on my own and
it works. For me.
61Identifying Short-Term, Realistic Goals that
Matter to the Person
- So I take it step by step. I have learned to
hurry slowly and do it in stages and set partial
goals when I have discovered that it makes sense
doing it by partial goals and making it
manageable, then you get positive feedback that
its going okay and then you dont hit the wall.
Thats my strategy, the strategy for success
partial goals and sensible goals and attainable
goals, and thats something Ive learned to do in
order to achieve things. When I have been able to
deal with something thats been a struggle and
feel secure, I move on. Step by step, put things
behind me.
62Implications for practice and care
- Most people with serious mental illnesses will be
able to figure out how to live a meaningful and
gratifying life in the face of the disorder - In order to do so, they may first have to regain
a sense of hope and a sense of being loved and
accepted as a worthwhile person who can have some
control over his or her life and be somewhat
effective in the world in doing ordinary tasks - This may represent a first and essential step
toward recovery and a first focus of care
63What providers can do
- In order to lay this essential foundation, care
providers need to pay particular attention to the
persons everyday life. This is because recovery
is made up of the same innumerable small acts of
living in which we all engage, such as walking a
dog, playing with a child, sharing a meal with a
friend, listening to music, or washing dishes. - It is nothing more but also nothing less.
64A Very Useful Question
-
- What is worth doing today?
- Heifetz, R.A. Linsky, M. (2002). Leadership
on the line. Boston Harvard Business School
Press.
65The Crux of the Problem
Well, this is a very impressive resume, young
man. I think youre going to make a fine
patient.
66The Story of Steve
- In his frequent efforts to promote the
transformation agenda in Connecticut,
Commissioner of Mental Health and Addiction
Services, Tom Kirk, Ph.D., tells the story of a
27 year-old man named Steve who he met during a
visit to a supported housing program. When he
asked the staff how Steve was doing in his
recovery, Commissioner Kirk reports that they
responded favorably about how well Steve was
doing in the program, following the rules, taking
his medication as prescribed, and having his
symptoms relatively under control. - When asked if this was the kind of life they
hoped for this young man for the foreseeable
future, the staff seemed puzzled, confident that
they were doing their best. His condition, after
all, was stable and he had not been admitted to
the hospital for several years. Commissioner
Kirk, however, was not satisfied. He asked the
staff to go one step further and consider whether
or not this would be the kind of life that would
make them content were they in Steves place. - Once it was phrased this way, the staff began to
think that more could be done for, and more could
be expected from, this clever college graduate
who was engaging, loved cars and racing, and had
aspirations of becoming a mechanic. But how could
they help him with that? They had little idea as
to what they could do beyond treating his
schizophrenia and encouraging him to participate
in program activities as a way of luring him away
from his television set. Becoming a mechanic
seemed a long way off, if it was to be possible
at all.
67Homeless woman with mental illness
- When you carry something, let me see, when you
carry like a television, you know, thats heavy,
you have something heavy and you put it down, you
feel better. Thats how I feel today. You dont
see me crying no more, you know. I need somebody
to, to understand me and help me. Like I say, if
youre going to go to my house or youre going to
call me, or you need to see me, please ask me how
I am
68- cause I got my problems. I need somebody to
come and help me talk. Dont give me nothing. I
dont want nothing from nobody. I just want you
to sit with me. Juanita, how are you today?
Thats all.
69Questions or Comments