Title: Introducing
1- Introducing
-
- Researched and
- written for the
- Canadian
- Association of
- Occupational
- Therapists
2The Evolving Canadian Guidelines
- Occupational Therapy Guidelines for
Client-Centered Practice - 1983 (concepts, process, assessment)
- 1986 (intervention)
- 1987 (outcomes)
- 1991 (Consolidated)
- 1993 (Mental Health)
- Enabling Occupation An Occupational Therapy
Perspective - 1997, 2002 (with Updated Preface)
- Enabling Occupation II (2007, 2013)
3Outline
- Project Team National Consultation
- Overview of the book
- Section I-IV key models and reflections
- Occupation
- Enablement
- Occupation-based enablement
- Positioning OT for leadership
4Enabling Occupation II Project Team
- Primary Author, Chair Elizabeth Townsend
- Primary Author Helene Polatajko
- Project Manager Janet Craik
- CAOT Team Members Claudia von Zweck
- Kathy Van Benthem
- 11 National Advisory Panel members
- 61 Canadian Contributing Authors
- 12 Reviewers
- 7 Publication team members
5National Consultation
- National Advisory Panel
- 61 Canadian Contributing Authors
- CAOT Policy Orientation
- CAOT Web Page With Updates
- CAOT Website Survey Plus Bulletin Board
- CAOT Conference June 2006 Forum
- National Diversity Review
- Peer Review Consumer, National International
- French translation/review
6- Primary Authors
- Elizabeth Townsend Helene Polatajko
- Amoroso, Bice Egan, Mary Pentland, Wendy
- Backman, Catherine Freeman, Andrew
Picard, Huguette - Baptiste, Sue Harvey, Andrew Purdie, Lisa
- Beagan, Brenda Head, Brenda Quach, Judy
- Brintnell, Sharon Iwama, Michael Rappolt,
Susan - Brown, Jocelyn Jarman, Jennifer Rigby, Patty
- Cameron, Deb Jongbloed, Lyn
Rivard, Annette - Cantin, Noémi Kirsh, Bonnie Sedgwick, Amy
- Caron Santha, Josiane Krupa, Terry Shaw, Lynn
- Clark, Jo Kumas-Tan, Zofia Stadnyk, Robin
- Cockburn, Lynn Laliberte Rudman, Debbie
Stewart, Debra - Connor-Schisler, Anne Landry, Jennifer Stewart,
Lynn - Craik, Janet Law, Mary Sumsion, Thelma
- Davis, Jane Lin, Nancy Thibeault, Rachel
- Dickinson, Randy Letts, Lori Trentham, Barry
- Doble, Susan Liu, Lili Trudel, Louis
- Donnelly, Catherine Manojlovich, Mary Versnel,
Joan
7Overview
- Vision
- To herald an era of occupational enablement for
occupational therapists and our clients. - Purpose
- To honour our past, affirm our present, and
profile a future that is focused on
occupation-based enablement.
8Book Structure
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword by Mary Law
- Prologue by Thelma Sumsion
- Overview Guidelines development Cultural
Location - Section I Occupation the core domain
- Section II Enablement the core competency
- Section III Occupation-based Enablement
- Section IV Positioning Occupational Therapy
- Epilogue, Glossary, Index, References
9Why Read This Text?
- This text honours the past, affirms the present,
and profiles a future for occupational therapy
focused on occupation-based enablement. - With its focus on occupation as core domain and
enablement as core competency, this book
addresses the age-old question, - What is occupational therapy?
10What is Occupational Therapy?
- Occupational therapy is the art and science of
enabling engagement in everyday living, through
occupation of enabling people to perform the
occupations that foster health and well-being
and of enabling a just and inclusive society so
that all people may participate to their
potential in the daily occupations of life
(Townsend Polatajko, 2007, p. 372).
11How is Enabling Occupation II different from
Enabling I?
- Enabling Occupation (1997, 2002)
- Canadian Model of Occupational Performance
(CMOP), the Person-Environment-Occupation (PEO)
Model and the Occupational Performance Process
Model (OPPM). -
- Enabling Occupation II (2007) presents the
scholarship and evidence to firmly ground
occupational therapy in occupation and
enablement. - Canadian Model of Occupational Performance and
Engagement (CMOP-E) which portrays an
occupational perspective that includes and
extends beyond occupational performance - Canadian Model of Client-Centred Enablement
(CMCE) which portrays a spectrum of enablement
skills based on enablement foundations (beliefs,
values, assumptions, concepts) to alert
practitioners to the core competence and power
relations in occupational therapys
client-centred practice and, - Canadian Practice Process Framework (CPPF) which
portrays eight action points and alternative
pathways in the process of practice clients.
12Enabling Occupation II The Three Key Models
Core Domain of Concern
Core Competency
Core Process
13Section I
- Occupation The core domain of
- concern for occupational therapy
- Vision
- To embrace human occupation as the core domain of
- concern for occupational therapy.
- Purpose
- To present our best understanding of human
occupation as it relates to occupational therapy.
14Occupation The Core Domain of Concern for
Occupational Therapy
- 1. Specifying the domain of concern Occupation
as core Helene J. Polatajko, Jane Davis, Deb
Stewart, Noémi Cantin, Bice Amoroso, Lisa Purdie,
Daniel Zimmerman. - 2. Human occupation in context Helene J.
Polatajko, Catherine Backman, Sue Baptiste, Jane
Davis, Parvin Eftekhar, Andrew Harvey, Jennifer
Jarman, Terry Krupa, Nancy Lin, Wendy Pentland,
Debbie Laliberte Rudman, Lynn Shaw, Bice Amoroso,
Anne Connor-Schisler. - 3. Occupational science Imperatives for
occupational therapy Helene J. Polatajko
(Editor), Daniel Molke, Sue Baptiste, Susan
Doble, Josiane Caron Santha, Bonnie Kirsh, Brenda
Beagan, Zofia Kumas-Tan, Michael Iwama, Debbie
Laliberte Rudman, Rachel Thibeault, Robin
Stadnyk.
15The Taxonomic Code of Occupational Performance
(TCOP)
16Basic Assumptions
17Canadian Model of Occupational Performance and
Engagement CMOP-E
18Models of Health and Well-Being
19Characteristics of Occupation
20Section I Reflections
- How to embrace occupation as the core domain of
concern in occupational therapy? - How can the language systems enhance an
occupational perspective? - How can the CMOP-E frame your practice beyond
performance to include modes of occupational
interaction such as occupational development,
capacity, repertoire? - How can occupational science inform occupational
therapy practice?
21Section II
- Enablement The core competency of occupational
therapy - Vision
- To embrace enabling as the core competency of
- occupational therapy.
- Purpose
- To raise critical awareness about how
occupational therapists practice.
22Enablement The Core Competency of Occupational
Therapy
- 4. Enabling Occupational therapys core
competency Elizabeth A. Townsend, Brenda Beagan,
Zofia Kumas-Tan, Joan Versnel, Michael Iwama,
Jennifer Landry, Debra Stewart, Jocelyn Brown. - 5. Enabling individual change Elizabeth A.
Townsend, Barry Trentham, Jo Clark,
Claire-Jehanne Dubouloz-Wilner, Wendy Pentland,
Susan Doble, Debbie Laliberte Rudman. - 6. Enabling social change Elizabeth A. Townsend,
Lynn Cockburn, Lori Letts, Rachel Thibeault,
Barry Trentham.
23Occupational Therapy Clients
24Occupational Therapy Enablement Foundations
25Canadian Model of Client-Centred Enablement
(CMCE)
26Enablement Continuum
27(No Transcript)
28Section II Reflections
- How to imagine the scope of the client beyond the
individual level? - Can CMCE help with documentation and
communication practices, - describing what we do?
- Can you define enabling in enabling
occupation? - How do you avoid ineffective enablement?
- Can chapter 6 spark new ideas new opportunities
for occupational therapy? - Can we broaden our scope and have an impact on a
greater number of people if we consider our
client as communities, organizations, or
populations? - Instead of waiting for referrals to come in can
we act on behalf of populations and uncover
situations where there is occupational
deprivation and offer solutions that enable? - What stories do you have on enabling social
change?
29Section III
- Occupation-based enablement
- Vision
- To enable our clients to benefit from the full
potential of a practice focused on occupational
enablement. - Purpose
- To bring structure and form to occupation-based
practice and to describe the how of occupational
enablement.
30Occupation-based Enablement
- 7. Occupation-based enablement A practice
mosaicHelene J. Polatajko, Noémi Cantin, Bice
Amoroso, Pat McKee, Annette Rivard, Bonnie Kirsh,
Debbie Laliberte Rudman, Patty Rigby, Nancy Lin - 8. Occupation-based practice The essential
elementsHelene J. Polatajko, Jane Davis, Noémi
Cantin, Claire-Jehanne Dubouloz-Wilner, Barry
Trentham - 9. Introducing the Canadian Practice Process
Framework (CPPF) Amplifying the context Janet
Craik, Jane Davis, Helene J. Polatajko - 10. Using the Canadian Process Practice
Framework Amplifying the process Jane Davis,
Janet Craik, Helene J. Polatajko
31The Breadth of Occupation Therapy Focused on
Enablement
32Canadian Practice Process Framework (CPPF)
33Fit Chart
34Section III Reflections
- Do you see how practice fits into figure 7.1?
- Can the five essential elements of practice help
you define your scope of practice (along with you
knowledge, skills, regulations)? - In the absence of evidence to support our
practice, consider how abductive reasoning
legitimizes what we do. - Can Figure 8.2 Fit Chart help you in abductive
reasoning and lead you to sound clinical
decisions to help address client occupational
issues? - Can you structure documentation practices around
CPPF? - Could you use CPPF interprofessionally in your
practice?
35Section IV
- Positioning occupational therapy for leadership
- Vision
- To position Canadian occupational therapists as
world leaders in advancing an occupational
therapy vision of health, well-being, and justice
through occupation - Purpose
- To advance the vision by escalating scholarship
in practice, accountability, and access to
occupational therapy
36Positioning Occupational Therapy for Leadership
11. Escalating participation in scholarly
practice for enabling occupation Elizabeth A.
Townsend, Mary Egan, Mary Law, Mary Manojlovich,
Brenda Head. 12. Accountability for enabling
occupation Discovering opportunities Elizabeth
A. Townsend, Andrew Freeman, Lili Liu, Judy
Quach, Susan Rappolt, Annette Rivard 13. Funding,
policy, and legislative opportunities Elizabeth
A. Townsend, Lyn Jongbloed, Robin Stadnyk, Hilary
Drummond 14. Occupational therapy workforce
planning Elizabeth A. Townsend, Claudia von
Zweck, Sue Baptiste, Terry Krupa, Huguette
Picard, Louis Trudel
37Enabling Occupation II Second edition (2013)
38Leadership in Enabling Occupation (LEO) Model
39Section IV Reflections
- How can we escalate practice through scholarship
and accountability? - Can we exert our power through language of
occupation? - How can we escalate practice through funding and
workforce planning? - Be forward thinking and envision what the ideal
practice would/could be. - Consider what strengths and challenges are faced
in the practice setting and what strategies can
be used to enhance enabling occupation through
the 4 forces of scholarship, accountability,
funding and workforce planning
40Critical Reflections
- How can you herald an era of occupational
enablement for occupational therapists and our
clients? - How can you attend to diversity in the profession
and clients? - How can you position the profession
politically, strategically, economically?
41Articles relating to Enabling Occupation II
- Craik, J., Townsend, E., Polatajko, H. (2008).
Introducing the new guidelines Enabling
Occupation II Advancing an Occupational Therapy
Vision for Health, Well-being, Justice through
Occupation, OT Now, 10 (1), p. 3-5. - Fazio, K., Hicks, E., Kuzma, C., Leung, P.,
Schwartz, A., Stergiou-Kita, M. (2008) The
Canadian Practice Process Framework Using a
conscious approach to occupational therapy
practice, OT Now, 10 (4), p. 6-9. - Stadnyk, R., Phillips, J., Sapeta, S., MacAulay,
A., Champion, M., Tam, L. Craik, J. (2009).
The Canadian Model of Client-Centred Enablement
Reflections from diverse occupational therapy
practitioners. OT Now, 11(3), 26-28. - Zhang, C., McCarthy, C. Craik, J. (2008).
Students as translators for the Canadian Model
of Occupational Performance and Engagement, OT
Now, 10 (2), p. 3-5.