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Perceived difficulty in everyday technology use among persons with acquired brain injury of ... PDF

750 Pages·2016·17.02 MB·English
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COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 FACILITATING SOCIAL INTERACTION SKILLS THROUGH OCCUPATION: A GROUP INTERVENTION FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH NEUROLOGICAL PROBLEMS Thursday, 16th June - 14:20 - OS - 1A.02 - Interventions Following Stroke - McMunn Theatre - Abstract ID: 630 - Oral Ms. Carmen Fuchs1, Ms. Elín María Heiðberg1, Mrs. Karina Pedersen1, Mrs. Valerie J. Harris1 1Sjálfsbjörg, Long term rehabilitation centre, National Federation of Physically Impaired People, Reykjavík, Iceland Background: Difficulty with social interaction skills can negatively impact on the daily life of individuals by hinderingparticipationinmeaningfuloccupations. Thispilotstudyofagroupinterventionprogram aims to improve the social skills of individuals with neurological problems living in the community. The program is offered at a long term rehabilitation centre. Theoretical underpinning (eg PEOP / MOHO/ CMOP-E): ThegroupinterventionisguidedbytheOccupationalTherapyInterventionProcessModel(OTIPM) usingamodelforeducationandteachingaswellasoccupationalskillstraining(acquisitionalmodel) with a client-centred approach. Assessment / Intervention/ Technique: The aim of the group intervention is to enhance participants’ social interaction skills through occu- pations of their choice. Participants are assessed using the Evaluation of Social Interaction (ESI) and set individual goals prior to commencing the intervention. The client group consists of seven individualsmeetingfortengroupsessionsandtwoindividualsessionsoveraperiodofsixweeks. All participants had reported having problems with social interaction skills. Evaluation of outcome: The effectiveness of the group intervention will be evaluated using the ESI and a non-standardized self-evaluation of participants’ goals. The results will be presented. Application to practice: Information on the effectiveness of group intervention to improve social interaction skills is essential for therapists to improve their practice. Results can be used to change intervention methods and develop clinical practice. 2 COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY INTERVENTIONS AND THE FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES OF STROKE PATIENTS IN AN IRISH IN-PATIENT REHABILIATION UNIT Thursday, 16th June - 14:40 - OS - 1A.03 - Interventions Following Stroke - McMunn Theatre - Abstract ID: 743 - Oral Ms. Íde O’shaughnessy1, Ms. Anne Connolly1, Ms. Caroline Brennan1 1St. James’s Hospital, Dublin Background: Stroke is the leading cause of acquired disability in Ireland (Irish Heart Foundation, 2010). Occupational Therapists (OTs) aim to improve the functional independence of their pa- tients.There is currently a paucity of Irish research investigating the duration and range of occupa- tional therapy (OT) interventions in stroke rehabilitation, and possible correlation with functional outcomes. Method: A prospective, non-experimental study design was utilised. All patients had a Functional Independence Measure (FIM) completed within 5 days of admission and on discharge. Data from consecutivepatientsadmittedtotheunit,whomeettheinclusionandexclusioncriteriawasrecorded using a proforma designed by the researchers. Therapy times were extrapolated from Electronic Patient Records. Results: Data collection commenced in June 2015. Data correlates with international findings, moderately affected patients (Initial FIM score 40-80) were most likely to make clinically significant gains, return home and were less likely to require extensive supports. OTs utilise a wide range of interventions; in this setting posture and pressure care, personal care retraining and discharge planning appear to be prioritised. Those requiring specialised seating or home visits received the most direct hours of OT. Conclusion: FindingshavehighlightedthattheFIMscoreuponadmissiontorehabilitationishighly predictiveoffunctionaloutcomesanddischargedestinationforourclinicalpopulation. Patientswith moderatelevelsofdependencyonadmissionhavebeenshowntobenefitgreatestfromrehabilitation. Application to Practice: This research demonstrates that in our setting the FIM is a predictive tool for rehabilitation outcomes and OT resources required. 3 COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 IMPLEMENTING STROKE GUIDELINES: A SELF-EVALUATION TOOL TO SUPPORT OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS Thursday, 16th June - 15:00 - OS - 1A.04 - Interventions Following Stroke - McMunn Theatre - Abstract ID: 1228 - Oral Mrs. Esther Steultjens1, Mr. Ton Satink2, Ms. Suzanne Van Hees3 1Research department of Neurorehabilitation, HAN University of Applied Sciences, Verlengde Groenestraat 75, Nijmegen„ 2Research department of Neurorehabilitation & School of Occupational Therapy, HAN university of applied sciences, Nijmegen, 3Department of rehabilitation, occupational therapy. Radboud Medical Center Nijmegen Background: To support occupational therapists (OTs) a self-evaluation tool for implementing the OT stroke guideline (Steultjens, E. et al, 2013) has been developed. Method: The online tool has been developed in a step-wise process. 1) Clinical guidelines were transferred into statements regarding the use of specific measures, goal setting principles, and interventions. Statements reflected the level of application of the guidelines. 30 OTs involved in the initial OT- guidelinedevelopmenttestedthesestatements. Thisconceptself-evaluationtoolwassentoutto210 OTs that had attended the Dutch stroke guideline conference. The final version, is tested among a second group of OTs aiming 1) to know the level of implementation of the OT stroke guideline in OT practice, 2) to know if the self-evaluation tool is effective in implementing guidelines. Results: The statements and feedback were clear, usable and supportive and reflected the guidelines well. OTswithhighimplementationskillsdidnotexperiencethissupportandaskedfornewevidencenot yet described in the guidelines. Generally, the online self-evaluation tool was easy to administer but the possibility to archive the feedback was missed. Conclusion: The self-evaluation tool is usable in practice. Results and conclusions on the support it provides for occupational therapists with low implementation skills will be presented in june 2016. Application to Practice: Guidelineimplementationcanbesupportedwithonlinetoolsforself-evaluationandwillbediscussed with respect to the results of the large survey currently executed. 4 COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 DEVELOPING CULTURAL COMPETENCE BASED ON REFLECTIONS IN INTERNATIONAL FIELDWORK EDUCATION – STUDENT AND TEACHER PERSPECTIVES Thursday, 16th June - 14:00 - OS - 1B.01 - Developments in Education - O’ Flaherty Theatre - Abstract ID: 396 - Oral Ms. Arden Panotes1, Mr. Jay Allen Villon1, Mrs. Caroline Fischl2 1University of the Philippines - Manila, 2Umeå University Background: Cultural competence plays an important role in client-centered occupational therapy. A culturally competent provision of care can contribute in providing relevant and sensitive assessment and in- tervention services for diverse client population. Development of cultural competence is an ongoing and continuous process, and it is thus necessary to start with this in the education of occupational therapy. Literatureindicatesthatinternationalpartnershipsandexchangestudiescanbeastrategy to promote its development among occupational therapy students. Educational Philosophy: Inoccupationaltherapy, reflectivepracticeisessentialindevelopingprofessionalreasoning. Inoccu- pationaltherapyeducation,reflectivelearningisimportantinintegratingknowledgeandexperiences into meaningful perspectives. Pedagogy: Exchange students from Manila, Philippines engaged in learning activities in clinical and role- emerging settings in Umeå, Sweden, such as supervised client care provision, collaborative devel- opment of project proposal for fieldwork placement, and interdisciplinary case management. These activitiesprovidedthemwithopportunitiestointeractandcommunicatewithcolleaguesandclients withSwedishandotherethnicbackgrounds. Discussionsbetweenthestudentsandteachersinvolved were intended to stimulate reflection on students’ experiences. Evaluation: The reflective discussions have been helpful in integrating students’ experiences into meaningful perspectives and have contributed to degrees of cultural competence in both students and teacher. Reflectingonstudents’experiencestogetherwiththeteacherhasincreasedawarenessandsensitivity on cultural differences in daily living as well as occupational therapy practice and education. Application to Education: International exchange programs may contribute into enhancing students’ and teachers’ cultural competence and improving clinical education. 5 COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY STUNDENT’S EXPERIENCES DURING ROLE EMERGING PLACEMENTS Thursday, 16th June - 14:20 - OS - 1B.02 - Developments in Education - O’ Flaherty Theatre - Abstract ID: 1035 - Oral Ms. Christine Schaefer1, Ms. Jolien Van Den Houten1, Mr. Frans Schoonbrood1 1Zuyd University of Applied Sciences Background: Duetosocietaldevelopmentroleemergingplacementsarenecessary. Asitisshowninothercountries they provide opportunities and challenges for the development in a changing health-care system (Overton 2009). Educational Philosophy or theory: In the United Kingdom and Canada the first evaluations of role emerging placements are ongoing (Gregory 2011, Thomas 2011). However, little is known about student’s experiences regarding their preknowledge to fit the requirements of a role emerging placement in the Netherlands. Having started the first periods of role emerging placements at Zuyd Hogeschool in the Netherlands the first evaluation is going on considering the efficiency of the preparation for and the development of competencies during the placement. Pedagogy/educational approaches used: The aim of this study is to show how Dutch students experience preparation on a role emerging placement. A qualitative study with semi-structured interviews using focus groups from different role emerging fields is carried out at the moment. Evaluation: A presentation will show the results of the analysis about student’s experiences during their role emerging placement. It will focus on the preparation for a role emerging placement at Zuyd Hogeschool and the development of role emerging skills. Application to Education and/or practice: The results of this first study will show whether preparation and support during role emerging placements needs adaptation in teaching and coaching. 6 COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 AN E-LEARNING COURSE IN COUNSELLING FOR CLINICAL SUPERVISORS Thursday, 16th June - 14:40 - OS - 1B.03 - Developments in Education - O’ Flaherty Theatre - Abstract ID: 749 - Oral Prof. Sidsel Kaland1 1Department of Occupational therapy, Physiotherapy and Radiography, Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, Bergen University College, Norway Fieldwork is a central learning arena for students under supervising of occupational therapists. The supervisors shall provide challenges; verify students’ academic behavior and their direct patient care (Paschal 2002). Supervisors should also “interpret” the complex and often frustrating and overwhelming reality in which the students find themselves. Experience shows that supervisors often lack formal qualifications in guidance/counselling. HaukelandUniversityHospital(HUH)isanimportantpartnerforBergenUniversityCollege(BUC). IncollaborationwithoneoftheoccupationaltherapistsatHUH,Ihavedesignedasimpleinteractive e-learning course of 2 hours duration in counselling. The course is divided into 5 parts, and the practitioners can finish the course partly. Part 1: Preparation before the student arrive. Part 2: How to solve a specific guidance situation. Part 3: Meeting a challenging student, one example from each of the Three years. Part 4: collaborative/cooperative learning. We wish that students should cooperate in fieldwork. This is useful for students, but also a Resource for the practice field (Vågstøl, Skøien and Raaheim 2007). Part 5: Evidence based practice in counselling. The course was completed and published September 2015. Evaluating data will be a part of the presentation. Litterature: Paschal, K.A. (2002) Techniques for Teaching Students in Clinical Settings. In: Shepart, K.F & Jensen, G.M. red. Handbook of teaching Physical Therapists. 2. Edt. Boston, Butterworth- Heinemann, s. 255-285. Vågstøl, U. & Skøien, A.k. (2011) «A learning climate for discovery and awareness». Physiotherapy students‘perspective on learning and supervision in practice. Advances in Physiotherapy, 13 (2) s. 71-78. 7 COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 MAKING YOUR ACADEMIC SELF COUNT: PERFORMANCE METRICS OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY EDUCATORS AND RESEARCHERS SHOULD BE AWARE OF Thursday, 16th June - 15:00 - OS - 1B.04 - Developments in Education - O’ Flaherty Theatre - Abstract ID: 33 - Oral Dr. Ted Brown1 1Department of Occupational Therapy, Monash University - Peninsula Campus Introduction: There has been a move in university environments towards the quantification of re- search outputs and academic performance. Examples of this include how much research funding a researcher been awarded and the mean or cumulative impact factor of the journals that univer- sity staff have published in. In addition, there has also been a move towards the quantification of performance metrics for individual educators and researchers. These performance metrics are often important in relation to promotion, tenure, performance appraisal, quality assurance, and research funding success. Objectives: Therehasbeenamoveinuniversityenvironmentstowardsthequantificationofresearch outputs and academic performance. This presentation will review and critique several types of performance metrics that occupational therapy educators and researchers can access and utilise. Methods: Currently there are several performance metrics that academic staff can access and apply including: the SCOPUS H-index, the Google Scholar H-Index, the Research Gate Score (RGS), and the citation metrics generated by the Publish or Perish software program. Examples of these quantitative performance metrics will be presented and critiqued for audience members. Application to Education & Conclusion: If occupational therapy educators and researchers are goingtobecompetitiveinthehighereducationtertiaryenvironment,theyneedtobeawareofthese metrics and how to apply them strategically. Key points will be illustrated for audience members using Power Point slides. 8 COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 INCREASE THE MOTIVATION FOR THERAPY FOR CHILDREN WITH DEVELOPMENTAL COORDINATION DISORDER (DCD) BY TAKING THE PHOTO-INTERVIEW ASSESSMENT. Thursday, 16th June - 14:00 - OS - 1C.01 - Children and Young People - Anderson Theatre - Abstract ID: 651 - Oral Mrs. siska Vandemaele1, Mrs. Kim Dujardin1, Ms. Haike Vanwelsenaere1, Mrs. Nathalie Vanassche2 1Howest, 2Ter Kouter Background: ScientificresearchindicatesthatchildrenwithDCDshowlong-termlowerself-esteem,limitedsocial skills and reduced motivation for physical activities. Method: A qualitative study is conducted into the intrinsic motivation for therapy of five boys with DCD, between the age of 8 and 12. Pre and post measuring with the photo interview assessment is done, establishinganincreasedordecreasedmotivation. Eachchildtakesthephotointerview,followedby a few sessions in which the concrete requests for help are handled. The alternative hypothesis (H1) is the motivation for therapy does increase with all five children with DCD, who had the photo interview assessment taken. Results: One child was eliminated from the study as therapy was stopped unexpectedly. An intrinsic motivation questionnaire, based on scientific articles and the IMI (Intrinsic Motivation Inventory), is filled out by occupational therapists and the parents before the photo-interview as- sessment and at the end of all the occupational therapy sessions focussing on the obtained request for help from the child. The results generally show a positive increase in intrinsic motivation for therapy of the children with DCD. Conclusion: by taking the photo interview and by dealing with the concrete demand for help by task oriented treatment methods, there is a successful improvement of the intrinsic motivation for therapy of children with DCD. 9 COTEC - ENOTHE 2016 ‘WE’RE NOT ONLY HERE FOR YOUR CHILD’: EARLY INTERVENTION IN THE CONTEXT OF INDIGENOUS FAMILIES IN CANADA Thursday, 16th June - 14:20 - OS - 1C.02 - Children and Young People - Anderson Theatre - Abstract ID: 576 - Oral Dr. Alison Gerlach1, Dr. Annette Browne1, Dr. Melinda Suto1, Dr. Margo Greenwood2 1University of British Columbia, 2University of Northern British Columbia Background: Despite some improvements in recent years, many Indigenous children in Canada continue to expe- rience health inequities as a result of structural factors that are unjust and potentially remediable. Currently there is a lack of knowledge on how early intervention programs promote Indigenous chil- dren’s health and address health inequities that are rooted in structural factors. This is of serious concern given growing evidence on the effects of early adversity across the life course. Method: Thisqualitativeinquirywasinformedbycriticaltheoreticalperspectivesandemployeddecolonizing methodologies to undertake research in partnership with an Indigenous early intervention program in British Columbia, Canada. Data collection included semi-structured interviews with Indigenous caregivers, Elders, early intervention workers, and their managers. Results: CriticalanalysesrevealedhowIndigenousearlyinterventionpoliciesandpracticesare: (1)grounded in a relational onto-epistemology; (2) are highly responsive to the diversity, complexity and speci- ficities of families’ lived realities, and (3) affirm and strengthen women’s agency and resistance, particularly in the context of their experiences of socio-economic marginalization, and racialization in the healthcare and child welfare systems. Conclusion: This research begins to address a gap in the literature on how a relational approach to early inter- vention,aspartofanetworkofsocialsupports,canplayanimportantroleinfosteringhealthequity for Indigenous children and non-Indigenous children living in conditions of social disadvantage. Application to Practice: Findings are applicable to occupational therapy for all families and children who experience social marginalization and structural violence. 10

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1St. James's Hospital, Dublin. Background: . Social Sciences, Bergen University College, Norway. Fieldwork is a Handbook of teaching Physical Therapists. 2. Edt. Boston Akershus University College (HiOA). A survey of
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