2. 0900-1030
Intro to OBP
The Core of OT
What is Occupation?
How your placement fit / did not fit into Occupation
>Break<
1030-1200
Operation Occupation
Occupation Based Interview
Reflection on word cloud & Assessment
Group discussion about Ax.
Occupation Based Practice:
In Mental Health
4. "....provides services to individuals and populations
to develop maintain, restore and optimize health
and function throughout the lifespan. This includes
providing services to people compromised by
aging, injury, disease or environmental factors."
5. "....Physiotherapy identifies and maximises quality
of life and movement potential....This encompasses
physical, psychological, emotional, and social well
being. (Physiotherapists Board of New Zealand)
Physiotherapists Board of New Zealand. (2009).
Annual Report 2008-2009. Wellington: Author
6. Occupational therapy is a client-centred health
profession concerned with promoting health and well
being through occupation.
The primary goal of occupational therapy is to enable
people to participate in the activities of everyday life.
(WFOT 2012)
Definition "Occupational Therapy"
7. "...occupation as ends and occupation as means..."
Gray, J. (1998). Putting occupation into practice: Occupation as
ends, occupation as means. American Journal of Occupational
Therapy, 52(5), 354-364
8. Occupation as an ends is the goal or the product of
intervention.
Occupation as a means is when a specific occupation is
used as a means in therapy to bring about change in a
person's performance.
Perspectives in Human Occupation: Participation in Life / [edited by]
Paula Kramer, Jim Hinojosa, Charlotte Brasic Royeen. (pg 2)
10. Occupation is perceived as “doing” by the individual, is goal-directed, carries
meaning for the individual, and is repeatable. (McLaughlin-Gray, 1997)
Occupation is groups of activities and tasks of
everyday life, named, organized, and given
value and meaning by individuals and a
culture; occupation is everything people do to
occupy themselves, including looking after
themselves (self-care), enjoying life (leisure),
and contributing to the social and economic
fabric of their communities (productivity)
(Canadian Association of
Occupational Therapists, 1997)
Occupations are the daily living tasks that are part of an
individual’s lifestyle (Golledge, 1998).
Occupation is engagement in activities,
tasks, and roles for the purpose of
productive pursuit, maintaining one’s self in
the environment, and for purposes of
relaxation, entertainment, creativity, and
celebration (Christiansen, Baum, & Bass-
Haugen, 2005)
Occupation is the doing of work, play, or
activities of daily living within a temporal,
physical, and sociocultural context that
characterizes much of human life
(Kielhofner, 2008)
Occupation provides the mechanism for social interaction
and societal development and growth, forming the
foundation of community, local, and national identity
because individuals not only engage in separate pursuits,
they are able to plan and execute group activity to the extent
of national government or to achieve international goals for
individual, mutual, and community purposes (Wilcock, 2006)
11. The Nature of Occupation
active
purposeful
meaningful
contextualised
impacts on health
Matthew Molineux
12. Occupational Reflection
From your experience
1 example of a time that you felt 100% occupation
focused
1 example of a time when you felt there was no
occupation focus and could have been
What would you change about what happened to
make it more occupation focused.
15. 6hrs in other ward
meetings
3hrs per functional assessment
12hrs in Ward
rounds
3hrs running groups
12hrs doing admin tasks
38hrs in a working week
36hrs before ANY interventions
This left me with only 2hrs a week
to do any 1on1 interventions
16.
17. Gray, J. (1998). Putting occupation into practice: Occupation as
ends, occupation as means. American Journal of Occupational
Therapy, 52(5), 354-364
"...occupation as ends and occupation as means..."
18. Doing-Being-Becoming Occupation Based Therapists
Occupational Language
Engage with other
professionals
Continuing Professional Development
Confident in the power of occupation!
Brainstorm. Students to write their definitions on a whiteboard at the front of the room and we’ll keep them till the end
Emphasise the importance of this notion!
Discuss that Occupation as a concept is both very simple and extremely complex
Don’t read all the definitions but emphasise that there are many different definitions of occupation all with merit and most looking at similar concepts
Matthew proposed the Nature of Occupation rather then a definition so that the contextual factors aren’t boxed in and set
20-30min break depending on how time goes
Operation Occupation
Operation Occupation
Operation Occupation
Emphasise the importance of this notion!
So how do we ensure that we maintain our occupation focus in clinical practice?
Brainstorm and define certain occupational terms….ill put together a list we can use and then give them at the end.
Talk about the various methods of networking. In person, events, through work, social media (shameless plug for MH4OT lol) etc
Talk about how this can help
Continue reading and learning all you can about occupation to remain confident in its health improving power.
This is where we do the group interview.
Review of the whiteboard and change any of the definitions