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Chapter 26 Occupational Therapy Interventions for Individuals

Chapter 26 Occupational Therapy Interventions for Individuals. Glen Gillen. Learning Objectives. Understand the overarching themes that occupational therapists embrace when choosing interventions for their clients

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Chapter 26 Occupational Therapy Interventions for Individuals

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  1. Chapter 26Occupational TherapyInterventions for Individuals Glen Gillen

  2. Learning Objectives • Understand the overarching themes that occupational therapists embrace when choosing interventions for their clients • Differentiate between interventions that are categorized as “occupation as ends” and “occupation as means” • Develop and choose interventions for clients that combine the principles of occupation as ends and occupation as means • Compare and contrast a variety of specific intervention approaches that are used for clients receiving occupational therapy services • Begin to understand when to choose one type of intervention over another, combine interventions, and/or switch the intervention plan • Understand the concept of grading interventions

  3. Overarching Interrelated Themes • Client centered • Evidence based • Chosen based on sound professional reasoning

  4. Occupation as Endsas Intervention • Directly teaching the activity or task • Using clients’ abilities to learn a task • Providing adaptations to learn a task or activity • A rehabilitative approach; A skills training approach

  5. Occupation as Endsas Intervention (Continued) • The therapist serves as teacher or adaptor of a task • Influenced by learning and cognitive information processing theories • Not used to make therapeutic change of underlying capabilities • such as strength or memory

  6. Occupation as Meansas Intervention • Including a variety of interventions, such as arts and crafts, and specific daily activities • Requiring more constrained responses as compared to occupation as ends • Chosen based on both client interest and potential to remediate an underlying impairment • Providing a challenge that is slightly beyond what the client can easily achieve • finding “just the right challenge”

  7. Combining Occupation asMeans and as Ends • A collaborative approach is used to determine goals and client’s interests • The practitioner uses skills of occupational analysis to determine underlying performance skills • and/or client factors may need to be challenged

  8. Preparatory interventions • Preparatory interventions have been defined as “methods and techniques that prepare the client for occupational performance” (AOTA, 2008, p. 653).

  9. Example Preparatory Interventions • Applying a therapeutic hot pack to and stretching both shoulders prior to a remediation session that uses reaching into kitchen cabinets as a means to improve shoulder range of motion. • Teaching a person with an anxiety disorder to use deep breathing and guided imagery to promote relaxation prior to interviewing for a new job.

  10. Remediation or Restoration Examples • Therapeutic exercise to strengthen a muscle • Use of a video game to improve sustained attention • Goal-oriented reaching to improve upper limb function • Constraint-induced movement therapy to improve upper limb control

  11. Additional Remediation or Restoration Examples • Mall walking program to improve endurance • Using homemaking tasks to challenge cognitive functions such as safety and judgment • Sensory integration techniques

  12. Occupational Skill Acquisition Examples • Teaching meal preparation skills • Task-specific practice of handwriting • Mental practice of IADL • Teaching adaptive coping skills • Using motor learning principles to learn or relearn self-care skills • Teaching a recently widowed woman how to manage monthly bills • Developing crawling ability in a nonambulatory child with developmental delays

  13. Example Adaptation/CompensationApproaches • Use of a wrist extension orthosis to allow keyboarding • Using a checklist system to perform assigned tasks in a supported employment program • Using a tub seat, handheld shower, and long-handled sponge to enable bathing • Using lightweight cookware during meal preparation

  14. Example Adaptation/CompensationApproaches (Continued) • Using built-up handles on school supplies • Using a power scooter during grocery shopping • Using an augmentative communication device to interact with other students

  15. Example Environmental Modifications • Performing a home visit and suggesting removing throw rugs, sliding shower doors, and unnecessary furniture to promote wheelchair access. • Recommend appropriate playground equipment for children with varying skills. • Recommending minimizing environmental stimuli (e.g., television on in the background, many people talking at once) for those who are easily distracted.

  16. Example Environmental Modifications (Continued) • Providing specific information re: the gradient for a wheelchair ramp. • Setting up a bathroom so that needed grooming and hygiene items are placed on the right for those who do not attend to the left.

  17. Educational Approach Examples • Instructing caretakers on proper transfer techniques • Informing a person as to the signs and symptoms of emerging depression • Leading a stroke education group focused on community resources and leisure opportunities • Providing information about alternative community access after a driver’s license is lost due to visual impairment • Instructing a client or caregiver on skin inspection techniques and the signs of skin breakdown

  18. Prevention Approach Examples • Instructing a stock person in a retail store on proper lifting techniques • Instructing nursing staff on an appropriate in-bed turning schedule to prevent the development of decubitus ulcers • Educating a person who types most of the day on proper posture, rest breaks, etc. to prevent carpal tunnel syndrome • Preventing social isolation by suggesting appropriate leisure-based after-work activities such as a bowling league, participation in a chorus, etc.

  19. Palliative Approach Examples • Prescribing positioning equipment that allows more time out of bed • Engaging in reminiscence activities • Engage in activities related to leaving a legacy such as finally writing down and sharing a secret recipe, engagement in creative arts, scrapbooking, etc. • Physical agent modalities, positioning, edema management, and orthoses to reduce pain • Teaching caregivers handling techniques for bed mobility assist as the client’s physical status declines

  20. Examples of Therapeutic Use of Self • Developing rapport • Appropriate use of humor • Maintaining open communication • Being empathetic • Establishing trust • Being motivational • Maintaining a caring attitude • Active listening

  21. Case Applications • Benjamin: A Married Older Man Whose Family Is Concerned about His Driving Abilities • James: A Married Banker Who Survived a Stroke • Sahar: An 8-Year-Old Girl Living with Cerebral Palsy • Lois: An Adult Living with Schizophrenia at Home • Shirley: Receiving Home Hospice with End-stage Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

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