Bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice

Although client-centred practice has become an essential part of Canadian occupational therapy practice in the last twenty years (Law, 1998; Sumsion & Smyth, 2000), many authors have indicated that therapists do not practice in a client-centred manner (Law, Baptiste & Mills, 1995; Toomey,...

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Main Author: Mortenson, William Bennett
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12157
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-121572018-01-05T17:36:18Z Bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice Mortenson, William Bennett Although client-centred practice has become an essential part of Canadian occupational therapy practice in the last twenty years (Law, 1998; Sumsion & Smyth, 2000), many authors have indicated that therapists do not practice in a client-centred manner (Law, Baptiste & Mills, 1995; Toomey, Nicholson & Carswell, 1995; Hammell, 1998a). Some authors have focused on how therapists are responsible for problems implementing client-centred practice, because they are unwilling to give up power (Sumsion, 1999c; Gage, 1999; Hammell, 1998a; Law, Polatajko, Pollock, McColl, Carswell, & Baptiste, 1994). As power has been identified as an important construct in the literature on client-centred practice, I have conducted an exploratory, qualitative study of occupational therapists' experiences of client-centred practice using standpoint theory and Foucault's work on power to frame the study. Based on a thematic analysis of in-depth ethnographic interviews of nine therapists from acute care and homecare settings three main themes were identified. "Bridging that gap: ideal versus real conceptions of client-centred practice" reveals the tensions that therapists experience between the discourse and practice of occupational therapy. "Related to the service environment: the importance of setting" focuses on how institutional factors shape practice. The final theme "a bit of tension: problems with the client-therapist relationship" describes the client-therapist interaction, which is influenced by discursive and institutional factors. The thesis concludes with a discussion of the theoretical implications, practical applications, limitations and significance of these research findings. Medicine, Faculty of Graduate 2009-08-13T21:35:49Z 2009-08-13T21:35:49Z 2002 2002-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12157 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 8433223 bytes application/pdf
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description Although client-centred practice has become an essential part of Canadian occupational therapy practice in the last twenty years (Law, 1998; Sumsion & Smyth, 2000), many authors have indicated that therapists do not practice in a client-centred manner (Law, Baptiste & Mills, 1995; Toomey, Nicholson & Carswell, 1995; Hammell, 1998a). Some authors have focused on how therapists are responsible for problems implementing client-centred practice, because they are unwilling to give up power (Sumsion, 1999c; Gage, 1999; Hammell, 1998a; Law, Polatajko, Pollock, McColl, Carswell, & Baptiste, 1994). As power has been identified as an important construct in the literature on client-centred practice, I have conducted an exploratory, qualitative study of occupational therapists' experiences of client-centred practice using standpoint theory and Foucault's work on power to frame the study. Based on a thematic analysis of in-depth ethnographic interviews of nine therapists from acute care and homecare settings three main themes were identified. "Bridging that gap: ideal versus real conceptions of client-centred practice" reveals the tensions that therapists experience between the discourse and practice of occupational therapy. "Related to the service environment: the importance of setting" focuses on how institutional factors shape practice. The final theme "a bit of tension: problems with the client-therapist relationship" describes the client-therapist interaction, which is influenced by discursive and institutional factors. The thesis concludes with a discussion of the theoretical implications, practical applications, limitations and significance of these research findings. === Medicine, Faculty of === Graduate
author Mortenson, William Bennett
spellingShingle Mortenson, William Bennett
Bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice
author_facet Mortenson, William Bennett
author_sort Mortenson, William Bennett
title Bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice
title_short Bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice
title_full Bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice
title_fullStr Bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice
title_full_unstemmed Bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice
title_sort bridging that gap : occupational therapist experiences of client-centred practice
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12157
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