“Surthriving” Hand Rehabilitation: Proposing Interventions to Support Novice Occupational Therapists Working in Underserved Contexts

Author:

van Stormbroek Kirsty1ORCID,van der Merwe Tania1ORCID,O’Brien Lisa2ORCID,Myezwa Hellen3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Occupational Therapy, School of Therapeutic Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

2. Swinburne University of Technology Hawthorn Campus, John Street, Hawthorn, Australia

3. Department of Physiotherapy, School of Therapeutic Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

Hand rehabilitation delivered to underserved South African communities is often the responsibility of novice or generalist occupational therapists. Novice therapists typically work with restricted supervision, support, and resources. Little is known about how these therapists should be supported in order to strengthen the services that they deliver. This study is aimed at understanding how novice occupational therapists in their first year of practice describe their experience of delivering hand rehabilitation in order to identify their support and development needs and propose interventions to address these needs. A qualitative instrumental case study design was used. Data were collected from novice occupational therapists ( n = 9 ) who participated in an online community of practice. Data collection techniques included photoelicitation, facilitated reflection activities, and case discussion. Reflexive thematic analysis was employed. Trustworthiness strategies included reflexive writing, prolonged engagement, data source triangulation, member checking, and peer audit. Analysis generated three themes: (1) “submerged: I had to drown a little” captured participants’ experience of being saturated by contextual features including poverty and poor basic management of hand injuries. (2) “Starting somewhere” captured participants’ journey of treating patients with hand injuries. They transitioned from an initial sense of having “no idea” to developing “some idea”; their clinical reasoning was challenged when working with no diagnosis, unfamiliar presentations, or when contextual features rendered traditional approaches to therapy inappropriate. Finally, (3) “dynamics of ‘surthrival’” captured elements that contributed to participants either thriving or merely surviving their hand rehabilitation experience. The proposed strategies identified in this study to address the support and development needs of novice therapists include interventions focused on systems and health services; learning opportunities to support competency and physical resources; and emotional support. Beyond application to the South African context, these strategies may be considered for supporting generalist or novice therapists delivering hand rehabilitation in other low- to middle-income countries.

Funder

SANLiC Gold

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Occupational Therapy,General Medicine

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