Independence: An Analysis of a Complex and Core Construct in Occupational Therapy

Author:

Bonikowsky Sarah1,Musto Amanda2,Suteu Kerry Ann3,MacKenzie Sherry4,Dennis Donna5

Affiliation:

1. MSc in Occupational Therapy, Western University Canada, London, Ontario, Canada

2. Occupational Therapist, VHA Rehab Solutions and Honeypot Consulting, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Occupational Therapist, CBI Health Group, London, Ontario, Canada

4. Occupational Therapist, Source Rehabilitation Services Inc., Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

5. Lecturer, School of Occupational Therapy, Western University Canada, London, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Introduction: Independence is a core concept in occupational therapy, but there is little consensus within the profession upon a universal definition. The present study employed a critical interpretive synthesis to examine two fundamental research questions: ‘How is independence conceptualised in quantitative and qualitative research within occupational therapy?’ and ‘How does the term “independence”, in its present use, critically impact occupational therapy policy and practice?’ Method: Articles pertaining to occupational therapy and contributing to the definition of independence within the profession were examined. Three successive levels of coding — open, axial and selective — were used to analyse 19 final articles. Findings: From the literature, nine definition themes emerged: function, autonomy and competence, control, context, culture, environment, personal attributes and safety. These themes were then organised into three categories: personal factors, environmental factors and continuum, which were synthesised together to create a model that addresses all factors critical to the composition of independence. In addition, four clinical themes developed: goal of occupational therapy, client-therapist relationship, variable definitions in occupational therapy practice and limitations of present practice. Conclusion: Through the formalisation of the integral components of independence, this study enables a standardised foundation for the examination of this core concept across the profession.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Occupational Therapy

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