Affiliation:
1. Northern Health and Social Care Trust, Antrim, Northern Ireland
2. Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast, Northern Ireland
Abstract
In Northern Ireland, only two occupational therapists work within the specialist field of child and adolescent mental health (CAMH). This is despite recommendations made by the Bamford Review of Mental Health and Learning Disability (Northern Ireland) that occupational therapy should be a core element of CAMH provision. The College of Occupational Therapists has urged practitioners to challenge inequalities in health and social care provision and to use occupational language to reinforce the relationship between occupation, recovery and wellbeing. This opinion piece highlights occupational therapy core skills and occupational therapy frames of reference or modalities, underlining the application of both to eating disorders. The treatment models discussed are the Model of Human Occupation, the Canadian Model of Occupational Performance and sensory integration. Evidence reinforces that the models discussed are applicable, appropriate and valuable when treating children and adolescents with an eating disorder. It is argued that the valuable and unique role of occupational therapy must be recognised by health and social care commissioners and CAMH providers and be vocalised by occupational therapists. CAMH teams are advised to embrace the unique skills that occupational therapists have to offer children and adolescents with eating disorders in order to ensure that clients receive truly multidisciplinary and client-centred evidence-based services.
Cited by
10 articles.
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