Abstract
This paper summarizes the results of a survey of the role of occupational therapy in provincial psychiatric hospitals in Ontario. Occupational therapy was found to provide major programming in three areas: 1) functional skills assessment and training, 2) life skills assessment and training and, 3) self awareness and personal growth. Subjects used a variety of frames of reference, but models based upon Glasser's Reality Therapy predominated. A complementary relationship was found between occupational therapy and vocational and recreational services, with occupational therapy playing a clinical or therapeutic role, while vocational and recreational services provided normalizing experiences. A comparison of occupational therapy programming in the institutions surveyed, with programming reported in the recent occupational therapy literature indicated that techniques and media utilized parallelled those used in acute and community psychiatric programs.