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9780803610484

Occupation By Design Building Therapeutic Power

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780803610484

  • ISBN10:

    0803610483

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2003-02-25
  • Publisher: F.A. Davis Company

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Summary

This engaging, user-friendly text guides occupational practitioners and students toward creatively designing and implementing occupation-based interventions for people with disabilities. The book covers the three primary proficiencies: understanding occupation in context, developing design skills, and applying occupation in practice. This innovative approach focuses on the interactive process of designing client-centered interventions, building a bridge between occupational science, and its application in occupational therapy. "After briefly looking over the book, it appears to be a great book for a basic OT theory course or intro course." -- Claudia Miller, MHS, OTR/L, Cincinnati State College, Cincinnati, Ohio "This is a good (very good!) text. It will help us introduce the philosophical and theoretical notions of occupation (as process and outcome) when students enter as freshmen and then continue to reinforce these concepts throughout the time they are in the OT program." -- Jacquelyn Bolden, PhD, OTR/L, Florida A & M University,Tallahassee, Florida

Table of Contents

Section 1 Becoming a Designer of Therapeutically Powerful Occupations
1(36)
Welcome to Occupation by Design
3(12)
What Is an Occupation? An Activity?
4(2)
A Little Occupational Science History
6(2)
Understanding Occupations: First in Yourself and Others, Then as Therapy
8(4)
You Are What You Do: The Occupations of Occupational Therapists
12(3)
The Creative Process of Designing Occupations
15(22)
Design Is a Constant in Life and in Practice
16(2)
Academic Approaches to the Design Process
18(2)
Building Your Skills within the Seven General Phases of the Design Process
20(13)
You Are a Designer of Occupations
33(4)
Section 2 Designing for Appeal: Pleasure, Productivity, and Restoration in Occupations
37(98)
The Notion of Balance
39(18)
The Notion of Balance
40(1)
The Cultural History of the Idea of Balance
40(3)
Occupational Therapy: Transcending Cultural Categories for a Deeper Understanding of Occupation
43(3)
Researching the Good Life
46(3)
So, What Is Balance?
49(8)
Productivity in Occupation
57(22)
Productivity Inborn
58(4)
Productivity as a Moral Imperative: The Protestant Work Ethic
62(1)
Work Identity
63(5)
Productivity Stress
68(3)
Productivity as a Key Dynamic in Powerful Occupational Therapy
71(8)
Pleasure in Occupations
79(18)
The Activities of Play and Leisure
80(1)
Simple Sensory Pleasures
81(4)
Complex Cerebral Pleasures
85(2)
Taking Pleasure Too Far: Chemical and Activity Addictions
87(3)
Designing Pleasure into Life
90(7)
Restoration in Occupations
97(20)
Restorative Activities: The Ancient Beat in the Modern Dance
98(1)
Restoration from Sleep
98(7)
Restoration from Eating and Drinking
105(1)
Restoration from Self-Care Activities
106(1)
Restoration from Quiet-Focus Activities
107(2)
Paying Attention to Restoration in the Blend
109(8)
Does the Intervention Appeal? Designing with Productivity, Pleasure, and Restoration
117(18)
Initial Client Picture
118(2)
Applying Your Estimation of What Will Appeal
120(1)
Designing with Productivity
121(2)
Designing with Pleasure
123(4)
Designing with Restoration
127(4)
Working on Balance: Is It a Client Goal?
131(1)
Custom Design of Appealing Therapeutic Occupations
131(4)
Section 3 Designing for Intactness: The Spatial, Temporal, and Sociocultural Dimensions
135(102)
The Evolution of Today's Occupational Patterns
137(14)
Ruth Zemke
Adaptation and Evolution
138(1)
Human Evolutionary Adaptation
138(3)
Tools, Technology, and Occupation
141(5)
The Evolutionary Template of Today's Occupational Patterns
146(5)
The Spatial Dimension of Occupation
151(18)
The Body as the House of the Occupational Self
153(2)
The Occupational Environment
155(4)
Material Culture as Human Adaptation
159(2)
Social Meanings of Occupational Spaces
161(2)
Treatment Space
163(6)
The Temporal Dimension of Occupation
169(28)
Biotemporality
170(5)
Sociotemporality
175(6)
Subjective Time
181(3)
Orchestrating Occupations within the Flow of Time
184(2)
Broad Temporal Patterns of Occupations
186(2)
Using Time
188(9)
The Sociocultural Dimension of Occupation
197(22)
Between Self and Society
198(2)
Social Ties
200(1)
Human Culture
201(4)
Cultures of Service Provision
205(2)
Sociocultural Aspects of Effective Occupation-Based Intervention
207(12)
Intactness: Designing with Context
219(18)
The Profession's Shift to Community-Based Care
220(1)
Ethical Imperative to Advocate Use of the Client's Most Therapeutic Environment
221(1)
Four General Modes in the Therapeutic Use of Context
222(3)
Therapeutic Use of the Three Dimensions of Context
225(1)
Designing with Spatial Context
225(2)
Designing with Temporal Context
227(3)
Designing with Sociocultural Context
230(1)
Intactness: Where Means and Ends Run Together
231(6)
Section 4 Designing for Accuracy: Elements of the Occupational Design Process
237(112)
A Study of Occupation-Based Practice
239(24)
Helene Goldstein-Lohman
Amy Kratz
Doris Pierce
A Study of Two Therapists' Experience of Occupation-Based Practice
240(1)
Making the Meaning and Values of Multiple Approaches Explicit
241(5)
Moral Contracts of Intervention
246(4)
The Dynamic Tensions between Occupation-Based and Component-Focused Practice
250(4)
Uncovering and Reclaiming Occupational Identity
254(3)
The Subtle Therapist: Working through Context
257(1)
Summary
258(5)
Therapist Design Skill
263(12)
What Is Intervention Accuracy?
264(1)
The Demand for Constant Creativity in Practice
264(1)
Motivation
265(1)
Investigation
266(1)
Definition
267(1)
Ideation
268(1)
Idea Selection
269(1)
Implementation
269(1)
Evaluation
270(1)
Summary
271(4)
Collaborative Occupational Goal Generation
275(8)
The Contribution of Collaborative Occupational Goal Generation to Intervention Accuracy
276(1)
The Interaction Style of Therapist-Client Collaborations in Client-Centered Practice
276(2)
Hearing the Client's Story
278(1)
Therapeutic Processes of Assessment and Goal Setting
279(1)
Summary: Collaboration and Intervention Accuracy
280(3)
Precision Fit of Intervention to Goal
283(10)
Precision Intervention Design
284(1)
Increasing Precision through the Continual Development of Expertise
284(1)
Observation Skills
285(1)
Selecting Strategies for Occupational Pattern Change
286(2)
The Changing Story: Continual Reconfiguration of Client Goals to Increase Precision
288(1)
Evidence-Based Practice
288(1)
Barriers to Precise Practice
289(1)
Using Ends as Means
289(1)
Summary
289(4)
Accuracy: The Art of Great Therapy
293(8)
Accuracy and Intervention Power
294(1)
Therapist Design Skill
294(1)
Collaborative Occupational Goal Generation
295(1)
Precision Fit of Intervention to Goal
295(1)
How Great a Therapist Will You Be?
296(5)
Section 5 Conclusion
You Are What You Do
301(48)
Celebrating Occupation in Your Own Life: Dancing in the Stream of Time
302(2)
Celebrating Occupation in the Lives of Others: The Limitations of Access to the Other
304(2)
Celebrating Occupation in Practice: Power, Complexity, and Popularity
306(2)
Being What We Do
308(3)
Appendices
A Cases
311(36)
Case A-1 Mabel
311(2)
Case A-2 David
313(2)
Case A-3 Mary
315(2)
Case A-4 James
317(2)
Case A-5 Sam
319(1)
Case A-6 Tina
320(2)
Case A-7 Bill
322(2)
Case A-8 Grace
324(1)
Case A-9 Jacob
325(2)
Case A-10 Mr. McMasters
327(1)
Case A-11 Jeremiah
328(1)
Case A-12 Alice
329(1)
Case A-13 John
330(2)
Case A-14 Mr. Lowenstein
332(2)
Case A-15 Alta
334(2)
Case A-16 Donald
336(3)
Case A-17 Lou
339(3)
Case A-18 Tara
342(1)
Case A-19 Barb
343(4)
B Recommended Narratives of Disability
347(2)
C Recommended Narratives of Occupational Experience
349

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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