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1.
Can J Occup Ther ; 82(2): 119-28, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26281435

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Accreditation standards and practice competencies underscore the importance of research for occupational therapy practice, but they do not guide how occupational therapy education addresses research. Despite the prominence of qualitative research in the health professions, there exists a need to articulate how and why qualitative inquiry is taught in occupational therapy education. PURPOSE: We discuss how qualitative inquiry education can develop habits of reflection and reflexivity, criticality, and active engagement in preparation for occupational therapy practice. KEY ISSUES: We hold that our students' professional abilities to practice in a well-reasoned, ethical, and responsive manner are enhanced by experiences with qualitative inquiry and suggest that there is potential in linking qualitative inquiry experiences to professional habit formation in occupational therapy education. IMPLICATIONS: In addition to teaching research for its own sake, we suggest that educators can adopt a broader view of how qualitative inquiry functions within occupational therapy education.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research/education , Models, Educational , Occupational Therapy/education , Professional Practice , Qualitative Research , Humans
2.
J Appl Gerontol ; 33(3): 357-82, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24652865

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study was to document predictors of long-term retention among minority participants in the Well Elderly 2 Study, a randomized controlled trial of a lifestyle intervention for community-dwelling older adults. The primary sample included 149 African American and 92 Hispanic men and women aged 60 to 95 years, recruited at senior activity centers and senior residences. Chi-square and logistic regression procedures were undertaken to examine study-based, psychosocial and health-related predictors of retention at 18 months following study entry. For both African Americans and Hispanics, intervention adherence was the strongest predictor. Retention was also related to high active coping and average (vs. high or low) levels of activity participation among African Americans and high social network strength among Hispanics. The results suggest that improved knowledge of the predictors of retention among minority elders can spawn new retention strategies that can be applied at individual, subgroup, and sample-wide levels.


Subject(s)
Activities of Daily Living/psychology , Aging , Life Style/ethnology , Refusal to Participate , Adaptation, Psychological , Black or African American/psychology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Aging/ethnology , Aging/psychology , Female , Hispanic or Latino/psychology , Humans , Independent Living/psychology , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Selection , Refusal to Participate/ethnology , Refusal to Participate/psychology , Social Behavior , Social Networking , United States/ethnology
3.
J Epidemiol Community Health ; 66(9): 782-90, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21636614

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Older people are at risk for health decline and loss of independence. Lifestyle interventions offer potential for reducing such negative outcomes. The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a preventive lifestyle-based occupational therapy intervention, administered in a variety of community-based sites, in improving mental and physical well-being and cognitive functioning in ethnically diverse older people. METHODS: A randomised controlled trial was conducted comparing an occupational therapy intervention and a no-treatment control condition over a 6-month experimental phase. Participants included 460 men and women aged 60-95 years (mean age 74.9 ± 7.7 years; 53% <$12000 annual income) recruited from 21 sites in the greater Los Angeles metropolitan area. RESULTS: Intervention participants, relative to untreated controls, showed more favourable change scores on indices of bodily pain, vitality, social functioning, mental health, composite mental functioning, life satisfaction and depressive symptomatology (ps<0.05). The intervention group had a significantly greater increment in quality-adjusted life years (p<0.02), which was achieved cost-effectively (US $41218/UK £24868 per unit). No intervention effect was found for cognitive functioning outcome measures. CONCLUSIONS: A lifestyle-oriented occupational therapy intervention has beneficial effects for ethnically diverse older people recruited from a wide array of community settings. Because the intervention is cost-effective and is applicable on a wide-scale basis, it has the potential to help reduce health decline and promote well-being in older people. Trial Registration clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT0078634.


Subject(s)
Geriatric Assessment , Health Promotion/economics , Health Services for the Aged/economics , Health Status Indicators , Life Style , Occupational Therapy/economics , Quality of Life , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cognition/physiology , Comparative Effectiveness Research , Cross-Over Studies , Female , Health Behavior/ethnology , Humans , Life Style/ethnology , Los Angeles , Male , Mental Recall , Middle Aged , Occupational Therapy/psychology , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data
4.
Psychol Assess ; 23(2): 558-62, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21319906

ABSTRACT

Reverse-scored items on assessment scales increase cognitive processing demands and may therefore lead to measurement problems for older adult respondents. In this study, the objective was to examine possible psychometric inadequacies of reverse-scored items on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) when used to assess ethnically diverse older adults. Using baseline data from a gerontologic clinical trial (n = 460), we tested the hypotheses that the reversed items on the CES-D (a) are less reliable than nonreversed items, (b) disproportionately lead to intraindividually atypical responses that are psychometrically problematic, and (c) evidence improved measurement properties when an imputation procedure based on the scale mean is used to replace atypical responses. In general, the results supported the hypotheses. Relative to nonreversed CES-D items, the 4 reversed items were less internally consistent, were associated with lower item-scale correlations, and were more often answered atypically at an intraindividual level. Further, the atypical responses were negatively correlated with responses to psychometrically sound nonreversed items that had similar content. The use of imputation to replace atypical responses enhanced the predictive validity of the set of reverse-scored items. Among older adult respondents, reverse-scored items are associated with measurement difficulties. It is recommended that appropriate correction procedures such as item readministration or statistical imputation be applied to reduce the difficulties.


Subject(s)
Depression/psychology , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales/statistics & numerical data , Age Factors , Aged , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Depression/diagnosis , Ethnicity/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Reproducibility of Results
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