Skip to main content Site map

Contemporary Issues in Occupational Therapy: Reasoning and Reflection


Contemporary Issues in Occupational Therapy: Reasoning and Reflection

Paperback by Creek, Jennifer (University of Teesside); Lawson-Porter, Anne (Group Head of Education, College of OTs)

Contemporary Issues in Occupational Therapy: Reasoning and Reflection

£71.95

ISBN:
9780470065112
Publication Date:
13 Apr 2007
Language:
English
Publisher:
John Wiley & Sons Inc
Pages:
250 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 22 - 24 May 2024
Contemporary Issues in Occupational Therapy: Reasoning and Reflection

Description

This book is a collection of essays on occupational therapy theory and its application in practice. They represent the reflections, on aspects of occupational therapy, of experts in their own fields who are at the cutting edge of theory development. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, occupational therapists are beginning to conceptualise occupational therapy as a complex intervention. This book provides the level of detail to support such an understanding. Two chapters discuss the profession of occupational therapy: how it has developed and what is involved in being an occupational therapist. Other chapters explore the idea of occupation from different perspectives, providing detailed analyses of the concept that is central to the profession of occupational therapy. The third type of chapter describes how theory is used in occupational therapy practice, for example, in making decisions or implementing research findings.

Contents

About the editors. Contributors. Foreword by Elizabeth White. Preface. Acknowledgements. Introduction (Jennifer Creek and Anne Lawson-Porter). 1. The thinking therapist (Jennifer Creek). 2. The romance of occupational therapy (Clare Hocking). 3. Occupation for occupational therapists: how far will we go? (Clare Hocking and Ellen Nicholson). 4. A psychoanalytic discourse in occupational therapy (Lindsey Nicholls). 5. What's going on? Finding an explanation for what we do (Rosemary Caulton and Rayna Dickson). 6. When service users' views vary from those of their carers (Elizabeth White). 7. Engaging the reluctant client (Jennifer Creek). 8. Exploring the facets of clinical reasoning (Kit Sinclair). 9. Knowing more than we can say (Priscilla Harries). 10. Making sense of research utilisation (Katrina Bannigan). Index.

Back

University of Salford logo