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A Service User Perspective Informing the Role of Occupational Therapy in School Transition Practice for High School Learners with TBI: An African Perspective.
- Source :
-
Occupational Therapy International . 8/1/2019, p1-15. 15p. 4 Charts. - Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Background. In the South African context, there are no specific guidelines regarding how to prepare and support adolescents for the transition from a health care to a high school setting post TBI. This raises questions about the relevance and responsiveness of the current transition practices in occupational therapy in terms of adequately preparing and supporting these adolescents to participate in school and hence exercise their right to a quality education. Method. This study explored adolescents and other key role players' perspectives on and experiences of the high school transition (i.e., school reentry and continued school participation) post TBI. It was anticipated that this would provide an increased understanding of the enablers and barriers to high school reentry and participation post TBI. This served as a basis to explore the main aim of this study which was to help occupational therapists identify where efforts in terms of service delivery are needed. This study was situated in the interpretivist qualitative paradigm and used a multicase study design, which included semistructured interviews with eight adolescent learners with TBI, their primary caregivers, teachers, and principals as well as observations and documentation review. Results. This paper will focus on a central theme in the research, namely, the nature and extent of support needed to facilitate the high school transition of adolescents with TBI within a developing context. Similar to the findings of studies conducted in developed contexts, participants highlighted that they felt that adolescents need support at various stages of the school transition. Participants further alluded to support that should be collaborative, coordinated, flexible, and monitored to ensure it is relevant and responsive to these adolescents' changing needs. Conclusion. The study findings conclude that occupational therapists have a crucial role in fostering an enabling environment (directly and indirectly) through fulfilling various roles including that of a facilitator, intermediary, coach, collaborator, supporter, and advocator. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *COMMUNICATION
*CONSUMER attitudes
*PSYCHOLOGY of high school students
*INTERVIEWING
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL care
*OCCUPATIONAL therapy
*RESEARCH funding
*TEENAGERS' conduct of life
*ACCESSIBLE design
*SAMPLE size (Statistics)
*JUDGMENT sampling
*OCCUPATIONAL roles
*SOCIAL support
*RE-entry students
*CAREGIVER attitudes
*REHABILITATION for brain injury patients
*COLLEGE teacher attitudes
*PATIENTS' attitudes
*FIELD notes (Science)
*ADOLESCENCE
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 09667903
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Occupational Therapy International
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 137841087
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/1201689