OTalk

#OTalk Research Tuesday 7th February 2023 -Innovative and Creative Dissemination:  Could this impact on knowledge transfer? Hosted by @preston_jenny

This weeks OTalk research chat will be hosted by @preston_jenny supported by @SamOTantha on the account

When considering the research process in its fullest sense the generation of evidence in itself is not sufficient.   The process by which new knowledge is translated into policy and practice is complex, variable and frequently slow (Graham et al, 2006).  Despite the considerable resources devoted to health sciences research, a consistent finding from the literature is that the transfer of research findings into practice is often a gradual and haphazard process (Graham et al, 2006).   Graham et al (2006) argues that this means that patients are denied treatment of proven benefit because the time it takes for research to become incorporated into practice is unacceptably long citing the example that 30% to 45% of patients are not receiving care according to scientific evidence and that 20% to 25% of the care provided is not needed or is potentially harmful (Graham et al, 2006). 

Finding and integrating evidence into the existing decision-making process can be challenging and several strategies have been proposed to support staff (Robertson et al, 2013).  Dissemination is a key part of the research process and incorporates focussed distribution aimed at increasing awareness and changing attitudes.  In their review of what actually informs occupational therapy practice Robertson et al (2013) identified four emergent themes of which informal, quick methods of accessing the evidence were favoured. 

Publication within peer reviewed journals is of course a key form of dissemination but increasingly innovative and creative forms of dissemination are emerging.  This #OTalk will seek to explore a range of approaches to dissemination incorporating their strengths and limitations and their impact on knowledge translation.

In advance of the chat please consider the following questions:

  1. What forms of evidence do you most frequently access?
  2. How does this meet your needs?
  3. Have you discovered any innovative and creative approaches to dissemination?
  4. What attracted you to these alternative formats?
  5. Are there any limitations?
  6. Do you have any innovative ideas that you would like to develop?

References

Graham ID, Logan J, Harrison MB, et al, (2006) Lost in knowledge translation: time for a map?  The Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 26: 13-24

Robertson L, Graham F, Anderson J (2013) What actually informs practice: occupational therapists’ views of evidence. British Journal of Occupational Therapy, 76(7), 317-324.DOI: 10.4276/030802213X13729279114979

OTalk

#OTalk Tuesday 31st January 2023 8pm – Underrepresentation, authenticity, career progression. Hosted by @hspenceruk / @CPD_RCOT 


This week Hannah Spencer @hspenceruk is hosting along with @CPD_RCOT – Check out what they have in-store below and join in live on twitter 8pm Tuesday 31st Jan 2023.
 
All members of our occupational therapy workforce, irrespective of background and/or
characteristics, should feel valued, respected, and supported to develop their talents to the full. Within and beyond our profession, however, there is a wealth of anecdotal evidence shared by individuals, in particular those from underrepresented and historically marginalised groups, which has highlighted inequity and injustice in relation to career development and the impact and implications of this.

The NHS annual Workforce Race Equality Standard (WRES) consistently evidences
increased prevalence of discrimination experienced by employees from a Black or Minority Ethnic (BME) background, as well as over-representation in junior roles (NHS England, 2022). There are similar narratives relating to those who are LGBTQIA+, live with disabilities and/or long-term health conditions and/or who’s many complex and intersecting identities intertwine which can mean a cumulative experience of inequity and injustice. This can impact safety, belonging, wellbeing, motivation, performance, development, progression, retention… 

This #OTalk aligns with ongoing work @CPD_RCOT to improve inclusive engagement and the support offered to increase representation across all levels and scopes of practice. We want to challenge the barriers to career development and progression that can be and have been experienced by those historically underrepresented in our profession.  As part of this work, we also want to acknowledge that career progression and development aren’t always linear or hierarchical and that each individual’s narrative within the profession will be
different.

Ultimately, how can we support every member of our workforce to be the best they can be throughout their career and carve out their career pathway?  

Question 1: Have you experienced challenges or barriers that have prevented you from
feeling valued, respected, and supported to develop your talents to the full and which you think may have affected your career journey? Or observed challenges or barriers faced by others?

Question 2: Acknowledging the challenges that can be experienced, particularly by those from underrepresented and historically marginalised groups, what do you need (person, environment, occupation) to be your ‘best self’ as an OT?  

Question 3: Specifically relating to career development and progression: what helps/has
helped you/your colleagues to develop and progress in your/their roles and careers?  

Question 4: What role do you think supervision plays in feeling valued, respected, and
supported to develop your talents to the full? How can this be best facilitated?  

Question 5: What else do you think we need to do as a profession or within the organisations in which we work to allow every member of the occupational therapy workforce to feel valued, respected, and supported to develop their talents to the full, regardless of their background or characteristics?

Question 6: Last week’s #OTalk from @FocusOnFairness focussed on #NQOT
#EarlyCareerOT experiences. What would you say to yourself as an #EarlyCareerOT?
 What facilitated or what do you wish you’d done differently as part of your career
development journey?

Question 7: Allies/wider community, what action(s) have you been prompted to take as a result of tonight’s conversation?

OTalk

#OTalk Tuesday 24th January 2023 – The Focus On Fairness Observatory hosted by @FocusOnFairness supported by @ElizabethCasso1

This week our host is @FocusOnFairness a project supported by @ElizabethCasso1

The Focus On Fairness Observatory is an arm’s length project of the Elizabeth Casson Trust exploring diversity, inclusion and equity within the profession. For our second Observatory event held on 11th January 2023, we invited attendees to explore what support minoritised occupational therapy graduates starting their careers. Individuals with varied experiences attended, including newly qualified occupational therapists, representatives from clinical practice, universities, bodies such as RCOT and the HCPC, as well as other professions such as physiotherapy. 

We specifically considered the actions that could be taken by Higher Educational Institutions (HEIs), how recruitment practices and processes can be equitable, as well as how we support graduates in post and facilitate retention. Eight different ideas for next steps came from the discussions, which were then voted on by attendees who each chose three that should be prioritised by the Trust. The ideas with the most support were:

  1. Co-produced research about what helps OTs to feel supported in transitioning from learner to OT involving academics and the whole community
  2. Review and redesign recruitment processes from outreach to employment and share through a guidebook
  3. Managers to understand their role and responsibility regarding active allyship

We would like to ask some further questions regarding these ideas, and we hope that you can discuss them with us.

  1. What does co-produced research exploring the transition from learner to OT look like for you? How could students and NQOTs work with academics most effectively on this work? 
  1. What does an equitable recruitment process look like for you? Are you able to share any positive or negative experiences? What would have improved the recruitment process?
  1. How is it best to engage occupational therapy managers to consider their role and responsibility regarding active allyship? Which forum/ fora should be used? If you are a manager, how would you like to learn more about active allyship?

OTalk

#OTalk 17th January 2023 – Dyslexia and Occupational Therapy – hosted by @SharonOTUClan  

Dyslexia and Occupational Therapy – This chat will be hosted by Sharon Hardman @SharonOTUClan  

During my Occupational Therapy (OT) pre-registration training I was diagnosed with specific learning difficulties, more commonly known as dyslexia, 3 days before the UK went into the first Covid-19 lockdown in March 2020.  This was a huge shock to me as I had already achieved 10 GCSEs, 3 A levels, BA (Hons) degree and Post Graduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) and no one has noticed my dyslexia.  

According to Dyslexia Association (2022) “dyslexia is a lifelong condition, which has a substantial effect on an individual’s day to day activities and is classed as a disability under the Equality Act 2010.  Dyslexia varies from person to person and no two people will have the same set of strengths and weaknesses. Dyslexic individuals often have difficulties processing and remembering information, for example:

  • a tendency to read inaccurately and without adequate comprehension.
  • inconsistent spelling.
  • difficulty with planning and writing essays.
  • difficulty getting started and completing work.
  • a tendency to get ‘tied up’ using long words, e.g. preliminary, philosophical.
  • a tendency to confuse verbal instructions, places, times and dates.
  • greater difficulty in learning a foreign language.
  • low self-esteem.
  • Frustration leading to behavioural or emotional difficulties.
  • disorganised.
  • difficulty with map reading.
  • difficulty filling in forms and writing reports.
  • tendency to miss and confuse appointment times.
  • low opinion of capabilities.
  • constantly loses and forgets items and information.”

I wanted to create an #OTalk that enabled the OT community to share their experiences of dyslexia and promote further discussion in this area.

Dyslexia Association (2022) Available at https://www.dyslexia.uk.net/what-is-dyslexia/signs-of-dyslexia/

The 5 questions that I would like you to consider are:

  1. Dyslexia requires reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010.  What are your experiences of reasonable adjustments for dyslexia?
  1. How do you feel about your dyslexia diagnosis today? 
  1. Do you use any assistive technology such as speech recognition software, text to speech software eg read and write gold, mind mapping, scanning software and hand reading pens, spellcheckers, apps, computer software, tablets, smart mobile phone, electronic diary, WhatsApp, computer learning programmes and voice assisted devices like Alexia?
  1. What dyslexia strategies do you use for work? Consider clinical assessment and note taking.
  1. What would you like to see the occupational therapy profession do in the future to address dyslexia needs and preferences? 

Sharon

OTalk

#OTalk – 10th January 2023 Embracing Belonging Centred Practice hosted by @LaughingOT

This week Alice Hortop @LaughingOT is hosting with @Ruth_Hawley on the OTalk account for support, read all about it here……………..

Welcome, thank you so much for reading this blog and hopefully coming to the #OTalk on how we can embrace belong centred practice. Belonging centred practice is the subject of my PhD at Brighton University with Dr. Rebecca Twinley, Dr Channine Clarke and Professor Gayle Letherby of Plymouth University with supported funding from the Elizabeth Casson Memorial Trust. This is an interesting topic to explore, below is a short introduction to whet your appetite and you will have the opportunity to influence its development. We have a Facebook page called ‘The Belonging Movement’.

The presenting concern

As occupational therapists (OT), we feel enlightened due to our positive distinctness from other health professionals who are traditionally guided by the medical model. We feel pride in our advancement through our long-established person-centered paradigm, which is increasingly used by other health and well-being professionals. Our practice models are person-centered built on humanistic principles designed to enable us to see the person we are working alongside as a whole, not their parts (Duncan, 2011). But, what if our feelings of pride at our enlightenment are creating complacency, a cognitive dissonance to the need to continue to evolve to reflect unprecedented levels of loneliness, depression, and high suicide rates? What if our profession reflects patriarchal and capitalist values rather than the inspiring humanity that Creek (2017) describes our socialist, suffrage, and settlement movement roots of our inception?

A brief introduction to belonging-centred practice

Belonging-centred practice shifts the focus from the individual to their belonging group, their independence to their interdependence, participation not function, to look for their belonging, and supports its sustainability. Whalley-Hammel (2009 and 2014) compels occupational therapists to focus on belonging needs as an imperative, saying people are designed to be interdependent in groups for their wellbeing. Belonging-centred practice sees we are inherently connected in complex relationships which need to be visible and honoured in practice. Imagine a child’s mobile with farm animals dangling from its different branches if you disturb any of those dangling animals the whole mobile begins its wobbly adjustment to regain its overall balance. Human differences and life challenges are experienced similarly, rarely would they affect solely an individual yet much of our practice focuses on individual functioning in self-care, productivity, and leisure. Belonging-centred practice enables humans’ autonomy whilst valuing their interdependence, sees beyond the individual and their independence to the important people around them and challenges practice that creates a culture of ableism. A simple example would be, instead of the ‘this is me’ booklet commonly used to support person-centred practice, a ‘this is us’ booklet would also encourage well-being considerations of loved ones. Again, thinking of the child’s mobile, greater stability, and wellbeing in the belonging group would enhance the services we provide.

Why do we need belonging-centred practice?

Belonging centred practice is evolving in response to the negative influences of neoliberalism on the direction of occupational therapy in the last few decades. Until recently campaigning the RCOT (2022) website definition of occupational therapy ended, “Everything we do is focused on increasing independence and wellbeing.” The emphasis on independence alongside wellbeing appears innocuous at first glance, admirable and aspirational even. It is only in recent years I began to question if independence should beat the heart of our practice. Neoliberalism believes a high degree of self-reliance makes a good society, a productive society. Thatcher believed the welfare state created lethargy, entitlement, and worse dependency rather than hard work, competitiveness, and personal initiative (Davies, 2022). Also referred to as self-reliance, self-responsibility, and independence. Westernised governments, also known as ‘global north’, adoption of neoliberalist theories of devolving responsibility to citizens for their welfare influenced the practice of OT, changing the core professional paradigms, language, values, and focus (Malfitano, Whiteford, and Molineux, 2021). 

A quick definition search of the word independence included, “If one thing or person is independent of another, they are separate and not connected, so the first one is not affected or influenced by the second.” If you do a dictionary search for the antonyms to independence you will find descriptions of dependence, weakness, reliance, inadequate, impotent, subordinate, helpless and even parasitic. Who would want to identify with those words? Through my OT career I approached the people I worked with offering independence, without considering the implication that is what everyone should aspire to be. I often hear vexed OTs complaining that a client won’t accept a care package or equipment, won’t raise the alarm when they fall or do not share when they are in pain or struggling. Are we really surprised? We approach hailing the virtues of independence and to accept anything less creates an internalised ableism of feeling lesser.

There is a wealth of evidence demonstrating the far-reaching damaging effects of loneliness and disconnection between individuals, communities, and society, not to be confused with solitude which can be beneficial if chosen and balanced. Unsurprisingly, the evidence supporting the benefits of connection, co-regulation, sharing, and reciprocation are plentiful e.g., Psychoneuroimmunoendriconology research recommended by trauma experts, such as Maté, Porges, Dana, Levine, states we are built to coregulate to maintain our health and wellbeing. Our previous OT definition assumed a positive correlation between independence and wellbeing but in reality, independence only describes a level of functioning in an activity, not a state of being, living. Worse hyper independence can be a trauma response and truly none of us are independent. 

The rest we will explore through the twitter session…

References

Creek J (2017) Enabling occupational therapy practice in marginal settings. In: D Sakellariou, N Pollard (eds) Occupational therapies without borders: integrating justice with practice, 2nd edition. Edinburgh: Elsevier. pp. 237-244. 

Davies, J. (2022) Sedated, how modern capitalism created our mental health crisis. London: Atlantic books.

Duncan, E. (2008) Skills for practice in occupational therapy. London: Elsevier.

Malfitano, S., Whiteford, G., & Molineux, M. (2021). Transcending the individual: The promise and potential of collectivist approaches in occupational therapy. Scandinavian journal of occupational therapy, 28(3), pp 188–200.

Royal College of Occupational Therapy (2022) What is occupational therapy? [accessed 28/06/2022] Available at: https://www.rcot.co.uk/about-occupational-therapy/what-is-occupational-therapy

Whalley Hammell, K. (2014) Belonging, occupation, and human well-being: An exploration. Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy, Vol. 81(1) pp39-50

Yao, D. P.G., Sy, M. P., Martinez, P. G. V., & Laboy, E. C. (2022). Is occupational therapy an ableist health profession? A critical reflection on ableism and occupational therapy. Cadernos Brasileiros de Terapia Ocupacional, 30, e3303.