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Identifying occupational therapy outcome measures supportive of recovery-orientated mental health services in Ireland

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posted on 2021-04-13, 10:50 authored by Roisín Kearn, Nancy Salmon, Mairéad Cahill, Eithne Egan
Purpose – No occupational therapy outcome measures have been designed specifically for recovery-orientated services. This paper aims to identify occupational therapy outcome measures relevant to mental health practice and assess them against recovery principles adopted by Irish Mental Health Services. Design/methodology/approach – A narrative review methodology was used to appraise outcome measures against CHIME recovery principles. Findings – A systematic search across 13 databases identified eight well-established outcome measures commonly used within occupational therapy mental health literature. The included outcome measures were appraised using a recovery alignment tool. Practical implications – All outcome measures connected to some recovery processes. Those using semi-structured interview formats and notably the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) had the strongest alignment to recovery processes. Originality/value – This is the first known review which provides some validation that the included outcome measures support recovery processes, yet the measures rely heavily on therapist’s skills for processes to be facilitated. It recommends that ways to better support the process of partnership in occupational therapy mental health outcome measures be explored and further research be undertaken.

History

Publication

Irish Journal of Occupational Therapy;

Publisher

Emerald Publishing Limited

Note

peer-reviewed

Language

English

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