成年癌症患者的职业适应:一项现象学纵向研究。

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 REHABILITATION Australian Occupational Therapy Journal Pub Date : 2023-10-08 DOI:10.1111/1440-1630.12908
Julie M. Brose, Eileen Willis, Deidre D. Morgan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

简介:癌症晚期患者希望在癌症进展过程中继续参与他们有价值的职业。然而,依赖性的增加和身体状况的恶化挑战了一个人的能力,因此需要适应他们的职业。关于职业适应过程的理论框架往往没有解决功能逐渐衰退的影响。方法:采用纵向现象学设计,了解癌症晚期成年工人职业参与的生活体验。一个半结构化的访谈系列探讨了参与者的职业参与体验以及这种体验如何随着时间的推移而变化。根据人类职业模型(MOHO)对数据进行主题分析和映射。结果:8名成年人(40-64岁) 岁)参加了33次19岁以上的采访 月。从数据中构建了三个主题:通过行为进行的持续适应,意志在适应中的意义,以及日常生活取决于我的环境。研究结果表明,适应过程是通过职业参与发生的,是由意志驱动的,并受到环境的影响。在癌症晚期人群中,志愿和环境在职业适应中比职业能力发挥更重要的作用。结论:研究结果通过识别意志和环境在职业适应过程中的中心地位,进一步推动了MOHO对职业适应的理论概念化。对于患有晚期癌症的人来说,疾病进展会导致持续的功能下降,从而使能力成为一种不稳定和站不住脚的结构。相反,本文认为,职业适应是由意志(即行为背后的动机)和环境促进的,从而在生命结束时培养身份感和意义感。因此,职业治疗师对意志和环境意义的认识可以促进晚期癌症患者在生命结束时的持续职业参与和意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Occupational adaptation for adults living with advanced cancer: A phenomenological longitudinal study

Introduction

People living with advanced cancer want to continue participating in their valued occupations amid cancer progression. However, increasing dependence and bodily deterioration challenge a person's ability to do so, thus requiring adaptation to how they engage in their occupations. Theoretical frameworks on the process of occupational adaptation often do not address the implications of progressive functional decline.

Methods

A longitudinal phenomenological design was used to understand the lived experience of occupational engagement for working-aged adults living with advanced cancer. A semi-structured interview series explored participants' experience of occupational engagement and how this changed over time. Data were analysed thematically and mapped against the Model of Human Occupation (MOHO).

Findings

Eight adults (40–64 years old) participated in 33 interviews over 19 months. Three themes were constructed from the data: ongoing adaptation through doing, the significance of volition in adaptation, and everyday life is contingent on my environment. Study findings demonstrate that the process of adaptation occurs through occupational engagement, is motivated by volition, and is affected by the environment. Volition and the environment play a more central role in occupational adaptation than occupational competency for the advanced cancer cohort.

Conclusion

Study findings further MOHO's theoretical conceptualisation of occupational adaptation by identifying the centrality of volition and the environment in the process of adaptation. For people living with advanced cancer, disease progression results in unremitting functional decline, thus rendering competency an unstable and untenable construct. Rather, this paper argues that occupational adaptation is facilitated by volition (i.e., the motivation behind the doing) and the environment, thus fostering a sense of identity and meaning at the end of life. Occupational therapists' awareness of the significance of volition and the environment can thus foster continued occupational engagement and meaning at the end of life for people living with advanced cancer.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
16.70%
发文量
69
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Australian Occupational Therapy Journal is a leading international peer reviewed publication presenting influential, high quality innovative scholarship and research relevant to occupational therapy. The aim of the journal is to be a leader in the dissemination of scholarship and evidence to substantiate, influence and shape policy and occupational therapy practice locally and globally. The journal publishes empirical studies, theoretical papers, and reviews. Preference will be given to manuscripts that have a sound theoretical basis, methodological rigour with sufficient scope and scale to make important new contributions to the occupational therapy body of knowledge. AOTJ does not publish protocols for any study design The journal will consider multidisciplinary or interprofessional studies that include occupational therapy, occupational therapists or occupational therapy students, so long as ‘key points’ highlight the specific implications for occupational therapy, occupational therapists and/or occupational therapy students and/or consumers.
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