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Revision with unchanged content. Satisfactory performance in personally valued roles is known to be important to a sense of purpose and well-being in everyday life, yet there is little under standing of how the concept of role might be used by the role performer. People recovering from stroke frequently do not resume roles that they pre viously held and valued, yet this problem is often not effectively addressed in rehabilitation. This study used the conceptual framework of the Occupational Performance Model (Australia) (Chapparo & Ranka, 1997) to examine how a group of men perceived their own…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Revision with unchanged content. Satisfactory performance in personally valued roles is known to be important to a sense of purpose and well-being in everyday life, yet there is little under standing of how the concept of role might be used by the role performer. People recovering from stroke frequently do not resume roles that they pre viously held and valued, yet this problem is often not effectively addressed in rehabilitation. This study used the conceptual framework of the Occupational Performance Model (Australia) (Chapparo & Ranka, 1997) to examine how a group of men perceived their own occupational role performance following a disabling stroke. Inductive analysis of the data showed that participants used the concept of role to organise their own occupational performance in terms of meaning, personal abilities and time. This book uses the information suggested by the data to discuss the nature of occupational role performance in ways that develop and extend the construct of occupational performance role as described by Chapparo and Ranka and other occupational therapy researchers. It is addressed to health professionals, health educators, and researchers who are working with people with chronic disability.
Autorenporträt
Studies occupational therapy and social participation among community-living adults at Sydney University, NSW, Australia, where she is a university lecturer and a senior research fellow.