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Family-Centred Assessment and Intervention in Pediatric
Rehabilitation analyzes the effectiveness of Family-Centred
Services (FCS) for children with disabilities or chronic illnesses.
This text provides you with the exact definition of FCS and offers
proof that parent involvement in children's treatment greatly
enhances therapy. You can use the suggestions and methods to
integrate parents into therapy, maximizing the family's
intervention experiences and making your work more successful and
effective. Many clinicians agree that families play a crucial part
in deciding what intervention strategies are best for their
children. From this text, you will learn that listening to parents
and valuing parental input will give you insight into the goals,
needs, and ambitions families have for their children. This enables
you to choose, with the parent, the interventions that best suit
your patients'needs and the needs of their families.In addition to
information on how to integrate parents and families into
intervention, Family-Centred Assessment and Intervention in
Pediatric Rehabilitation offers suggestions that will improve your
existing FCS or help you implement a family- centred approach,
including: performing therapy in natural settings, such as school
or home, to make changes in the children's social and physical
environments acknowledging the grieving and adaptation process of
families while being compassionate and understanding letting
parents describe what they would like their child to be able to do
and accomplish in the future putting the parents'concerns and
requests first, enabling parents to deal with caring for their
child supporting parents and reinforcing them when they have
innovative and helpful ideas informing parents on the progress of
their children and educating parents on methodologies and
strategies used in FCS Many of the suggestions derived from the
analysis of current data and original research in Family-Centred
Assessment and Intervention in Pediatric Rehabilitation have
immediate clinical applicability, allowing you to quickly adapt
methods into your intervention processes.This text also provides
you with information on types of evaluative methods, such as
Measure of Processes of Care (MPOC) and Family-Centred Program
Rating Scale (Fam PRS), that will help you determine if your FCS
program is working efficiently. Emphasizing the goal of parent
interaction in FCS services, Family-Centred Assessment and
Intervention in Pediatric Rehabilitation offers methods that will
improve your work with families and patients, making services more
beneficial and relevant to the child and to their families.
Family-Centred Assessment and Intervention in Pediatric
Rehabilitation analyzes the effectiveness of Family-Centred
Services (FCS) for children with disabilities or chronic illnesses.
This text provides you with the exact definition of FCS and offers
proof that parent involvement in children's treatment greatly
enhances therapy. You can use the suggestions and methods to
integrate parents into therapy, maximizing the family's
intervention experiences and making your work more successful and
effective.Many clinicians agree that families play a crucial part
in deciding what intervention strategies are best for their
children. From this text, you will learn that listening to parents
and valuing parental input will give you insight into the goals,
needs, and ambitions families have for their children. This enables
you to choose, with the parent, the interventions that best suit
your patients'needs and the needs of their families. In addition to
information on how to integrate parents and families into
intervention, Family-Centred Assessment and Intervention in
Pediatric Rehabilitation offers suggestions that will improve your
existing FCS or help you implement a family- centred approach,
including: performing therapy in natural settings, such as school
or home, to make changes in the children's social and physical
environments acknowledging the grieving and adaptation process of
families while being compassionate and understanding letting
parents describe what they would like their child to be able to do
and accomplish in the future putting the parents'concerns and
requests first, enabling parents to deal with caring for their
child supporting parents and reinforcing them when they have
innovative and helpful ideas informing parents on the progress of
their children and educating parents on methodologies and
strategies used in FCSMany of the suggestions derived from the
analysis of current data and original research in Family-Centred
Assessment and Intervention in Pediatric Rehabilitation have
immediate clinical applicability, allowing you to quickly adapt
methods into your intervention processes. This text also provides
you with information on types of evaluative methods, such as
Measure of Processes of Care (MPOC) and Family-Centred Program
Rating Scale (Fam PRS), that will help you determine if your FCS
program is working efficiently. Emphasizing the goal of parent
interaction in FCS services, Family-Centred Assessment and
Intervention in Pediatric Rehabilitation offers methods that will
improve your work with families and patients, making services more
beneficial and relevant to the child and to their families.
As the profession of occupational therapy continues to mature and
expand its practice, the measurement of occupational performance is
one of the key avenues that all practicing clinicians will need to
explore and master. Measuring Occupational Performance: Supporting
Best Practice in Occupational Therapy, Third Edition summarizes the
measurement tools needed to assess client occupational performance,
to provide the best intervention, and to document the effectiveness
of that intervention. These measurement tools are not just a
compilation of all that are available for measurement relevant to
occupational therapy; they are an elite group of tools carefully
selected by the editors through a process of rigorous theoretical,
clinical, and scientific reasoning. In this Third Edition, Drs.
Mary Law, Carolyn Baum, and Winnie Dunn have updated current
chapters and added new topics that have not been covered in past
editions, such as a chapter on measuring school performance, a key
area of practice. Also included is a chapter on measurement
principles and development to highlight the concepts common to all
the measures included in the text. The Third Edition also has a
focus on the best measures and measures that are used most
frequently. Features of the Third Edition: *Offers insight into the
importance of measuring functional performance, methodologies,
measurement issues, and best approach for outcome measurement
*Conveys a broad focus on occupational performance and offers
examples from a wide range of practice settings and from multiple
spots throughout the lifespan *Explains the technical aspects of
measurement development and methodologies and which components of
functioning are to be measured and how *Develops an understanding
of the theoretical aspects and evidence for both standardized tests
and non-standardized tests Instructors in educational settings can
visit www.efacultylounge.com for additional material to be used for
teaching in the classroom. New in the Third Edition: *Focus on
strengths-based approaches *Measures health and disability at both
individual and population levels using the International
Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) *An
emphasis on evidence-based practice and using evidence from other
disciplines, not just from occupational therapy *New chapter
focused on school-based practice *New content on reliability,
validity, and responsiveness *New content on goal attainment
*Additional material on decision making in practice In this
changing health care environment, Measuring Occupational
Performance: Supporting Best Practice in Occupational Therapy,
Third Edition explains how core values and beliefs can be put into
everyday practice and is the essential reference manual for the
evidence-based occupational therapy and occupational therapy
assistant student and practitioner.
While evidence-based practice (EBP) has greatly influenced
rehabilitation in the past decade, it continues to evolve and
practitioners need guidance to implement evidence into their
practice. Evidence-Based Rehabilitation: A Guide to Practice, the
best-selling text providing step-by-step EBP guidance for
rehabilitation professionals, has been updated into an expanded
Third Edition. In Evidence-Based Rehabilitation, Third Edition Drs.
Mary Law and Joy MacDermid, along with their contributors, explain
evidence-based rehabilitation, the concepts underlying EBP, and
build the reader's knowledge and skills through specific learning.
The text is organised by the steps of the EBP process-introduction
to EBP, finding the evidence, assessing the evidence, and using the
evidence. EBP focuses first and foremost on making the best
decisions for each client and using the best information available.
For many rehabilitation practitioners, building skills in EBP is
best done one step at a time. Evidence-Based Rehabilitation helps
the rehabilitation student and practitioner develop his or her
knowledge and skills to implement evidence-based rehabilitation in
practice. Benefits of the Third Edition: All chapters have been
updated with new information and resources New chapters about
systematic reviews, and knowledge transfer Extensive guide
available with specific student activities and answers for faculty
use Critical review forms included for student use-these forms have
been used by practitioners and researchers around the world for 10
to 20 years Recognition throughout the book that EBP in
rehabilitation means bringing together research evidence, clinical
reasoning of the therapist and client values and goals Fits the
standard 3-unit course design with 11 to 12 sessions Instructors in
educational settings can visit www.efacultylounge.com for
additional materials to be used for teaching in the classroom.
Designed and written by an occupational therapist and a physical
therapist with extensive research, education, and practice
experience, Evidence-Based Rehabilitation: A Guide to Practice,
Third Edition will guide both occupational therapy and physical
therapy students and practitioners as they incorporate
evidence-based practice into their work.
In contemporary Western culture, the word "fetus" introduces either
a political subject or a literal, medicalized entity. Neither of
these frameworks does justice to the vast array of religious
literature and oral traditions from cultures around the world in
which the fetus emerges as a powerful symbol or metaphor. This
volume presents essays that explore the depiction of the fetus in
the world's major religious traditions, finding some striking
commonalities as well as intriguing differences. Among the themes
that emerge is the tendency to conceive of the fetus as somehow
independent of the mother's body -- as in the case of the Buddha,
who is described as inhabiting a palace while gestating in the
womb. On the other hand, the fetus can also symbolically represent
profound human needs and emotions, such as the universal experience
of vulnerability. The authors note how the advent of the fetal
sonogram has transformed how people everywhere imagine the unborn
today, giving rise to a narrow range of decidedly literal questions
about personhood, gender, and disability.
Puppets of Nostalgia is the first major work in any Western
language to examine the ritual origins and religious dimensions of
puppetry in Japan. In a lucid and engaging style accessible to the
general reader, Jane Marie Law describes the "life, death, and
rebirth" of awaji ningyo shibai, the unique form of puppet theater
of Awaji Island that has existed since the sixteenth century.
Puppetry rites on Awaji helped to maintain rigid ritual purity
codes and to keep dangerous spiritual forces properly channeled and
appeased. Law conducted fieldwork on Awaji, located in Japan's
Inland Sea, over a ten-year period. In addition to being a detailed
history and ethnography of this ritual tradition, Law's work is, at
a theoretical level, a study of the process and meaning of
tradition formation, reformation, invention, and revitalization. It
will interest scholars in a number of fields, including the history
of religions, anthropology, cultural studies, ritual and theater
studies, Japanese studies, and social history. Focusing on the
puppetry tradition of Awaji Island, Puppets of Nostalgia describes
the activities of the island's ritual puppeteers and includes the
first English translation of their performance texts and detailed
descriptions of their rites. Because the author has lived on Awaji
during extended periods of research, the work includes fine
attention to local detail and nuanced readings of religious
currents in Japan that affect popular religious expression.
Illustrated throughout with rare photographs, the book provides an
in-depth view of a four-hundred-year-old tradition never so
thoroughly revealed to Western readers. Originally published in
1997. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
technology to again make available previously out-of-print books
from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.
These editions preserve the original texts of these important books
while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions.
The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase
access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of
books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in
1905.
In contemporary Western culture, the word "fetus" introduces either
a political subject or a literal, medicalized entity. Neither of
these frameworks does justice to the vast array of religious
literature and oral traditions from cultures around the world in
which the fetus emerges as a powerful symbol or metaphor. This
volume presents essays that explore the depiction of the fetus in
the world's major religious traditions, finding some striking
commonalities as well as intriguing differences. Among the themes
that emerge is the tendency to conceive of the fetus as somehow
independent of the mother's body -- as in the case of the Buddha,
who is described as inhabiting a palace while gestating in the
womb. On the other hand, the fetus can also symbolically represent
profound human needs and emotions, such as the universal experience
of vulnerability. The authors note how the advent of the fetal
sonogram has transformed how people everywhere imagine the unborn
today, giving rise to a narrow range of decidedly literal questions
about personhood, gender, and disability.
Puppets of Nostalgia is the first major work in any Western
language to examine the ritual origins and religious dimensions of
puppetry in Japan. In a lucid and engaging style accessible to the
general reader, Jane Marie Law describes the "life, death, and
rebirth" of awaji ningyo shibai, the unique form of puppet theater
of Awaji Island that has existed since the sixteenth century.
Puppetry rites on Awaji helped to maintain rigid ritual purity
codes and to keep dangerous spiritual forces properly channeled and
appeased. Law conducted fieldwork on Awaji, located in Japan's
Inland Sea, over a ten-year period. In addition to being a detailed
history and ethnography of this ritual tradition, Law's work is, at
a theoretical level, a study of the process and meaning of
tradition formation, reformation, invention, and revitalization. It
will interest scholars in a number of fields, including the history
of religions, anthropology, cultural studies, ritual and theater
studies, Japanese studies, and social history. Focusing on the
puppetry tradition of Awaji Island, Puppets of Nostalgia describes
the activities of the island's ritual puppeteers and includes the
first English translation of their performance texts and detailed
descriptions of their rites. Because the author has lived on Awaji
during extended periods of research, the work includes fine
attention to local detail and nuanced readings of religious
currents in Japan that affect popular religious expression.
Illustrated throughout with rare photographs, the book provides an
in-depth view of a four-hundred-year-old tradition never so
thoroughly revealed to Western readers. Originally published in
1997. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
technology to again make available previously out-of-print books
from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.
These editions preserve the original texts of these important books
while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions.
The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase
access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of
books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in
1905.
Drawing together motivational theory, research-based evidence and
guidance for best practice, this book presents innovative models
for goal-setting and goal pursuit in therapy with children. Setting
goals not only allows children, and their families, to engage with
the overall therapeutic process, but it also provides an essential
motivational element throughout the entire therapeutic process. The
editors and contributors give practical advice on empathically
collaborating with the child and his or her family, to clearly
identify achievable goals that can be wholeheartedly pursued. Key
information on Self-Determination Theory (SDT) is accessibly
explained, which will aid professional understanding of the
relationship between motivation, goal-setting, and strong
therapeutic practice. The approaches in this book can be used by a
wide range of professionals, including those who specialise in
working with children with physical disabilities, learning
disabilities, and emotional and behavioural difficulties. The
combination of theory, research and practical advice makes this
book an essential resource for professionals working
therapeutically with children, including occupational therapists,
speech and language therapists, physiotherapists, counsellors,
psychologists, social workers, arts therapists and
psychotherapists.
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