Aldrich Rebecca M, Boston Tessa L, Daaleman Claire E
Rebecca M. Aldrich, PhD, OTR/L, is Assistant Professor, Doisy College of Health Sciences, Saint Louis University, Saint Louis, MO;
Tessa L. Boston, MOTS, is Graduate Student, Master of Occupational Therapy program, Doisy College of Health Sciences, Saint Louis University, Saint Louis, MO.
Am J Occup Ther. 2017 Jan/Feb;71(1):7101100040p1-7101100040p5. doi: 10.5014/ajot.2017.023085.
At 99 years old, occupational therapy is a global health care profession with a growing orientation toward justice. Because much of the occupational justice discourse has developed outside the United States, parallels between the profession's ethos and its current focus on justice must be examined more closely in this country. Although occupational therapy practitioners in the United States are better equipped than their predecessors with language and theories that explicitly emphasize justice, the potential for bringing that focus to bear depends on practitioners' willingness to think differently about their practices. We argue that a focus on justice can be naturally integrated with curriculum standards by emphasizing the link between cultural humility, client-centeredness, and embodied habits of "seeking out unknown others." Outside formal education, practitioners can be encouraged to think of justice as something that already intersects with practice, not something that practitioners must choose whether to take up.
在99岁高龄时,职业治疗是一门全球性的医疗保健专业,且越来越注重正义。由于许多职业正义的论述是在美国以外发展起来的,因此在这个国家必须更仔细地审视该专业的精神气质与其当前对正义的关注之间的相似之处。尽管美国的职业治疗从业者比他们的前辈更有能力运用明确强调正义的语言和理论,但将这种关注付诸实践的潜力取决于从业者是否愿意以不同的方式思考他们的实践。我们认为,通过强调文化谦逊、以客户为中心以及“寻找未知他人”的具体习惯之间的联系,对正义的关注可以自然地融入课程标准。在正规教育之外,可以鼓励从业者将正义视为已经与实践相交的东西,而不是从业者必须选择是否接受的东西。