Patricia Laverdure, OTD, OTR/L, BCP, FAOTA, is Assistant Professor and Program Director, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA;
Stephanie Beisbier, OTD, OTR/L, is Associate Professor and Professional Entry Program Director, Mount Mary University, Milwaukee, WI.
Am J Occup Ther. 2021 Jan-Feb;75(1):7501205050p1-7501205050p24. doi: 10.5014/ajot.2021.039560.
The findings support the use of occupation- and activity-based interventions to improve the occupational participation of children and youth with disabilities.
To examine the effectiveness of occupation- and activity-based interventions to improve participation and performance in activities of daily living (ADLs), play, and leisure in children and youth.
MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, ERIC, OTseeker, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews; reference lists of retrieved articles; and tables of contents of selected journals were searched to identify peer-reviewed studies published between 2000 and 2017.
Studies addressing occupation- and activity-based interventions and outcomes for children ages 5 to 21 were selected and appraised using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols guidelines, evaluated for risk of bias, and synthesized to develop practice recommendations.
Fifteen Level I (meta-analyses, systematic reviews, and randomized controlled trials), 5 Level II (two groups, nonrandomized), and 3 Level III (one group, pretest-posttest, retrospective) studies were examined and categorized by type of intervention and outcome. Each study used occupation- or activity-based interventions and reported ADL, play, or leisure outcomes. Intervention themes identified include supporting engagement in occupations, supporting participation with cognitive supports, and using technology to support occupational participation and performance.
Strong evidence indicates that engagement in occupations and activities, practice within and across environments, and coaching and feedback improve participation and performance in ADLs and functional mobility. Moderate evidence supports the use of collaborative goal setting, modeling, and guided participation in play and leisure. Moderate evidence also supports technological interventions for ADL, play, and leisure performance.
Engaging children and youth in occupations and activities; providing guidance in goal direction, planning, and feedback to enhance their participation; coaching caregivers in effective carryover; and providing technology-based intervention can improve the occupational participation and performance of children and youth.
这些发现支持使用以职业和活动为基础的干预措施来提高残疾儿童和青少年的职业参与度。
研究以职业和活动为基础的干预措施对提高儿童和青少年日常生活活动(ADL)、游戏和休闲活动的参与度和表现的有效性。
MEDLINE、PsycINFO、CINAHL、ERIC、OTseeker 和 Cochrane 系统评价数据库;检索文章的参考文献列表;以及选定期刊的目录表都进行了搜索,以确定 2000 年至 2017 年期间发表的同行评议研究。
选择并评估了针对 5 至 21 岁儿童的以职业和活动为基础的干预措施及结果的研究,并使用系统评价和荟萃分析协议的首选报告项目指南进行了评估,评估了偏倚风险,并综合制定了实践建议。
共检查了 15 项一级(荟萃分析、系统评价和随机对照试验)、5 项二级(两组,非随机)和 3 项三级(一组,前后测试,回顾性)研究,并根据干预类型和结果进行了分类。每一项研究都使用了以职业或活动为基础的干预措施,并报告了 ADL、游戏或休闲方面的结果。确定的干预主题包括支持参与职业、支持认知支持下的参与,以及使用技术支持职业参与和表现。
强有力的证据表明,参与职业和活动、在环境内和跨环境进行实践、以及辅导和反馈可以提高 ADL 和功能性移动的参与度和表现。中等证据支持协作目标设定、建模和引导游戏和休闲中的参与。中等证据也支持用于 ADL、游戏和休闲表现的技术干预。
让儿童和青少年参与职业和活动;在方向、计划和反馈方面提供指导,以增强他们的参与度;指导照顾者有效地进行后续行动;并提供基于技术的干预,可以提高儿童和青少年的职业参与度和表现。