Murray Felicity, Hess Ka Yan, Rihtman Tanya
Occupational Therapy Programme, Department of Sport, Nutrition and Allied Health Professions, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK.
Aust Occup Ther J. 2025 Feb;72(1):e12998. doi: 10.1111/1440-1630.12998. Epub 2024 Oct 15.
Climate change threatens the environments in which person-centred occupational therapy occurs. Environmental sustainability is directly linked with the health and wellbeing of current and future generations, presenting occupational therapists with a unique advocacy and activist role. As practitioners of the future, there is an urgent need to understand students' attitudes, perceptions of, and self-perceived preparedness for, dealing with environmental determinants of health and intergenerational occupational and climate justice.
A cross-sectional exploratory descriptive survey collected United Kingdom (UK) based allied health professional students' attitudes, perceptions, and self-perceived preparedness for advocating for environmental sustainability in the context of person-centred care. The survey was distributed to 48 gatekeepers in UK institutions with approved allied health professional training programmes (44 offered occupational therapy); 62 occupational therapy students responded. Descriptive and non-parametric inferential statistics were used to analyse quantitative data. Text and short answers were analysed qualitatively via inductive content analysis.
The study was co-designed and implemented with MSc (pre-registration) occupational therapy students.
Participants (94%) expressed concerns for climate change, with 84% feeling responsible for addressing environmental sustainability in health care. While 64.5% identified climate justice as a top priority, a perceived challenge emerged between person-centred care and sustainability, with only 18% of participants feeling prepared for environmental sustainability in occupational therapy practice. Participants requested education on personal and professional sustainability practices, as well as collective action. Sharing personal climate change experiences, advocating with family and friends, and facilitating connections for collective action were highlighted as potentially transformative educational tools in this area.
Occupational therapy curricula should address environmental sustainability through pragmatic, critical, and ethical lenses to enhance students' preparedness for this advocacy and activist role. Reflection and continuous professional development for environmentally sustainable practices is recommended.
Occupational therapists believe that it is important to support people to participate in occupations that matter to them. However, the activities that some people choose to participate in may have negative effects on the environment and the planet. It is important to ensure that when occupational therapists support people in their choices of activities, this does not lead to unequal access to healthy and meaningful occupations of others, now or in the future. That is because occupational therapists also have a responsibility to prevent occupational injustice. Occupational therapy students are the professionals of the future, so it is important to include them in research about this topic. They need to develop skills that allow them to simultaneously make sure that they are delivering person-centred care, which is not environmentally detrimental and that does not lead to occupational injustice. Making sure that occupational therapists provide person-centred care while also managing risks of occupational injustice may be seen as a profession-specific dilemma. In this study, occupational therapy students in the UK completed a survey about their feelings, views, and readiness for managing this dilemma. Results showed that most respondents are concerned about climate change, but do not feel that their occupational therapy education sufficiently prepared them to practise in an environmentally sustainable way. They were asked to propose ideas for addressing this issue, and the article discusses how occupational therapy curricula might be changed in accordance.
气候变化威胁着以个人为中心的职业治疗所处的环境。环境可持续性与当代及后代的健康和福祉直接相关,这赋予了职业治疗师独特的倡导和行动主义角色。作为未来的从业者,迫切需要了解学生对于应对健康的环境决定因素以及代际职业与气候正义的态度、认知和自我感知的准备情况。
一项横断面探索性描述性调查收集了英国相关健康专业学生对于在以个人为中心的护理背景下倡导环境可持续性的态度、认知和自我感知的准备情况。该调查分发给了英国48所设有经批准的相关健康专业培训项目的机构的把关人(44所提供职业治疗培训);62名职业治疗专业学生做出了回应。使用描述性和非参数推断统计分析定量数据。通过归纳性内容分析对文本和简短回答进行定性分析。
该研究是与理学硕士(预注册)职业治疗专业学生共同设计并实施的。
参与者(94%)表达了对气候变化的担忧,84%的人认为自己有责任在医疗保健中推动环境可持续性。虽然64.5%的人将气候正义视为首要任务,但在以个人为中心的护理与可持续性之间出现了一个明显的挑战,只有18%的参与者认为自己为职业治疗实践中的环境可持续性做好了准备。参与者要求获得关于个人和专业可持续性实践以及集体行动的教育。分享个人气候变化经历、与家人和朋友进行倡导以及促进集体行动的联系被视为该领域可能具有变革性的教育工具。
职业治疗课程应通过务实、批判性和道德的视角来应对环境可持续性,以增强学生在这一倡导和行动主义角色方面的准备。建议对环境可持续性实践进行反思并持续开展专业发展。
职业治疗师认为,支持人们参与对他们重要的活动很重要。然而,一些人选择参与的活动可能会对环境和地球产生负面影响。重要的是要确保,当职业治疗师支持人们选择活动时,这不会导致现在或未来其他人不平等地获得健康且有意义的活动。这是因为职业治疗师也有责任防止职业不公正。职业治疗专业学生是未来的专业人员,因此将他们纳入关于这个主题的研究很重要。他们需要培养技能,以便能够同时确保他们提供的是以个人为中心的护理,这种护理不会对环境有害且不会导致职业不公正。确保职业治疗师提供以个人为中心的护理,同时管理职业不公正的风险,这可能被视为一个特定专业领域的困境。在这项研究中,英国的职业治疗专业学生完成了一项关于他们对管理这一困境的感受、观点和准备情况的调查。结果显示,大多数受访者担心气候变化,但不觉得他们的职业治疗教育使他们有足够的准备以环境可持续的方式进行实践。他们被要求提出解决这个问题的想法,并且本文讨论了职业治疗课程可能如何相应地进行改变。