Park S, Fisher A G, Velozo C A
School of Occupational Therapy, Pacific University, Forest Grove, Oregon 97116.
Am J Occup Ther. 1994 Aug;48(8):697-709. doi: 10.5014/ajot.48.8.697.
The study described in this article examined the effect of home versus clinic settings on the instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) performance of older adults.
Twenty older adults living in the community were evaluated in their homes and in an occupational therapy clinic with the Assessment of Motor and Process Skills (AMPS). The motor and process ability measures were compared between the two settings with many-faceted Rasch analysis.
The subjects' motor ability measures tended to remain stable from clinic to home settings. The process ability measures tended not to remain stable from clinic to home settings, because 10 of the 20 subjects performed significantly better in their homes.
These findings support the idea that process skill abilities are affected by the environment to a greater degree than are motor skills abilities and that for persons living in the community, the familiar home environment tends to support IADL performance. If an occupational therapist wants to know how a person performs IADLs, the therapist should evaluate that person's performance in the environment in which the client will be functioning.
本文所述研究考察了居家环境与诊所环境对老年人日常生活工具性活动(IADL)表现的影响。
采用运动与过程技能评估(AMPS)对20名居住在社区的老年人在其家中和职业治疗诊所进行评估。运用多层面Rasch分析比较两种环境下的运动和过程能力测量结果。
从诊所环境到居家环境,受试者的运动能力测量结果趋于稳定。而过程能力测量结果在从诊所环境到居家环境时往往不稳定,因为20名受试者中有10名在自己家中表现明显更好。
这些发现支持了以下观点,即过程技能能力比运动技能能力受环境的影响更大,并且对于居住在社区中的人而言,熟悉的居家环境往往有助于IADL表现。如果职业治疗师想了解一个人如何进行IADL,治疗师应在客户将要发挥功能的环境中评估其表现。