- Title
- Occupational therapy medicolegal assessment of domestic assistance requirements: focus group perspectives
- Creator
- Arnold, Susan; Mackenzie, Lynette; Millington, Michael; James, Carole
- Relation
- Australian Occupational Therapy Journal Vol. 66, Issue 2, p. 239-248
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1440-1630.12552
- Publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2019
- Description
- Background/aim: Estimating domestic assistance requirements within the medicolegal field is a role for occupational therapists. It is a complex multidimensional process of clinical reasoning with no published research outlining how an occupational therapist translates assessment data into the number of hours of domestic assistance required. This study describes the current occupational therapy practice of estimating domestic assistance hours within the medicolegal context. Method: Three focus groups, totalling 14 occupational therapists providing medicolegal reports in New South Wales, were conducted. Sydney University provided ethics approval. Focus group data were thematically analysed. Results: Four themes were identified: Tasks included as housework. Assessment process – interview of pre‐injury and recovery status; functional performance on specific tasks and a tour of the home. Influential factors – include legal system restrictions, medical management, cultural and society values, family expectations, location and impact of diagnosis. Strategies to determine care – triangulation of observed data with medical reports and clinical experience. Knowledge of community and own performance times within the framework of occupational therapy philosophy Discussion: No single method of translating assessment data to hours of care was identified. Therapists use of their own housework performance raises ethical issues. Use of claimant only statements raises issues of inaccurate data on which to base decisions. Therapists should refer to occupational therapy process of clinical reasoning to explain their recommendations even though the reasoning does not give a definite number of care hours. Conclusion: Therapists need to understand the factors influencing their clinical reasoning when integrating all available information into an estimating of domestic assistance hours. Further study analysing the content of medicolegal report may provide information as to how therapists document their clinical reasoning for court.
- Subject
- domestic care assessment; legal; medicolegal assessment
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1442615
- Identifier
- uon:41739
- Identifier
- ISSN:1440-1630
- Language
- eng
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