TY - JOUR
T1 - Occupational Therapy Practice Guidelines for Adults With Chronic Conditions
AU - Fields, Beth
AU - Smallfield, Stacy
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 by the American Occupational Therapy Association, Inc.
PY - 2022/3/1
Y1 - 2022/3/1
N2 - IMPORTANCE: Demand is increasing for occupational therapy practitioners to help the growing population of adults with chronic conditions manage their conditions. OBJECTIVE: This Practice Guideline, which is informed by systematic reviews of the literature on the use of self-management interventions, is meant to guide occupational therapy practitioners' clinical decision making when working with community-dwelling adults with chronic conditions. The chronic conditions included heart disease, chronic lung conditions, diabetes, and kidney disease. The self-management interventions addressed ADLs and sleep and rest; IADLs; education, work, volunteering, leisure, and social participation; and the caregiver role. METHOD: We reviewed, discussed, and integrated the clinical recommendations developed from four systematic reviews, supporting literature, and expert opinion to provide recommendations for practice. RESULTS: A total of 102 articles were included in the systematic reviews, which served as the primary basis for the practice recommendations. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS: Strong to moderate evidence supports clinical recommendations for the use of self-management interventions when working with clients with chronic conditions. We recommend the use of a multimodal approach that includes three components-education, goal setting, and problem solving-over an extended period to assist clients in establishing self-management habits and routines. On the basis of emerging evidence and expert opinion, we recommend that occupational therapy practitioners consider using a prevention approach, helping clients establish habits and routines, and emphasizing shared goal setting when addressing clients' self-management of chronic conditions. What This Article Adds: This Practice Guideline provides a summary of strong to moderate evidence that supports clinical recommendations for the use of self-management interventions with clients with chronic conditions. When guided by this evidence, occupational therapy practitioners are better able to help clients meet their occupational challenges.
AB - IMPORTANCE: Demand is increasing for occupational therapy practitioners to help the growing population of adults with chronic conditions manage their conditions. OBJECTIVE: This Practice Guideline, which is informed by systematic reviews of the literature on the use of self-management interventions, is meant to guide occupational therapy practitioners' clinical decision making when working with community-dwelling adults with chronic conditions. The chronic conditions included heart disease, chronic lung conditions, diabetes, and kidney disease. The self-management interventions addressed ADLs and sleep and rest; IADLs; education, work, volunteering, leisure, and social participation; and the caregiver role. METHOD: We reviewed, discussed, and integrated the clinical recommendations developed from four systematic reviews, supporting literature, and expert opinion to provide recommendations for practice. RESULTS: A total of 102 articles were included in the systematic reviews, which served as the primary basis for the practice recommendations. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS: Strong to moderate evidence supports clinical recommendations for the use of self-management interventions when working with clients with chronic conditions. We recommend the use of a multimodal approach that includes three components-education, goal setting, and problem solving-over an extended period to assist clients in establishing self-management habits and routines. On the basis of emerging evidence and expert opinion, we recommend that occupational therapy practitioners consider using a prevention approach, helping clients establish habits and routines, and emphasizing shared goal setting when addressing clients' self-management of chronic conditions. What This Article Adds: This Practice Guideline provides a summary of strong to moderate evidence that supports clinical recommendations for the use of self-management interventions with clients with chronic conditions. When guided by this evidence, occupational therapy practitioners are better able to help clients meet their occupational challenges.
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U2 - 10.5104/ajot.2022/762001
DO - 10.5104/ajot.2022/762001
M3 - Article
C2 - 35299240
AN - SCOPUS:85126894893
SN - 0272-9490
VL - 76
JO - American Journal of Occupational Therapy
JF - American Journal of Occupational Therapy
IS - 2
ER -