Literature DB >> 10842683

The orchestration of occupation: the dance of mothers.

E A Larson1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This article describes the relationship of mothers' orchestration of daily occupations, the specialized maternal work of parenting a child with a disability, and the mother's subjective well-being.
METHOD: Mothers' daily occupations and subjective well-being were studied using multiple in-depth interviews, participant observation of a day's round of occupations, and scales of well-being. Data were treated to a recursive analysis, which included theoretical notes generated during transcriptions that identified important themes and additional points of inquiry, line-by-line coding of transcripts, and theoretical sorting of codes and regrouping, recoding. To account for patterns in the data, a relational analysis was conducted that included the generation of metaphors.
RESULTS: Emergent findings of this analysis identified the mothers' guiding occupational motif and eight processes of orchestration in their daily routines. The occupational motif, the embrace of paradox, directed the mother's orchestration of daily occupations. The orchestration processes included planning, organizing, balancing, anticipating, interpreting, forecasting, perspective shifting, and meaning making. Examples illustrate the maternally driven and child-sensitive nature of these processes.
CONCLUSION: In their daily rounds, the mothers studied were attentive to the manner and method with which they interacted with their children to produce child-contingent occupations commensurate with their values of being a good mother. Using these orchestration processes, mothers made sense of their past, designed their present, and planned for their future within their daily occupational rounds for themselves and family members.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10842683     DOI: 10.5014/ajot.54.3.269

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Occup Ther        ISSN: 0272-9490


  2 in total

1.  Quality of Life, Coping Styles, Stress Levels, and Time Use in Mothers of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Comparing Single Versus Coupled Households.

Authors:  Tomomi McAuliffe; Reinie Cordier; Sharmila Vaz; Yvonne Thomas; Torbjorn Falkmer
Journal:  J Autism Dev Disord       Date:  2017-10

2.  Participation in Out-of-Home Environments for Young Children With and Without Developmental Disabilities.

Authors:  Chun Yi Lim; Mary Law; Mary Khetani; Nancy Pollock; Peter Rosenbaum
Journal:  OTJR (Thorofare N J)       Date:  2016-07-22
  2 in total

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