| Literature DB >> 30946612 |
Laura VanPuymbrouck1, Carli Friedman2.
Abstract
Background: Entering occupational therapy (OT) students have established beliefs, informed by sociocultural backgrounds. Understanding how students define and understand disability, and the relationships these understandings have to disability bias, can guide curriculum design decisions to integrate meso and macro level perspectives of disability into clinical reasoning.Aim/Objective: This study's aim was to explore incoming occupational therapy students' (n = 67) understandings of disability and their attitudes towards it.Material and method: An online survey was used to collect data on students' attitudes and definitions of disability. Mixed research methods were used to analyze students' definitions of disability (content analysis) in relation to disability attitudes (Disability Attitudes Implicit Association Test).Results/Finding: Findings reveal students enter curriculums with vast differences in understandings of people with disabilities and these may provide a basis for and contribute to differences in attitudes of disability.Conclusions: OT students have established beliefs of disability as individualized or more socially constructed and these influence disability biases.Significance: Students' education has considerable influence in shaping attitudes and ways of interacting with people with disability. Understanding students' assumptions as they enter a program is a first step to evaluate how curriculum design may influence development of student clinical reasoning strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Occupational therapy education; disability; implicit attitudes; medical model; social model
Year: 2019 PMID: 30946612 DOI: 10.1080/11038128.2019.1596310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Occup Ther ISSN: 1103-8128 Impact factor: 2.611