Profile of occupational therapy services in non‐urban settings: A global scoping review

K Hayes, V Dos Santos, M Costigan… - Australian …, 2023 - Wiley Online Library
K Hayes, V Dos Santos, M Costigan, D Morante
Australian Occupational Therapy Journal, 2023Wiley Online Library
Introduction Regional, rural, and remote people represent nearly half the world's population
yet experience disproportionally higher disease, mortality, and disability rates, coupled with
limited healthcare access. Occupational therapy has committed to occupational justice, yet
no descriptive framework of services provided by occupational therapists in non‐urban
locations exists. Understanding current non‐urban service practices will provide a basis for
non‐urban service development and research to reduce this inequity. Methods Four …
Introduction
Regional, rural, and remote people represent nearly half the world's population yet experience disproportionally higher disease, mortality, and disability rates, coupled with limited healthcare access. Occupational therapy has committed to occupational justice, yet no descriptive framework of services provided by occupational therapists in non‐urban locations exists. Understanding current non‐urban service practices will provide a basis for non‐urban service development and research to reduce this inequity.
Methods
Four databases were systematically searched for publications describing non‐urban occupational therapy services, from any country, written in English, French, Portuguese, or Spanish, from 2010 to 2020. Publications were screened against criteria for inclusion, and data were identified using an extraction tool and presented in a frequency table, on a map, and in a searchable supporting information Table S1.
Results
Only 117 publications were included discussing services provided to populations across 19 countries. They were mostly published in English (98%) and about populations from English‐speaking countries (70%). Included publications discussed individualist services (65%), for defined age groups (74%), and for people with specific medical diagnoses (58%). Services were commonly provided in the client's community (56%), originating from urban locations (45%) where the provider travelled (26%) or contacted clients using telehealth (19%). Individual 1:1 enabling strategies were most described (59%), including remediation (34%), compensation (9%), or education (7%). Community enablement strategies were infrequently described (14%), focused primarily on transformation to improve existing service delivery (9%), with some redistributive justice (3%), and one community development strategy (1%). Exploratory research services accounted for the remaining studies (27%). Differences were noted between Global North and South approaches.
Conclusion
Globally, occupational therapy has limited focus on non‐urban services and favours individualist rehabilitative strategies provided by therapists remote from the client's context. Further research is required on the effectiveness and appropriateness of occupational therapy strategies to improve rural/urban inequity and health outcomes.
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