Canadian Model of
Occupational Performance
and Engagement
Annotations:
CAOT - Canadian Association of Occupational Therapists
PERSON
SPIRITUALITY at the core
Performance components
COGNITIVE (thinking) --- the domain that comprises all mental
functions both cognitive & intellectual, & includes, among other
things, perception, concentration, memory, comprehension,
judgement & reasoning
AFFECTIVE (feeling) --- the domain that comprises all social &
emotional functions & includes both interpersonal & intrapersonal
factors
PHYSICAL (doing) --- the domain that
comprises all sensory, motor &
sensorimotor functions
ENVIRONMENT (affords
occupational opportunities)
CULTURAL --- Ethnic, racial, ceremonial &
routine practices, based on ethos & value
system of particular groups
PHYSICAL --- Natural & built surroundings that consist of buildings, roads, gardens,
vehicles for transportation, technology, weather & other materials
SOCIAL --- social priorities about all elements of the environment,
patterns of relationships of people living in an organised community,
social groupings based on common interests, values, attitudes & beliefs
INSTITUTIONAL --- societal institutions & practices including policies,
decision-making processes, procedures, accessibility & other
organisational practices. Includes economic components, legal
components & political components
OCCUPATION
bridge that connects person
and environment - i.e.
individuals act on environment
through occupation
Domain of concern for
Occupational Therapy
groups of activities and tasks in
everyday life, named, organised, and
given value and meaning by
individuals and culture
SELF-CARE --- looking after oneself
PRODUCTIVITY --- contributing to social & economic
fabric of community
LEISURE --- enjoying life
BASIC ASSUMPTIONS
Humans are occupational beings
Occupation has therapeutic potential
Occupation affects health & well-being
Occupation organises time& brings structure to living
Occupation brings meaning to life
through the combination of
cultural and individual influences
on the creation of meaning
Occupations are idiosyncratic - the
specific occupations that a person might
engage in will vary from person to person
OCCUPATIONAL PEFORMANCE & ENGAGMENT
OCCUPATIONAL PERFORMANCE - the dynamic
interaction of person, occupation &
environment (more limited concept than
occupational engagement)
OCCUPATIONAL ENGAGEMENT - Individuals can engage in
occupation without necessarily performing it
ENABLEMENT & CLIENT-CENTRED PRACTICE
CLIENT-CENTRED PRACTICE
focussing on client
goals and
projected
outcomes
six categories of clients
Individuals
Families
Groups
Communities
Organisations (e.g. agencies, clubs,
associations, government, corporate
or non-governmental populations
Populations
ENABLEMENT
Occupational therapy is the art & science of enabling
engagement in everyday living, through occupation;
of enabling people to perform the occupations that
foster health and well-being; and of enabling a just
and inclusive society so that all people may
participate to their potential in the daily occupations
of life (Enabling II , p.89)
ENABLE - giving power, strengthening,
providing with ability or means to do
something & with means to do or be
something & making something possible
Three type of undertaking that are
enabled: 1) people's engagement in
everyday life, 2) their performance of
occupation, 3) the development of a just
society in which people can participate (for
an OT to enable all 3 of these outcomes,
their practice would need to be aimed at
both personal & societal levels)
ENABLEMENT through
occupation is the current
core of occupational therapy
Enabling is the basis of occupational therapy's
client-centred practice and a foundation for
client empowerment & justice (Enabling II, p.99)
The assumption at the core of both enablement
&client-centred practice is that occupational therapy
involves "collaborating with people rather than doing
things for them" (Enabling II, p.98)
Mutual relationship between client-centredness &
enablement "In occupational therapy, client-centred
practice delimits the definition of enablement;
conversely enablement delimits the definition of
client-centred pratice" (Enabling II, p. 99)
The processes through which occupational
therapists facilitate occupational performance
and engagement
Challenges to client-centred practice & enablement -
e.g. client's culture & level of education, therapist's
capacity to share power & recognise client expertise,
management philosophies & resource distribution of
the broader systems
CANADIAN MODEL OF CLIENT-CENTRED ENABLEMENT (CMCE)
CMOP-E does not specify the process of enablement
focuses on the encounter between
OT and client (therapeutic
relationship) and aims to make
explicit the process of enabling
occupation in a client-centred way
NB. The three practice models / frameworks are designed to be used in combination. CMOP-E provides the
overall structure for conceptualising occupational performance & engagement and the work of OTs. CPPF
provides details about the generic process used by OTs when working with clients,. CMCE provides an
action framework within which to conceptualise how OTs work with their clients