Cargando…

P55 Work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions

INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Developing a vocational identity is an important part of adolescent development and vocational morbidities have been recognized in young people with long term health conditions including rheumatic disease. Challenges in educational settings and/or workplaces have been report...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pidgeon, Claire, Hackett, Janine, Lunt, Laura, Farre, Albert, McDonagh, Janet
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9515825/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rap/rkac067.055
_version_ 1784798574777729024
author Pidgeon, Claire
Hackett, Janine
Lunt, Laura
Farre, Albert
McDonagh, Janet
author_facet Pidgeon, Claire
Hackett, Janine
Lunt, Laura
Farre, Albert
McDonagh, Janet
author_sort Pidgeon, Claire
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Developing a vocational identity is an important part of adolescent development and vocational morbidities have been recognized in young people with long term health conditions including rheumatic disease. Challenges in educational settings and/or workplaces have been reported by young people. Young people have also identified this area to be a research priority. Occupational Therapy (OT) is well placed to assume a lead role in this area, as it is the only health profession that has occupation at the core of its philosophy and practice. DESCRIPTION/METHOD: The aim of this study was to explore the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of adolescents and young adults with long term health conditions from the perspectives of OTs and to examine their current and potential role in addressing these needs. METHODS: A questionnaire was developed using Qualtrics software and piloted with two OTs and amended accordingly. A snowballing recruitment method via email and Twitter was employed. Initial contact was made via colleagues of the project team and cascaded to OT networks. Data included demographic, involvement in health care planning with education, perceived importance of addressing pre-vocational issues for young people, respondents’ knowledge and confidence, and the role of OT. DISCUSSION/RESULTS: The survey received 130 responses, of which 76 responses had complete data available (59%). A complete case analysis approach was taken. The majority of respondents were in clinical roles, primarily working in hospital or community settings and duration in practice ranged from 10 months to 40+ years. The perceived importance of addressing a wide range of vocational issues was consistently greater than the perceived knowledge and confidence of the professionals to address these. The majority of respondents (75%) perceived a need to address vocational issues for young people in their setting although only 22% reported that there was a designated member of their multidisciplinary team who would address these. The majority of such personnel identified by respondents were OTs but also included youth workers, education officer in the youth justice service, social worker. 63% routinely assessed productive/vocational occupations such as employment/education. Half of respondents (51%) did not know where to signpost/refer young people for vocational/employment advice. The majority (92%) reported not having any training in addressing vocational/employment issues specifically for young people aged 10-24 years and only 20% reported training in this area with adults. The majority (70%) however did perceive a difference in providing such advice to young people compared to adults. The main perceived barrier to addressing this area in practice was limited clinical time. KEY LEARNING POINTS/CONCLUSION: This study echoes previous calls for vocational issues to be addressed with young people with long-term health conditions and highlights the need for this to be addressed in both training and service provision.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9515825
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95158252022-09-28 P55 Work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions Pidgeon, Claire Hackett, Janine Lunt, Laura Farre, Albert McDonagh, Janet Rheumatol Adv Pract Posters INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Developing a vocational identity is an important part of adolescent development and vocational morbidities have been recognized in young people with long term health conditions including rheumatic disease. Challenges in educational settings and/or workplaces have been reported by young people. Young people have also identified this area to be a research priority. Occupational Therapy (OT) is well placed to assume a lead role in this area, as it is the only health profession that has occupation at the core of its philosophy and practice. DESCRIPTION/METHOD: The aim of this study was to explore the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of adolescents and young adults with long term health conditions from the perspectives of OTs and to examine their current and potential role in addressing these needs. METHODS: A questionnaire was developed using Qualtrics software and piloted with two OTs and amended accordingly. A snowballing recruitment method via email and Twitter was employed. Initial contact was made via colleagues of the project team and cascaded to OT networks. Data included demographic, involvement in health care planning with education, perceived importance of addressing pre-vocational issues for young people, respondents’ knowledge and confidence, and the role of OT. DISCUSSION/RESULTS: The survey received 130 responses, of which 76 responses had complete data available (59%). A complete case analysis approach was taken. The majority of respondents were in clinical roles, primarily working in hospital or community settings and duration in practice ranged from 10 months to 40+ years. The perceived importance of addressing a wide range of vocational issues was consistently greater than the perceived knowledge and confidence of the professionals to address these. The majority of respondents (75%) perceived a need to address vocational issues for young people in their setting although only 22% reported that there was a designated member of their multidisciplinary team who would address these. The majority of such personnel identified by respondents were OTs but also included youth workers, education officer in the youth justice service, social worker. 63% routinely assessed productive/vocational occupations such as employment/education. Half of respondents (51%) did not know where to signpost/refer young people for vocational/employment advice. The majority (92%) reported not having any training in addressing vocational/employment issues specifically for young people aged 10-24 years and only 20% reported training in this area with adults. The majority (70%) however did perceive a difference in providing such advice to young people compared to adults. The main perceived barrier to addressing this area in practice was limited clinical time. KEY LEARNING POINTS/CONCLUSION: This study echoes previous calls for vocational issues to be addressed with young people with long-term health conditions and highlights the need for this to be addressed in both training and service provision. Oxford University Press 2022-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9515825/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rap/rkac067.055 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Rheumatology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Posters
Pidgeon, Claire
Hackett, Janine
Lunt, Laura
Farre, Albert
McDonagh, Janet
P55 Work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions
title P55 Work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions
title_full P55 Work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions
title_fullStr P55 Work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions
title_full_unstemmed P55 Work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions
title_short P55 Work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions
title_sort p55 work ready champions for young people: the role of occupational therapy in addressing the pre-vocational and early-employment needs of young people with long term health conditions
topic Posters
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9515825/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rap/rkac067.055
work_keys_str_mv AT pidgeonclaire p55workreadychampionsforyoungpeopletheroleofoccupationaltherapyinaddressingtheprevocationalandearlyemploymentneedsofyoungpeoplewithlongtermhealthconditions
AT hackettjanine p55workreadychampionsforyoungpeopletheroleofoccupationaltherapyinaddressingtheprevocationalandearlyemploymentneedsofyoungpeoplewithlongtermhealthconditions
AT luntlaura p55workreadychampionsforyoungpeopletheroleofoccupationaltherapyinaddressingtheprevocationalandearlyemploymentneedsofyoungpeoplewithlongtermhealthconditions
AT farrealbert p55workreadychampionsforyoungpeopletheroleofoccupationaltherapyinaddressingtheprevocationalandearlyemploymentneedsofyoungpeoplewithlongtermhealthconditions
AT mcdonaghjanet p55workreadychampionsforyoungpeopletheroleofoccupationaltherapyinaddressingtheprevocationalandearlyemploymentneedsofyoungpeoplewithlongtermhealthconditions