HomeStore

Appreciating Occupational Therapy’s Role in Addressing Driving

Appreciating Occupational Therapy’s Role in Addressing Driving

Course Description:

Occupational therapists (OTs) support participation in the community, which includes addressing driving and community mobility for individuals of all ages and in all populations.  Driving and community mobility are highly complex instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) that can have a direct impact on engagement in other areas of occupations.  OTs and other Driver Rehabilitation Specialists (e.g. driving instructors with special training, physical therapists, psychiatrists, physicians, etc.) evaluate sensory, cognitive, and motor performance skills and relate findings to performance.  OTs have unique education and training in further evaluating a client’s performance patterns, contexts (including supports and barriers), and the influence driving and community mobility has in daily life and overall well-being.  This transactional perspective is unique to OT and situates our profession in the forefront of addressing this IADL and the issues that may arise if/when this IADL is compromised.  

OTs have an ethical obligation to address the valued task of driving and to assess if OT interventions can promote and/or prolong safe driving. The 2018 ACOTE Standards require entry level OT education programs to ensure students are able to “Evaluate the needs of persons, groups, and populations to design programs that enhance community mobility, and implement transportation transitions, including driver rehabilitation and community access.” However, based upon the geographical area and practice setting, practitioners might not feel comfortable in addressing driving, or assume another provider is addressing. The strong link between driving, community mobility, and other occupations provides a clear need for all OTs to commit to addressing driving with clients.  OTs have the knowledge necessary to identify those who are medically at risk and to provide necessary resources related to driving and community mobility, although some OTs may leave this to specialists in the field of driver rehabilitation. 

Select Delivery Type
From $12.95

Original: $37.00

-65%
Appreciating Occupational Therapy’s Role in Addressing Driving

$37.00

$12.95
Product image 1

Description

Course Description:

Occupational therapists (OTs) support participation in the community, which includes addressing driving and community mobility for individuals of all ages and in all populations.  Driving and community mobility are highly complex instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) that can have a direct impact on engagement in other areas of occupations.  OTs and other Driver Rehabilitation Specialists (e.g. driving instructors with special training, physical therapists, psychiatrists, physicians, etc.) evaluate sensory, cognitive, and motor performance skills and relate findings to performance.  OTs have unique education and training in further evaluating a client’s performance patterns, contexts (including supports and barriers), and the influence driving and community mobility has in daily life and overall well-being.  This transactional perspective is unique to OT and situates our profession in the forefront of addressing this IADL and the issues that may arise if/when this IADL is compromised.  

OTs have an ethical obligation to address the valued task of driving and to assess if OT interventions can promote and/or prolong safe driving. The 2018 ACOTE Standards require entry level OT education programs to ensure students are able to “Evaluate the needs of persons, groups, and populations to design programs that enhance community mobility, and implement transportation transitions, including driver rehabilitation and community access.” However, based upon the geographical area and practice setting, practitioners might not feel comfortable in addressing driving, or assume another provider is addressing. The strong link between driving, community mobility, and other occupations provides a clear need for all OTs to commit to addressing driving with clients.  OTs have the knowledge necessary to identify those who are medically at risk and to provide necessary resources related to driving and community mobility, although some OTs may leave this to specialists in the field of driver rehabilitation. 

You may also like

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Unlimited CE Membership for Occupational Therapy

$247.00

$86.45

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Tracheostomy, Voice, and Dysphagia: Evaluation and Treatment

$19.00

$6.65

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Interventions and Client Advocacy to Prevent Skin Breakdown and Promote Wound Healing

$37.00

$12.95

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Sundowning Syndrome: Clinical Factors and Therapeutic Approaches

$37.00

$12.95

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Impact of Loneliness on Health and Wellbeing for the Senior Population

$37.00

$12.95

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Enhancing Quality of Life: Non-Clinical Methods to Find Joy for Seniors

$72.00

$25.20

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Speech Generating Devices: Access, Vision, and Mounting

$105.00

$36.75

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Dynamic Seating: Moving Beyond Static Wheelchair Seating

$37.00

$12.95

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Aging Process: What is Happening to the Body and What Does it Mean?

$55.00

$19.25

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Seating Solutions for Clients with Increased Muscle Tone

$37.00

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Providing Control of Devices in the Environment for Play, Independence, and Participation

$37.00

$12.95

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Long-Term Effects of COVID-19 in Post-Acute and Residential Care Settings

$19.00

$6.65

Appreciating Occupational Therapy’s Role in Addressing Driving | HomeCEU