• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 4
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 6
  • 6
  • 4
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Hodnocení domácího prostředí z pohledu ergoterapie. Podtitul: Dotazníkové šetření mezi českými i zahraničními ergoterapeuty o hodnocení domácího prostředí a domácích návštěvách pacientů/klientů / Home Assessment from the View of Occupational Therapy. Subtitle: A Survey among Occupational Therapists from the Czech Republic and Abroad on Home Assessments and Home Visits

Rohlenová, Eva January 2018 (has links)
Home assessment is an important part of occupational therapy intervention. It can help improve patients' quality of life in many ways: lower the risk of falls, improve their self-dependence, increase participation etc. Despite that, there is little information about home assessment in Czech literature. There is no overview of home assessment tools nor any study summarizing information about current home assessment practice. The main goal of this thesis was to explore home assessment and home visit practice in the Czech republic using a questionaire-based survey among Czech occupational therapists. The results were to be compared to data gathered from foreign respondents. Theoretical part discusses the topic of the thesis iand presents information on home assessment tools. Chosen ones are described in detail (Cougar, WeHSA, Housing Enabler, SEMAFOR home). Practical part summarizes the results of the questionaire using tables, graphs and statistical analysis. Data from 144 Czech and 135 foreign respondents was gathered and analysed. Research hypotheses were that the majority of Czech occupational therapists don't do home visits and don't evaluate home environment using existing home assessment tools. Furthermore, foreign occupational therapists were expected to perform home visits and use existing...
2

An Evaluation of the Effects of an Abridged Parent Training Program on Parent-child Interactions in the Home

Jones-Hamilton, Allison M. 12 1900 (has links)
This study examined the effects of a condensed parent training program on parent-child interactions in the home. Two parents participated in a positive parenting workshop that included explicit training of four skills and indirect training of two additional skills. To determine skill acquisition, both parents performed role plays and completed written exams pre- and post-training. Role play assessment results showed improvements in all skill areas for both participants. Written assessment results showed improvements for all skills directly taught except one. Multiple measures were examined in the home prior to and following the workshop to assess generalization. Results showed an increase in positive interactions and decrease in coercive interactions and undesirable child behavior for both participants.
3

Clients' Perspectives of the Home Modification Process and Products

Thieman, Lauren Pauline 14 August 2008 (has links)
No description available.
4

Clients' perspectives of the home modification process and products

Thieman, Lauren Pauline. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.G.S.)--Miami University, Dept. of Sociology and Gerontology, 2008. / Title from first page of PDF document. Includes bibliographical references (p. 39-40).
5

Decision Support for Treatment of Patients with Advanced Parkinson’s Disease / Beslutsstöd för behandling av patienter med avancerad Parkinsons sjukdom

Westin, Jerker January 2010 (has links)
The overall aim of this thesis was to develop, deploy and evaluate new IT-based methods for supporting treatment and assessment of treatment of advanced Parkinson’s disease. In this condition a number of different motor and non-motor symptoms occur in episodes of varying frequency, duration and severity. In order to determine outcome of treatment changes, repeated assessments are necessary. Hospitalization for observation is expensive and may not be representative for the situation at home. Paper home diaries have questionable reliability and storage and retrieval of results are problematic. Approaches for monitoring using wearable sensors are unable to address important non-motor symptoms. A test battery system consisting of both self-assessments of symptoms and motor function tests was constructed for a touch screen mobile phone. Tests are performed on several occasions per day during test periods of one week. Data is transmitted over the mobile net to a central server where summaries in different symptom dimensions and an overall test score per patient and test period are calculated. There is a web application that graphically presents the results to treating clinical staff. As part of this work, a novel method for assessment of spiral drawing impairment useful during event-driven sampling was developed. To date, the system has been used by over 100 patients in 10 clinics in Sweden and Italy. Evidence is growing that the test battery is useful, reliable and valid for assessment of symptoms during advanced Parkinson’s disease. Infusion of a levodopa/carbidopa gel into the small intestine has been shown to reduce variation in plasma drug levels and improve clinical response in this patient category. A pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model of this intestinal gel infusion was constructed. Possibly this model can assist the process of individualization of dosage for this treatment through in numero simulations. Results from an exploratory data analysis indicate that severity measures during oral levodopa treatment may be factors to consider when deciding candidates for infusion treatment.
6

Fidélité interexaminateurs de l’Évaluation à domicile de l’interaction personne environnement (ÉDIPE) : version cognitive

Louis-Delsoin, Cindy 04 1900 (has links)
INTRODUCTION. D’ici 2030, le Québec comptera 180 000 personnes aînées vivant avec un trouble neurocognitif (PATNC). Les TNC entraînent des enjeux d’interaction personne environnement – l’aîné interagissant avec son environnement humain (proche aidant) ou non humain (domicile) – compromettant ainsi le maintien à domicile. Basée sur le Modèle de compétence, l’Évaluation à domicile de l’interaction personne environnement (ÉDIPE) – version cognitive vise à combler le manque d’instruments validés ciblant ces enjeux. Cet instrument comprend trois sections (Exploration des problèmes cognitifs et de leur impact; Évaluation de l’interaction; Validation et interprétation du processus d’évaluation) évaluées lors d’entrevues, d’observations et de mises en situation; deux échelles (ordinale; dichotomique) qualifient l’interaction personne-environnement. Ce Mémoire porte sur l’étude de la fidélité interexaminateurs de l’ÉDIPE–version cognitive. MÉTHODOLOGIE. Basés sur la Théorie classique de la mesure, deux ergothérapeutes indépendants et formés ont administré simultanément l’ÉDIPE–version cognitive à 30 dyades (PATNC-proches aidant), à domicile (3,2h/évaluation). Pour chaque item, le coefficient kappa, le pourcentage d’accord et l’erreur-type ont été calculés. RÉSULTATS. Les coefficients kappa varient entre -0,053 et 1,000 (pourcentages d’accord 50%-100%); la majorité (80%) varie d’Acceptable à Presque parfait. DISCUSSION. La formation et l’application rigoureuse du guide de passation soutiennent la fidélité interexaminateurs de l’instrument. Plusieurs coefficients faibles démontrent un pourcentage d’accord élevé, référant aux paradoxes de Feinstein et Cicchetti. CONCLUSION. Cette étude documente la fidélité interexaminateurs d’un instrument prometteur comblant une lacune dans la compréhension de l’interaction personne environnement des PATNC vivant à domicile. Poursuivre la validation de l’ÉDIPE–version cognitive appuiera davantage son utilisation en clinique et en recherche. / INTRODUCTION. By 2030, Quebec will have 180,000 older people living with a neurocognitive disorder (OPLwNDs). Neurocognitive disorders lead to issues affecting the person-environment interaction – the older adult interacting with his or her human (caregiver) or non-human (home) environment – thereby compromising aging in place. Based on the Model of Competence, the Home Assessment of Person-Environment Interaction (HoPE)-Cognitive Version aims to fill the gap in validated tools targeting these issues. This tool has three sections (Exploration of cognitive problems and their impact; Assessment of interaction; Validation and interpretation of the assessment process) that employ interviews, observations and task performance; two scales (ordinal; dichotomous) qualify the person-environment interaction. This Master’s thesis examines the interrater reliability of the HoPE-Cognitive Version. METHODOLOGY. Based on classical test theory, two independent, trained occupational therapists simultaneously administered the HoPE-Cognitive Version to 30 dyads (OPLwND-caregiver), at home (3.2 h/assessment). For each item, the kappa coefficient, percentage of agreement and standard error were calculated. RESULTS. Kappa coefficients ranged from -0.053 to 1.000 (percentages of agreement 50%–100%); the majority (80%) ranged from Acceptable to Almost Perfect. DISCUSSION. Training and rigorous application of the assessment guide support the tool’s interrater reliability. Several low coefficients demonstrate a high percentage of agreement, referring to Feinstein and Cicchetti’s paradoxes. CONCLUSION. This study documents the interrater reliability of a promising tool that fills a gap in understanding the person-environment interaction of OPLwNDs living at home. Further validation of the HoPE-Cognitive Version will support its use in clinical and research settings.

Page generated in 0.0832 seconds