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Standards of Practice for Occupational Therapy

American Occupational Therapy Association

2021American Journal of Occupational Therapy38 citationsDOI

Abstract

This document defines minimum standards for the practice of occupational therapy. According to the Occupational Therapy Practice Framework: Domain and Process (4th ed.; OTPF-4), occupational therapy is defined as the therapeutic use of everyday life occupations with persons, groups, or populations (i.e., the client) for the purpose of enhancing or enabling participation. . . . Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and non-disability-related needs. These services include acquisition and preservation of occupational identity for clients who have or are at risk for developing an illness, injury, disease, disorder, condition, impairment, disability, activity limitation, or participation restriction. (American Occupational Therapy Association [AOTA], 2020c, p. 1).

Topics & Concepts

Occupational therapyPromotion (chess)MedicineOccupational safety and healthOccupational health nursingEveryday lifeIdentity (music)NursingClinical PracticeWorkplace health promotionFamily medicineProcess (computing)MEDLINEDomain (mathematical analysis)PsychologyOccupational medicineOccupational Therapy Practice and ResearchAssistive Technology in Communication and MobilityOlder Adults Driving Studies