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Occupational Therapists<i>’</i> Implementation of Evidence-Based Practice: A Cross Sectional Survey

Robert Krueger, Melissa M. Sweetman, Malissa Martin, Thomas Cappaert

2020Occupational Therapy In Health Care25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Evidence-based practice (EBP) implementation has been associated with quality health care outcomes, yet only a small proportion of occupational therapists implement EBP. We conducted a cross-sectional survey measuring EBP implementation, skill and knowledge, self-reflection behavior, and practice demographics to clarify implementation of EBP and factors acting as supports. A random sample of occupational therapists practicing in the U.S. was invited to participate; 578 surveys were included in the final analysis. Participants implemented EBP less than 1 time over the previous 8 weeks; EBP use was highest in those with a doctorate (p = .002) and high self-reflection behavior (p = .001); EBP use was marginally higher in those with organizational support (p = .008; p = .009), time for EBP (p = .009), and access to full text articles (p = .006). Further investigation of how reflective practice and levels of doctoral education support EBP use are recommended.

Topics & Concepts

Evidence-based practiceCross-sectional studyOccupational therapyDemographicsPsychologyMedicineMedical educationNursingFamily medicinePhysical therapyAlternative medicineDemographySociologyPathologyHealth Sciences Research and EducationOccupational Therapy Practice and ResearchNursing Diagnosis and Documentation
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