Occupational Therapy News OTnews January 2019 | Page 33

PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY FEATURE Walsh WE (2018) Investigating public perception of occupational therapy: an environmental scan of three media outlets. American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 72(3), 1–10. Occupational therapists support people to participate in activities which matter to them. We are skilled at assessing the barriers to participation, and through the use of specific interventions, we can improve a person’s health and wellbeing. I have an interest in rehabilitation for palliative care clients. I am the end of life care champion for the team, and a RESPECT advocate. Occupational therapists enable people to carry out activities they value in their own environment and support them to improve their own health and wellbeing through specific interventions. I am the clinical lead for occupational therapists within the service and support all staff with their professional development. I contribute to the professional development of occupational therapists within the trust. I carry a clinical caseload and lead on moving and handling. Walsh (2018) investigated visibility and public perception of the occupational therapy profession through content analysis of three media outlets. An academic database (LexisNexis) was used to identify news articles about occupational therapy; Twitter feeds of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) and three other professional organisations were evaluated for tone of online presence; and ‘occupational therapy’ related Google Images were coded using MaxQDA software. Findings included that occupational therapy did not appear prominently in news items, and that the AOTA’s Twitter feed used very high levels of emotional ‘worried’ language that may be misconstrued as instability within an organisation. The author identifies the need to communicate a clear professional identity through academic and social platforms, and to highlight the words ‘occupational therapy’ within news items. I am an occupational therapist working in the joint community rehabilitation team. My role is to enable people to remain as independent and safe as possible, when completing the activities of daily living that matter to them the most. I aim to achieve this by either providing home exercise programmes, advice/guidance on alternative methods to completing tasks and equipment provision. I have an interest in providing interventions and rehabilitation to palliative clients and with those requiring moving and handling equipment. OTnews January 2019 33