1.Prepare the person to return home and resume their desired lifestyle.
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a. Assess the individual person’s occupational needs respecting their personal beliefs, needs and goals and understand the older person’s patterns of daily living [26]
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b. Recommend functional adaptations that will maximise the person’s abilities as they reintegrate back to usual living [27]. The aim is for pre-admission standard of living [28]
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c. Optimise the person-environment fit [29]
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d. Recommend and implement environmental modifications
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e. Prescribe adaptive equipment and observe its use insitu [26]
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2.Enhance self-efficacy beliefs and promote independence and sense of control through mastery of meaningful tasks
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1. Transfer altered skills to the home situation and assist in the adjustment to these changes [30]
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2. Habitual retraining insitu using strategies such as situational cues and targeting behaviours for change
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3. Encourage one-on-one education about the safe performance of activities in and around their home and immediate community
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4. Facilitate joint problem solving and solution generation [26,30]
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5. Lessen a person’s fear during the transition from hospital to home [11]
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3.Use goal setting as a therapeutic tool
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1. Develop client centred goals [31] that address individual occupational needs [26]
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2. Develop goals that aim to maximise the person’s potential to participate in desired activities [27]
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3. Include goals which enable the person to participate in activities both in the home and in the community [27] and incorporate health and physical activity goals [32]
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4. Plan for increasing independence/capacity over the next three months, setting goals for increasing ability [12,14,30]
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5. Review progress towards goals and facilitate further joint problem solving |
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