1st Edition

Discovery Through Activity Ideas and Resources for Applying Recovery Through Activity in Practice

Edited By Sue Parkinson Copyright 2022
    266 Pages 58 B/W Illustrations
    by Speechmark

    266 Pages 58 B/W Illustrations
    by Speechmark

    Discovery Through Activity provides a compendium of ideas, resources and practice evaluations that will inspire practitioners to be even more imaginative and to customise their own Recovery Through Activity programmes to meet the specifi c needs of participants.

    The original Recovery Through Activity handbook offers a flexible programme that is widely used in adult mental health settings. This accompanying and complementary resource shows how the intervention has been extended, adapted and applied service-wide. The resource showcases the work of a growing community of practitioners who have successfully facilitated Recovery Through Activity programmes to provide a forum for people to refl ect on their occupational lives and discuss and practise lifestyle choices that will enable them to improve their health and wellbeing.

    It includes:

    • an extended range of flexible ideas and resources to meet the needs of participants in Recovery Through Activity sessions

    • examples of how to apply Recovery Through Activity in one- to- one sessions and virtual groups

    • encouragement to adopt Recovery Through Activity across your services with confidence.

    With contributions illustrating the effective application of Recovery Through Activity in a range of settings and situations, this is a valuable resource for occupational therapists and other practitioners in mental health settings.

    Contributors

    Foreword - Philip Allen

    Preface - Sue Parkinson

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction - Sue Parkinson

    Part one: Adopting Recovery Through Activity across services

    Chapters

    1. Adopting Recovery Through Activity across adult community and inpatient mental health services – Amy Mitchell
    2. Embedding Recovery Through Activity service-wide – Amy Mitchell and Sarah Morecroft
    3. Part two: Applying Recovery Through Activity in a variety of settings

      Chapters

    4. Applying Recovery Through Activity in community and inpatient services for older adults – Gemma Perrin and Hannah Hazelwood
    5. Continuing Recovery Through Activity opportunities for older adults in a peer support group – Joan Holland and Alison Butters
    6. Applying Recovery Through Activity in an inpatient Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) -- Carly Watson, Isla Garrick and Hazel Watkiss
    7. Applying Recovery Through Activity in a prison service – Xenia Denson and Charlotte Wise
    8. Applying Recovery Through Activity in a secure learning disability service – Deborah Haworth
    9. Applying Recovery Through Activity in a neuropsychiatry service –Kimberley Connell, Nataliya Williams and Jess Powell
    10. Part three: Adapting Recovery Through Activity for virtual delivery

      Chapters

    11. Adapting Recovery Through Activity for one-to-one sessions – Rachael Kirtley and Ashley Lister
    12. Adapting Recovery Through Activity for virtual groups and one-to-one sessions – Gemma Dorer and Sarah Long
    13. Adapting Recovery Through Activity for a virtual group using PowerPoint – Niamh Gibney, Una Belton, Hugh Bulfin, Laura Hackett, Bláithín Swinburne and Lucinda Fallon

    Part four: Extending the content of Recovery Through Activity

    Sections

    1. Leisure Activities
    2. Creative Activities
    3. Technological Activities
    4. Physical Activities
    5. Outdoor Activities
    6. Faith Activities
    7. Self-care Activities
    8. Domestic Activities
    9. Caring Activities
    10. Vocational Activities
    11. Social Activities
    12. Community Activities

    Appendix

    Biography

    Sue Parkinson is known in the Occupational Therapy profession for her contributions to the Model of Human Occupation (MOHO), most notably in relation to the assessment manual for the Model of Human Occupation Screening Tool (MOHOST), the handbook for the Recovery Through Activity programme and the textbook A Guide to the Formulation of Plans and Goals in Occupational Therapy . The Recovery Through Activity programme was informed by her experiences as a Practice Development Adviser, supporting occupational therapists in mental health settings to consolidate their occupationcentred practice. In more recent years, her work has focused on providing MOHO training, primarily in the United Kingdom and Ireland. In doing so, she has had the satisfaction of making innumerable professional contacts and is delighted to share some of the work that has arisen from her exchanges in Discovery Through Activity.

    Discovery Through Activity builds upon its well-received predecessor and is the product of extensive investigation and collaboration. Its success, at least in part, lies in the fact that it draws on the ideas and experiences of a wide range of occupational therapists and healthcare workers, to further demonstrate what can be achieved in practice.

    The important and essential, contents of this handbook, and their impeccable delivery, render it to be of immense worth to those who are involved (or are prospectively involved) in the provision and management (and receipt) of occupational therapy. It will also be of great value to other therapists and indeed, their service users. Accordingly, its wide readership is very strongly urged.

    Philip Allen, LL.B