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Occupational therapists report a low level of knowledge, skill and involvement in evidence-based practice

✍ Scribed by Annie McCluskey


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
191 KB
Volume
50
Category
Article
ISSN
0045-0766

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✦ Synopsis


This study was conducted to collect information about Australian occupational therapists’ involvement in evidence‐based practice. The study aimed to document: (i) respondents’ level of knowledge and skills; (ii) their level of participation in continuing education; and (iii) perceived barriers to evidence‐based practice. A purposive sample of 85 occupational therapists was invited to complete a questionnaire prior to attending an introductory workshop on evidence‐based practice. Sixty‐seven questionnaires were returned and analysed (78.8% response rate). Half of the respondents rated their level of knowledge and skills required for evidence‐based practice as low (conducting database searches = 50.7%; critically appraising literature = 53.0%). The majority of respondents (79.1%) reported a low level of knowledge about electronic databases. Few respondents had attended education sessions on evidence‐based practice (15.0%). The six most commonly reported barriers to adopting evidence‐based practice were lack of time, a large caseload, limited searching skills, limited appraisal skills, difficulty accessing journals and a perceived lack of evidence to support occupational therapy intervention. The majority of occupational therapists in this sample were entering the first phase of continuing professional development in relation to evidence‐based practice.


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