Occupational Science Concepts Essential to Occupation-Based Practice: Development of Expert Consensus

Am J Occup Ther. 2021 Nov 1;75(6):7506205120. doi: 10.5014/ajot.2021.049090.

Abstract

Importance: What occupational science (OS) knowledge may be essential to occupational therapy practice has not been systematically explored.

Objective: To identify and gain expert consensus on OS concepts viewed as essential to occupational therapy practice.

Design: A complex, convergent mixed-methods Delphi design with an international panel of OS experts randomly assigned to two parallel groups. In Round 1, each group generated OS concepts; in Rounds 2 and 3, they rated the degree to which each concept was essential to occupational therapy. Data were analyzed separately for each group. A fourth round combined the two groups and used carefully merged concept definitions from both groups to validate consensus on essential concepts arising from the prior rounds.

Participants: Fifty-two nominated experts from 22 countries who met a priori criteria participated in the 14-mo study.

Results: Of 62 experts invited, 52 (Group A = 24, Group B = 28) participated in the first round, and 42 (81%) completed the full-group final round. Eleven concepts met the consensus threshold (≥70%) established for the study. Additional analysis compared parallel- and full-group results to carefully discern conceptual similarities and differences, especially with near-consensus concepts.

Conclusions and relevance: Substantial expert agreement was established for several OS concepts viewed as essential, providing a basis for future studies to refine the concepts for occupational therapy education and practice. What This Article Adds: The results of this research provide a systematically derived preliminary basis for selecting OS content for occupational therapy educational programs and preliminary concepts for organizing OS knowledge germane to occupational therapy practice.

MeSH terms

  • Consensus
  • Delphi Technique
  • Humans
  • Occupational Therapy*
  • Occupations