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Recreation Therapy:

Casey Linstad, CTRS Nicole Wells, CTRS, CBIS. Recreation Therapy:. An integral part of the rehabilitation treatment team. Rec Therapy Name: First Name. U=Ultimate Frisbee V=Volunteer W= Writing Y=Yoga Z=Zumba. A=Astrology B= Basketball C=Cooking D=Daydreaming E=Exercise F=Fishing

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Recreation Therapy:

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  1. Casey Linstad, CTRS Nicole Wells, CTRS, CBIS Recreation Therapy: An integral part of the rehabilitation treatment team

  2. Rec Therapy Name: First Name U=Ultimate Frisbee V=Volunteer W= WritingY=Yoga Z=Zumba A=Astrology B= Basketball C=Cooking D=Daydreaming E=Exercise F=Fishing G=Golf H=Hiking I=Indoor Gardening J=Jazzercise K=Knitting L=Lego M=Meditation N=Nail Art O=Origami P=Photography Q=Quilting R=Reading S=Self-Defense T=Taxidermy

  3. Rec Therapy Name: Last Name T=Team player U=Uniter V=Vessel W= Warrior Y=Yeller Z=Zapper A=Afficionado B= Beginner C=Competitor D=Dark Horse E=Entrant F=Fan G=Gamer H=Hipster I=Infuser J=Jock K=Knight L=Leader M=Master N=Novice O=Original P=Player Q=Quizzer R=Rookie S=Superstar

  4. Session Objectives 1. To educate on the importance of Recreation Therapy, especially in a brain injury rehabilitation setting. 2. To inspire health care professionals with evidence-based recreation interventions used for persons with brain injury. 3. To integrate Recreation Therapy into more brain injury rehabilitation programs.

  5. Recreation as Therapy? “While (RT) has much to offer...its specific contribution lies in the area of leisure functioning. Because leisure is such an integral part of most peoples lives, it is seen as vitally important to individuals overall quality of life and life satisfaction”. (Peterson, 2000)

  6. Quality of Life • Simply increasing the variety and frequency of social and leisure activities may not increase SQOL • Increase opportunities for participation with others • Enhance subjective experience of social and leisure activities • Specific to patients with TBI; social support network, redefining oneself though new roles, and participating in fulfilling and meaningful activities

  7. What does this mean for RT? “Providing the right patient with the right service (at) the right time in the right setting at the right intensity and for the right duration”. (Navar, 1991)

  8. Accountability via the Leisure Ability Model • Functional Intervention • Baseline abilities that are prerequisite to typical leisure behavior • hand-eye coordination, endurance, strength, memory, attention, orientation, expression • Leisure Education • Development of leisure-related skills, attitudes and knowledge • leisure awareness, social interaction skills, leisure activity skills and leisure resources • Recreation Participation • An expression of one’s leisure lifestyle • opportunities for fun, enjoyment and self-expression within an organized delivery system • leagues, tournaments, arts and crafts, music, fitness classes, park or pool (Peterson, 2000)

  9. APIE • Assess • Plan • Intervention • Evaluate

  10. Assessment Paper assessment Get to know WHOLE person Interview family and friends as well

  11. All Together Now! Interdisciplinary Goal: Ambulation • PT OT, SLP, Nursing, Psychology, Social Work, Nutrition, RT, others... A Fishy Story…

  12. Individual TR Goals Modifying favorite activities: • Physical modifications • Modification devices • Finding a similar activity with the same benefits

  13. Research Research Done before? Protocol/Procedures Outcomes Never enough research per intervention

  14. Intervention

  15. Evaluation Outcomes Documentation Debrief

  16. Session Objectives 1. To educate on the importance of Recreation Therapy, especially in a brain injury rehabilitation setting. 2. To inspire health care professionals with evidence-based recreation interventions used for persons with brain injury. 3. To integrate Recreation Therapy into more brain injury rehabilitation programs.

  17. References Navar, N. (1991). Advancing therapeutic recreation through quality assurance: A perspective on the changing nature of quality in therapeutic recreation. In B.Riley (Ed.), Quality management: Applications for therapeutic recreation (pp. 3-20). State College, PA: Venture Publishing Company. Peterson, Carol Ann, and Norma J. Stumbo. Therapeutic Recreation Program Design: Principles and Procedures. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 2000. Print. McLean, A.M.. (2013). Associations between social participation and subjective quality of life for adults with moderate to severe traumatic brain injury. Disability and Rehabilitation, Early Online, 1-10. doi:10.3109/09638288.2013.834986

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