Roots of recovery: Occupational therapy at the heart of health equity
Community rehabilitation
The World Health Organization has defined rehabilitation as ‘a set of measures that assist individuals who experience, or are likely to experience, disability to achieve and maintain optimal functioning in interaction with their environments’.69 Article 26, Habilitation and Rehabilitation, of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) calls for ’full inclusion and participation in all aspects of life’.70
Rehabilitation has far-reaching health, social and economic benefits. It delivers better outcomes and improved quality of life, improving functional outcomes, reducing length of hospital stay and enabling timely return to education, work or occupation and community living.71.72.73
Community rehabilitation is now a crucial part of recovery for those people affected by COVID-19, including those presenting with Long COVID or a deterioration in pre-existing conditions and mental health. Effective rehabilitation can reduce the physical, psychological, emotional, social, and economic impacts of the pandemic.73
Rehabilitation helps people to live well with long-term conditions. It is known that people from deprived populations are more likely to have multiple long-term conditions74, and 17 per cent of the UK population is expected to have four or more chronic conditions by 2035.75
People with low incomes and those from minority groups report difficulty accessing support to manage their long-term conditions.76 There are known inequalities in access to rehabilitation77 and poorer experiences of health services are reported by some social and ethnic groups.78 It is necessary to increase the availability of rehabilitation for those in greatest need. The routes to receiving support must be developed in partnership with communities to ensure access is inclusive for the local population reflecting diversity, cultural and personal needs.
In the community, occupational therapists may act individually or within combined allied health professions rehabilitation teams. Occupational therapists within rehabilitation are specialists in:
- Self-management approaches: occupational therapists support people to adopt healthy behaviours and strategies that enable participation in daily life and to achieve outcomes that have meaning for them, and support people with complex needs to overcome barriers to accessing existing opportunities such as social prescribing.
- Personalised care: occupational therapists embed personalised care through training and supervising others, including support workers, informal carers, care home and home care providers.
- Independent living: the profession’s understanding and expertise on the relationship between occupations and the environment is pivotal in supporting people to return to living meaningful lives.79
- Assistive technology: occupational therapists review care packages and advise on the use of assistive technology to minimise reliance on carers.80