Publication | Closed Access
Occupation, Health and Well-Being
400
Citations
39
References
1998
Year
Quality Of LifeFamily MedicineCritical ReviewDisabilityOccupational ScienceSocial Determinants Of HealthMental HealthWorker Well-beingOccupational Therapy LiteratureWell-being (Positive Psychology)Human WellbeingOccupational Health ServiceDisability StudyPsychological Well-beingHealth SciencesEmotional Well-beingRehabilitationElderly WellbeingOccupational TherapistsSubjective Well-beingSociologyOccupational DisorderOccupational TherapyMedicine
Occupational therapists believe that there is a relationship between occupation, health and well-being but there is little evidence in the occupational therapy literature to support this belief. This paper describes the results of a critical review of research examining the relationship between occupation and health and well-being. Twenty-two studies from the health and social sciences literature were reviewed using specific methodological review criteria. The findings of these studies provide moderate to strong evidence that occupation has an important influence on health and well-being. Because most of this research has been completed with persons without disabilities, further research is required to explain the nature of the relationship between occupation and health and well-being for persons who experience a disability which affects their daily occupations
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