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Journal Article

Citation

Moore K, Merritt B, Doble SE. Scand. J. Occup. Ther. 2010; 17(1): 77-85.

Affiliation

Bedford/Sackville Mental Health Services, Cobequid Community Health Centre, Lower Sackville, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/11038120903165115

PMID

20170414

Abstract

Background. Occupational therapists' ability to develop diagnostic-specific ADL intervention strategies is facilitated by an understanding of the ADL abilities of diagnostic groups. Aim. To determine whether there are significant differences in ADL ability and ADL skill profiles between samples of persons with bipolar disorder depression (n=158), bipolar disorder mania (n=200), and schizophrenia (n=200). Methods. All participants were assessed using the Assessment of Motor and Process Skills (AMPS). Mean ADL ability and skill item calibrations were compared between the three diagnostic samples. Findings. No clinically significant differences were found in mean ADL ability. The ADL process skill item "Attends" was more difficult for those with bipolar disorder mania than for those with bipolar disorder depression. This difference did not disrupt the measurement model. Implications. The findings fail to support the idea that valid predictions of skill performance can be made on the basis of psychiatric diagnosis. Thus, occupational performance must be assessed individually. The findings also provide solid evidence that valid measures of ADL ability are generated when persons with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia complete the AMPS. Intervention strategies are recommended to address limitations in the skill Attends among persons with bipolar disorder manic episode.


Language: en

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