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Research Papers

Parents' perspectives on occupational therapy and physical therapy goals for children with cerebral palsy

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Pages 248-258 | Accepted 01 Jun 2009, Published online: 15 Dec 2009
 

Abstract

Contemporary rehabilitation literature emphasises functional goals for children with disabilities and use of a collaborative goal-setting process grounded in principles of family centred service delivery.

Purpose. To explore parents' experiences with goals and goal setting.

Method. We conducted a qualitative study with 11 focus groups and two individual interviews with 39 parents of children with cerebral palsy living in western Canada. We used an inductive, thematic analysis to identify prominent themes.

Results. The analysis revealed five themes representing goals that were meaningful to parents and provided insight into parents' experiences with goal-setting processes in occupational and physical therapy: (1) movement as the means to functional success; (2) physical health and fitness are important therapy goals; (3) the importance of leading happy, fulfilling lives and being accepted by others; (4) ‘We can't do it all’: balancing therapy with the demands of everyday life; and (5) shifting roles and responsibilities in goal setting.

Conclusions. The variability noted both in parents' desired role in goal setting and in goals important to parents highlights the importance of establishing trusting relationships with families so that family goals, values, individual circumstances, and desired level of participation in goal setting can be openly discussed.

Acknowledgements

The authors express their sincere appreciation to the families who shared their stories with them. The following agencies provided financial support to L. W. during her doctoral training: The Canadian Child Health Clinician Scientist Program, the Stollery Children's Hospital Foundation, the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research, the Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine at the University of Alberta, and the Maternal, Fetal, Newborn Health Training Program. This study was funded by Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research. The Alberta Centre for Child, Family and Community Research also provided funding for knowledge translation.

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