Journal of Occupational Therapy Education (Jan 2020)

Occupational Therapy Students’ Self-Efficacy for Therapeutic Use of Self: Development and Associated Factors

  • Chia-Wei Fan,
  • Tove Carstensen,
  • Milada C. Småstuen,
  • Farzaneh Yazdani,
  • Brian Ellingham,
  • Tore Bonsaksen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26681/jote.2020.040103
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1

Abstract

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Occupational therapy students need to develop self-efficacy for therapeutic use of self in practice. This longitudinal study examined Norwegian occupational therapy students’ self-efficacy for therapeutic use of self over a 16-month period and investigated predictors of their end-point self-efficacy. One hundred and eleven students from two universities completed a self-efficacy questionnaire related to the use of self after a workshop, and at 3-month, 10-month, and 16-month follow-up. The students’ self-efficacy development was analyzed with linear mixed effect models, while factors associated with self-efficacy were investigated with linear regressions. The students from both universities showed a linear increase in self-efficacy for therapeutic mode use (p p p < 0.001). However, for the students from University 1 the largest increase occurred in an early phase, whereas for the students from University 2 the largest increase occurred in a late phase. Only baseline scores were associated with the end-point measure at 16-month follow-up. The study indicates that students’ self-efficacy for therapeutic use of self increased during the follow-up period and adds to the knowledge about occupational therapy students’ self-efficacy development related to understanding and managing client-therapist interactions.

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