Download - History of OT
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1900-1939: ARTS AND CRAFTS
MOVEMENT AND THE INFLUENCE OF WWI
History of Occupational Therapy
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Time line
1900: US Population Increases Progressive era fuels reform Increase of women in the work place
1917: US enters WWI1919: WWI ends (Treaty of Versailles)1920: Women gain the right to vote1929: Great depression
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Women’s Movement and Influence
Goal: establish selves outside of domestic sphere
Argument for: Morally superior Naturally nurturing Alturistic
Reform impulses Christian charity
Helping the poor or “the suffering”Gender roles clearly defined within this period
Men: leadership in the public sector Women: Establish institutes
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Hull House
Established by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates StarrAll female and secular society for political and professional
training Believed in scientific method for learning about social issues
Goal: Bridge gap between middle-class reformers and the poor Hull-House Provided kindergarten and day care facilities for the
children of working mothers; an employment bureau; an art gallery; libraries; English and citizenship classes; theater, music and art classes. As the complex expanded, Hull-House supported a Labor Museum, the Jane Club for single working girls, meeting places for trade union groups, and many cultural events.
Developed strong political ties with influential men and women in Chicago
Meeting house for supporters of contemporary social movements Chicago Arts and Crafts Society
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Anti-Modernism
Reaction to industrialism, emphasis on hand-made products
Equated idle hands with immoral characterLinked to the arts & crafts movement,
appreciation for meaning in simplicity (Transcendentalism)
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“This emphasis on the work ethic and on the idea that idleness produces an immoral character appears to have been intimately linked to early occupational therapy philosophy and to the arts-and-crafts movement or anti-modernism” - (Gutman,1995, p.259)
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Arts and Crafts Movement
William Morris (1834-1896), Founder William Morris was a poet, an artist, a designer, a
businessman and a socialist reformer.Founded In response to Industrial Revolution
Arts & Crafts movement stated that the Industrial Revolution, with its division of labor and mechanized manufacturing and factory production of household goods, had resulted in unsatisfying work conditions and poor quality products.
“humans, not machines, completed objects; therefore, work was not abstracted from life but had a place at its very core” -Ruskin
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Arts & Crafts Reaches America
Quality of design Natural materials Handmade designs Simple in design
Quality of life “handicraft clubs” “arts-and-crafts societies”
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Meanwhile in Medicine…
AdvancesShift towards a scientific foundation“Disease was understood in terms of
physiological processes rather than in terms of suffering or personal disorientation; specialists concerned themselves with organs and tissues rather than the whole patient” (Levin, 1987, p. 249)
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Alternative Medical Approach
Dr. Herbert J. Hall Work cure
Adolf Meyer, Mary Potter Brooks Meyer, and William Rush Dunton Curative occupation Goal-directed activity
Julia LathropSusan Tracy
Nursing
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“These progressive physicians, Meyer, Hall, and Dunton, worked with social caretakers Lathrop and Tracy to link the holistic treatment of the past with the modern, scientific approaches” (Levin, 1987, p. 250)
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Sheltered Workshops
Items sold in shopsThree purposes
Employ talented people who could earn a living by making authentic objects
To give spiritual support to craftspeople who pursued crafts as an avocation
To help employ the mentally and physically handicapped
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“The early occupational therapy link to the arts-and-crafts movement did not end with the demise of the therapeutic workshop.”
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Slagle and Meyer Unite
Belief that life should become as routine as possible
Meyer’s research on the “unbalanced” cycles of schizophrenia
Habit training= practice model Meyers and Slagle when at Henry Phipps Clinic at John Hopkins
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Habit Training
Balance of occupational cycles
Habit Formation as a learning process
Sequence of occupational cycles
Habit Training
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Roots of Rehabilitation in War
US Army rehabilitation program based on English reconstruction model “Bedside occupation and curative
workshops”Army Division of OrthopedicsBritish colonel Robert Jones’
Orthopedic rehabilitation back in war Society’s social & moral responsibility
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Reconstruction Aides
1918: Walter Reed Hospital (DC), Orthopedic Department uses physiotherapists & occupational therapists
“The employment of reconstruction aides [is] inadvisable […] it is not desirable to employ women in this type of work in military hospitals”
Commanding officers begin to call for more
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Evolution of reconstruction aides
Requirements established for R.A. position Educational training (medical disabilities,
anatomy, physiology) Demonstrate 3 fields occupation (crafts)
Reasons for pursuing career: Economic necessity Contribute something to society Experienced
ACTIVITIES OF MEANING, PURPOSE
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The Fight of Reconstruction Aides
ORTHOPEDISTS
RECONSTRUCTIONAIDES:
Physiotherapists, OTs
VOCATIONAL EDUCATORS
NURSES
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After WWI
Medical orientation in OT-curriculums
First occupational therapy program -Milwaukee
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Elizabeth Upham
Started 1st OT program at Milwaukee Downer College
Taught Intensive work in crafts Lectures covering medical, psychology, sociology,
economics and theory Hospital practice training
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Elizabeth Upham
Believed in moral character improvement through purposeful activity
Established the program to align OT with stronger medical affiliation and offered more structured course work to gain more credibility for the profession
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Elizabeth Upham
Suggested a person “who becomes an independent wage-earner adds to the resource of the country, while every one who cannot increases the drain of dependents” (p.259, Gutman, 1995).
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Organizations
National Society for promotion of Occupational Therapy or also known as NSPOT.
First meeting in 1917 Only six people attended; George Edward Barton,
Isabel Newton, Eleanor Clark Stagle, William Dunton Jr, Thomas Kinder and Susan Cox Johnson
By 3rd meeting in 1919 300 people attendedChanged name to AOTA in 1921
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Academia
First issue of Archives of Occupational Therapy published in 1922 by AOTA
Later became known as American Journal of Occupational Therapy (AJOT)
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Federal Industrial Rehabilitation Act
Passed in 1923Mandated hospitals that were caring for
people with industrial injuries or illness to use OT
program goal is to allow disabled individuals to be “restored to useful, remunerative employment and to self-respecting, self-supporting lives” (Clark, 1945, p. 504)
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Contributions we see now…
Women’s MovementArts and Crafts MovementMultidisciplinaryHolisticAOTA
Standardization Curriculum
Balance
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References
Crark, D. (1945). Industrial hygiene and the expandable federal state vocational rehabilitation program. American Journal of Public Health, 35, 504
Gutman, S.A.(1995). Influence of the U.S. military and occupational therapy reconstruction aides in World War I on the development of occupational therapy. The American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 49 (3), 256-262.
Levine, R. (1987). The influence of the arts-and-crafts movement on the professional status of occupational therapy. The American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 41 (4), 248-254.
Reed, K.L,& Sanderson, S.N. (1999). Concepts of occupational therapy. p.238-241. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Quiroga, V. A. M. (1995). Occupational therapy: the first 30 years 1900-1930. Bethesda, Maryland: American Occupational Therapy Association.