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Am J Occup Ther ; 74(3): 7403205030p1-7403205030p11, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32365309

RESUMO

IMPORTANCE: Transition and integration reentry services continue to grow in carceral settings; however, related provision of occupational therapy is limited. OBJECTIVE: To examine the implementation fidelity of an occupational therapy-administered interprofessional reentry program initiated in an urban jail. DESIGN: Retrospective, mixed quantitative and qualitative design. SETTING: Community-based reentry services provided prerelease in a Midwestern urban jail and postrelease in the local St. Louis community. PARTICIPANTS: Occupational therapy practitioners tracking process measures for identifying reentry project feasibility. INTERVENTION: Provision of recruitment, assessment, and skilled occupational therapy services with people held in a short-term jail facility and follow-up during community reentry. OUTCOME AND MEASURES: Detailed logs were analyzed to describe attendance at and duration of sessions. We coded barriers to and facilitators of implementation from weekly team meeting notes and logs using social-ecological categories. RESULTS: Findings indicate that it was feasible to implement prerelease jail-based services (N = 63) because of jail operations and community partnerships (facilitators) and to overcome institutional policies and environmental limitations (barriers). Full 8-wk prerelease programming was completed by 38% (n = 24) of participants, and 52% (n = 33) participated less than 8 wk. All who completed the full prerelease program and transitioned to the community (n = 15) initiated postrelease occupational therapy services. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The iterative feedback provided by process evaluation supported the feasibility of implementing the jail-based Occupational Therapy Transition and Integration Services program. WHAT THIS ARTICLE ADDS: This process evaluation provides evidence that implementation of an occupational therapy-based transition program in an urban jail is feasible.


Assuntos
Terapia Ocupacional , Prisioneiros , Avaliação de Programas e Projetos de Saúde , Humanos , Estudos Retrospectivos
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