Browsing Occupational Therapy by Author "De Jongh, Jo-Celene"
Now showing items 1-5 of 5
-
Client confidentiality: Perspectives of students in a healthcare training programme
Nortje, Nico; De Jongh, Jo-Celene (Health & Medical Publishing Group, 2016)BACKGROUND. Confidentiality is an important ethical principle for all health professionals and also has a legal bearing on duty. One of the most difficult issues health professionals face in their daily fieldwork practice ... -
Curriculum transformation: a proposed route to reflect a political consciousness in occupational therapy education
De Jongh, Jo-Celene; Hess-April, Lucia; Wegner, Lisa (Occupational Therapy Association of South Africa, 2012)Introduction: Curriculum review is an ongoing, dynamic, long-term process that forms part of occupational therapy education. The Department of Occupational Therapy, University of the Western Cape (UWC) recently responded ... -
Exploring occupational therapy graduates’ conceptualisations of occupational justice in practice: Curriculum implications
Hess-April, Lucia; Smith, Juliana; De Jongh, Jo-Celene (Health and Medical Publishing Group, 2016)BACKGROUND. The concept of occupational justice was derived from a social justice perspective in response to a renewed commitment by the occupational therapy profession to address the occupational needs of individuals, ... -
Professionalism – A case for medical education to honour the societal contract
Nortje, Nico; De Jongh, Jo-Celene (Occupational Therapy Association of South Africa, 2017)BACKGROUND: This study explores the concept of professionalism from the vantage point of a cohort of students as well as professionally qualified and practising occupational therapists. With the changes health care delivery ... -
“This pandemic has changed our daily living”: Young adults’ leisure experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa
Wegner, Lisa; Stirrup, Shannon; Desai, Himali; De Jongh, Jo-Celene (Journal of Occupational Science, 2022)The COVID-19 pandemic is a global human ecosystem disruption affecting almost every facet of daily living. South Africa adopted a risk-adjusted approach comprising five-levels to curb the spread of COVID-19. Early in 2020, ...