26 min

020 – Is the Sex Disparity in Occupational Therapy all Bad‪?‬ Occupied

    • Medicine

Today's discussion stemmed from a number of observations of late. Seemed like too much of a coincidence that the topic came up multiple times in a very short space of time so I decided to put together my thoughts. I'm very aware that for some people this topic is quite sensitive. I do encourage you to have a listen with an open mind as I am simply trying to highlight an idea that I haven't seen spoken about in the literature. That idea is that changing the demographics of Occupational Therapy will change the profession fundamentally. I definitely don't have a definitive answer to any of these raised concerns but the (well rounded) discussion needs to happen.

Topics:

I compare some of the reported experiences from the literature to my personal experience. My belief is that the experiences are legitimate but my interpretation of the cause of these experiences seems to differ greatly from those presented in the articles that I have read. I've seen a lot of very heated discussion on the topic of sex disparity.



My concern is that the views being taken into these discussions are not conducive to effective discussion. When the chat gets heated, this is stilting the ability for clinicians to have a well-rounded view. Another question I wanted to pose is if this is an issue from the perspective of men as my personal experience has never highlighted it as an issue but also I've not read any papers on the topic that have included men as authors..... so if you know of some shoot them through to me because I'd love to read.

Reference to the article discussed:

Beagan, B., & Fredricks, E. (2018). What about the men? Gender parity in occupational therapy. Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy, 85(2) 137-145. doi: 10.1177/0008417417728524



Keep occupied







Brock

brock.cook@me.com

@brockcookOT

Occupied Podcast

Today's discussion stemmed from a number of observations of late. Seemed like too much of a coincidence that the topic came up multiple times in a very short space of time so I decided to put together my thoughts. I'm very aware that for some people this topic is quite sensitive. I do encourage you to have a listen with an open mind as I am simply trying to highlight an idea that I haven't seen spoken about in the literature. That idea is that changing the demographics of Occupational Therapy will change the profession fundamentally. I definitely don't have a definitive answer to any of these raised concerns but the (well rounded) discussion needs to happen.

Topics:

I compare some of the reported experiences from the literature to my personal experience. My belief is that the experiences are legitimate but my interpretation of the cause of these experiences seems to differ greatly from those presented in the articles that I have read. I've seen a lot of very heated discussion on the topic of sex disparity.



My concern is that the views being taken into these discussions are not conducive to effective discussion. When the chat gets heated, this is stilting the ability for clinicians to have a well-rounded view. Another question I wanted to pose is if this is an issue from the perspective of men as my personal experience has never highlighted it as an issue but also I've not read any papers on the topic that have included men as authors..... so if you know of some shoot them through to me because I'd love to read.

Reference to the article discussed:

Beagan, B., & Fredricks, E. (2018). What about the men? Gender parity in occupational therapy. Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy, 85(2) 137-145. doi: 10.1177/0008417417728524



Keep occupied







Brock

brock.cook@me.com

@brockcookOT

Occupied Podcast

26 min