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 | PERSPECTIVES ON DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION
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Contesting Assumptions, Challenging Practice To order this title, and for more information, click here
By
Karen Hammell, PhD, MSc, OT(C), DipCOT, Researcher and Writer, Saskatchewan, Canada
Description
It explores issues that are central to rehabilitation, such as the nature of the body, the idea of independence, the rehabilitation process,
evidence-based practice and client-centred practice. Seeking always to ground theoretical ideas in the realities of every-day rehabilitation
practice, and drawing from a wealth of research evidence, the book continually examines the implications of these perspectives for the
education, practice, service delivery, research and theoretical development of the rehabilitation professions.
Contents
Preface. Exploring the assumptions underpinning rehabilitation. Normality and the classification of difference. Disability and deviance
from the norm. Theoretical models of disability. The cultural perpetuation of disability. The body and physical impairment. Disability,
rehabilitation and liminality. Rehabilitation fundamentals. Client-centred philosophy: exploring privalege and power. Researching disability
and rehabilitation. Contesting assumptions; challenging practice. Glossary. References
Bibliographic & ordering Information
Paperback, 216 pages, publication date: FEB-2006
ISBN-13: 978-0-443-10059-8
ISBN-10: 0-443-10059-4
Imprint: CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
062/648
Last update: 10 Jul 2008
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