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Article
The Lived Experience of Mothers Who Are Homeless and Participated in an Occupational Therapy Leisure Craft Group
Occupational Therapy in Mental Health
  • Winifred Schultz-Krohn, San Jose State University
  • Emily Winter, San Jose State University
  • Carina Mena, San Jose State University
  • Alison Roozeboom, San Jose State University
  • Lisa Vu, San Jose State University
Publication Date
1-1-2021
Document Type
Article
DOI
10.1080/0164212X.2021.1881022
Abstract

This phenomenological, qualitative, pilot investigation gained insight into the lived experience of mothers, living in an emergency homeless shelter, who participated in a twice weekly occupational therapy leisure craft group. This research applied the constructs of the Person-Environment-Occupation theoretical model along with concepts from occupational justice to provide occupational therapy services to an underserved population. Information was obtained using semi-structured interviews to explore what meaning was derived from participating in these occupational therapy group craft sessions. Informants verified content from existing literature regarding benefits of leisure participation and added the importance of creating an opportunity for self-care when faced with homelessness.

Keywords
  • crafts,
  • Homeless mothers,
  • leisure pursuits,
  • occupational therapy,
  • self-care
Citation Information
Winifred Schultz-Krohn, Emily Winter, Carina Mena, Alison Roozeboom, et al.. "The Lived Experience of Mothers Who Are Homeless and Participated in an Occupational Therapy Leisure Craft Group" Occupational Therapy in Mental Health Vol. 37 Iss. 2 (2021) p. 107 - 129
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/winifred_schultz-krohn/6/