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MODEL OF MODEL OF HUMAN HUMAN OCCUPATION OCCUPATION (MOHO) (MOHO)

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Page 1: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

MODEL OF HUMAN MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION OCCUPATION

(MOHO)(MOHO)

Page 2: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

THE BEGINNING…

• (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General System Theory.

• Gary Kielhofner was a student of Mary Reilly who originally created this model as a Master’s thesis in 1975. Within five years, Kielhofner and his colleagues published MOHO for the first time

Page 3: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

• MOHO was first published in 1980 as a series of 4 articles.

• The first edition of the book: A Model of Human Occupation: Theory and Application was published in 1985.

Page 4: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

• MOHO is a conceptual model of practice that evolved in middle of 1970s. • Subsequently designed & developed

into practice model to provide theory along with practical tools and strategies for occupational therapy and related rehabilitation practice.

MOHO – Brief Overview

Page 5: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Definition MOHO is defined as “ …a set of evolving theoretical arguments that are translated into a specific technology for practice and are refined and tested through research” (Kielhofner, 2002, p. 3).

Page 6: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

• Focus (domains of concern)• Basic Assumptions: Concepts, constructs,

relationships, principles, postulates• Function/disability continuums:

application to individual clients (deductive)

• Postulates of change: how change occurs provides basis for intervention planning, also includes motivation

• Evaluations, Interventions• Research (evidence, outcomes)

Page 7: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

FOCUS• Systemic, holistic approach for persons of varying needs and

populations across the lifespan• Stresses the importance of the mind/body connection in its

depiction of how motivation (internal) and performance of occupations (external) are interconnected

• Human occupation is described as the “doing” of work, play, or activities of daily living within a temporal, physical, and sociocultural context.

• Interactive nature between the person and his environment and how this relationship contributes to one’s source of motivation, patterns of behavior, and performance.

Page 8: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

PERSON – redefined for practice

• Kielhofner’s theoretical view of the person is very comprehensive.

• Variables include one’s motivation, behaviors, and performance

• All 3 inter-relate to form a person’s identity. • Kielhofner has specifically grouped these variables into 3

subsystems that he calls 1) volition, 2) habituation, and 3) performance capacity.

Page 9: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

HUMAN AS AN OPEN SYSTEM

• Input • Person • Occupational Performance ->• Environmental Feedback

Page 10: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Model of Human OccupationHuman Open system

Throughput

Subsystem

Volition

Habituation

Performance

OutputInput

Feedback

Page 11: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

MOHO CONCEPTS

Volition Values & interests

Habituation Roles & habits

Performance Subjective Experience

Page 12: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

MOHO – Concepts

• MOHO addresses how occupation is motivated, patterned, and performed.

• Humans in this model are conceptualized as being comprised of three interrelated components: volition, habituation, and performance capacity. – Volition refers to the motivation for occupation,

– Habituation refers to the process by which occupation is organized into patterns or routines, and

– Performance capacity refers to the physical and mental abilities that underlie skilled occupational performance.

Page 13: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

MOHO – Four Concepts • Since MOHO emphasizes that to understand

human occupation, we must understand the physical and social environments in which it takes place, the model looks at occupation and problems of occupation that occur in terms of its four primary concepts of – volition, – habituation, – performance capacity and – environmental context.

Page 14: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Volition Subsystem

Volition is the source of motivation for occupation.

Page 15: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Habituation Subsystem

Habituation refers to the process by which occupation is organized into patterns or routines

Page 16: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Performance Subsystem

Performance capacity refers to the physical and mental abilities that underlie skilled occupational performance. This subsystem is also called the mind-brain-body performance.

Page 17: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Assumptions

• Humans are biologically mandated to be active. Spontaneous action is the most fundamental characteristic of all living things (Boulder, 1968; von Bertalanffy, 1968).

• Practice Application: Persons have a fundamental and neurologically based need for action and doing. This innate need is the dominant source of motivation for participation in occupation.

Page 18: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Assumptions, cont.• Thinking, feeling, and doing are influenced by a dynamic

interaction between one’s internal components and the environment. Situations and conditions within the environment will influence a person’s motivation.

• Practice Application: Systems theory helps the practitioner to understand that there are multiple factors within the person and the environment that influence each other. A change (positive or negative) in any one variable will automatically result in a change in one’s motivation, behavior, and/or performance.

Page 19: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Assumptions, cont.• Man is an open system that can change and develop through

interaction with the environment. The parts of the open system cycle include input, throughput, output, and feedback.

• Practice Application: Persons are continuously impacted by input from one’s environment and feedback from one’s environment. Clients learn about themselves by experimenting with behaviors and receiving feedback about this behavior (output). Some cycles are positive and some are negative in outcome.

Page 20: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Assumptions, cont.• Heterarchy is the principle that the demands of a context or

situation will determine how human variables will organize themselves to achieve a sense of order. In a heterarchy, each component contributes something to the total outcome but the arrangement or order of these variables is changeable due to the conditions of the context and/or environment.

• Practice Application: The client’s environment, context, and/or situation greatly influence how the person variables identified as volition (motivation), habituation, (habits and routines) and performance capacity (mind/body skills) will inter-relate with each other.

Page 21: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Assumptions, cont.• Participation in occupations helps to create our

occupational identity, which is formed by the person’s internal structures defined by volition, habituation, and performance capacity. It is a subjective construct.

• Practice Application: Clients develop an identity over time. It is believed that this identity begins with self-appraisal and extends toward more challenging dynamics such as accepting responsibility for and knowing what one wants in life.

Page 22: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Assumptions, cont.• Occupational competence is the degree to which one

sustains a pattern of occupational participation that represents one’s occupational identity. Competence is the ability to put into action what a person internally regards as meaningful.

• Practice Application: Clients demonstrate competency when they can organize their life to meet the basic responsibilities to themselves and the role obligations of society in satisfying and meaningful ways.

Page 23: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Assumptions, cont.• Occupational adaptation is the outcome of a positive

occupational identity and achievement of occupational competence. It is dynamic and context dependent (refer to concept of heterarchy). Occupational therapy can promote change in clients. The parts within the person (throughput) that include motivation, life patterns, and performance lead to behaviors in work, play, and self care.

• Practice Application: The internal parts of the person are responsible for one’s occupational performance and adaptation. Occupational therapy acts as a form of feedback within one’s environment that can ultimately impact how one changes and alters behaviors

Page 24: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

ORDER• Kielhofner defined function as order (a status

of health and competent performance of daily living, work, and play).

• A person displays function when he is able to choose, organize, and perform occupations that are personally meaningful.

• It is a process whereby a person continuously learns how to balance his own expectations with those of society.

• A person who demonstrates order in daily living, work, and play experiences a sense of competence and role fulfillment

Page 25: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

DISORDER• Kielhofner termed dysfunction as disorder• The inability to perform occupations • An interruption in role performance• An inability to meet role responsibilities. • A person with dysfunctional behavior patterns

does not experience a basic quality of life nor can he meet personal and societal expectations.

Page 26: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

ORDER vs DISORDER

• Exploration, competence, and achievement = ORDER• Helplessness, incompetence,

and inefficacy = DISORDER

Page 27: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

3 PARTS OF A VOLITIONAL SUBSYSTEM• Volitional Subsystem – source of motivation that guides individuals to

anticipate, choose, experience and interpret what they do; thoughts and feelings about doing occupations that reflect a sense of mastery, enjoyment and value judgments. Composed of three smaller parts.

– Personal Causation – refers to one’s sense of competence and effectiveness; what a person feels capable of; a person’s awareness of his abilities; includes feelings of self efficacy (perception of control over one’s own behavior, thoughts, and emotions including a sense of control in achieving desired outcomes). Example: “I am an intelligent person who can succeed in occupational therapy”.

– Values – beliefs about what is right, important, and good to do that influences one’s goals; include personal convictions, principles, and a sense of obligation. Example: “I value helping others and therefore my goal is to become an occupational therapist”.

– Interests – what a person finds enjoyable, pleasing, and satisfying. Example: “I enjoy studying the arts and science that underlie occupational therapy as a profession.”

Page 28: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

2 PARTS OF THE HABITUATION SUBSYSTEM

• Habituation Subsystem – made up of the behaviors and roles that help persons to organize their daily life. Composed of two smaller parts.

– Habits – automatic and repetitive behaviors that influence how persons perform routine activities, use time, and behave on a daily basis.

– Internalized Roles – a source of identity with inherent obligations and expectations; also referred to as scripts or ideas of what is expected of oneself in a particular situation; enable individuals to fulfill needs for self and society.

Page 29: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

PARTS OF THE PERFORMANCE CAPACITY SUBSYTEM

• Mind-Brain-Body Subsystem – composed of four constituents that represent one’s capacity for occupational performance; one’s underlying natural ability

– Musculoskeletal – bones, muscles, joints comprising one’s biomechanical structure

– Neurological – central and peripheral nervous systems– Cardiopulmonary – cardiovascular and pulmonary

systems– Symbolic – abstract images that guide and give meaning

Page 30: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Occupational Performance or Skilled Actions(output)

• Goal directed actions (output) that make up occupational performance.

• 3 categories.– Motor Skills – used to move one’s self or objects– Process Skills – thinking and planning actions used to help

one organize and adapt– Communication and Interaction Skills – observable

operations used to verbalize needs and intentions that are part of social behaviors

Page 31: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Person + Occupational Performance

• Person constructs (volitional, habituation, and mind-brain-body subsystems) plus one’s occupational performance contribute to the development of occupational identity, occupational competence and occupational adaptation.

Page 32: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

ENVIRONMENT

• Physical and social places in which a person performs occupations

• Shaped by culture • Provides opportunities and resources

(positive) as well as demands and constraints (negative)

• A significant source of feedback that can maintain or extinguish one’s occupational performance.

Page 33: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

CHANGE• As a person experiments with novel behaviors

and repeats them over time, these behaviors will become more automatic and habitual.

• Persons create a sense of occupational competence when they are capable of engaging in productive and meaningful actions

• Sufficient repetition and environmental feedback is required to assimilate new performance patterns

Page 34: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

MOTIVATION

• Motivation is influenced by a person’s interests, values, and a sense of personal causation, all aspects of the volitional subsystem. Therefore, the volitional subsystem becomes a significant focus area for motivation and change.

Page 35: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

EVALUATION PROCESS• Kielhofner calls this a data gathering process.

1. Use the data to find out about a client from the viewpoint of an outsider looking in.

2. Collect and use data to help clients understand how their personal perceptions and subjective views lead to occupational performance actions and patterns.

Page 36: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

ASSESSMENTS• MOHO assessment instruments are both

structured and unstructured. Structured assessments typically include observational measures, self report questionnaires and checklists, and structured interviews. Unstructured assessments allow the therapist to be more informal and spontaneous in response to a client’s needs.

Page 37: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

INTERVENTION GUIDELINES

• Interventions should be focused on changing one’s occupational performance (skilled action process). Adaptive solutions should be offered in substitution for maladaptive ones.

• Interventions may be aimed at modifying or altering one’s environment to promote opportunities for change.

Page 38: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

INTERVENTION GUIDELINES (cont..)• Interventions that are aimed at skilled performance

are more efficient than those aimed at a client’s underlying personal structure.

• Interventions that take place in one’s natural environment are more likely to be assimilated by the client. Therapists should be ready to alter or modify the client’s environment to increase occupational performance

• Interventions that relate to one’s volitional subsystem provide the most meaning and impact for the client. Occupations must be relevant to the client to be effective.

Page 39: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

Model of Human Occupation

• Advantages:–Widely applicable & may be particularly

useful for unraveling complex problems. –Motivation is regarded as crucial–Makes strong links between individuals,

tasks & environment. – Standardized assessments can be used

Page 40: MODEL OF HUMAN OCCUPATION (MOHO). THE BEGINNING… (MOHO) is a conceptual model of practice that evolved from Reilly’s Occupational Behavior Model and General

For whom and where is MOHO applied in practice?

• MOHO is intended for use with any person experiencing problems in their occupational life and is designed to be applicable across the life span. For example, MOHO has been applied with such diverse groups as adults with chronic pain, children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, persons with traumatic brain injury, older persons with dementia, persons living with AIDS, and adolescents with mental illness. It has also been applied in situations dealing with children and adults who are homeless, with battle-fatigued soldiers, and with victims of war and social injustice.

• MOHO is also used in a variety of contexts. For example, it has been applied in hospitals, outpatient clinics, residential facilities, nursing homes, rehabilitation programs, work programs, prisons and correctional settings, and community based organizations.