Title of article :
Looking into the Content of the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM): A Danish Cross-Sectional Study
Author/Authors :
Larsen , Anette Enemark Occupational Therapy - Department of Therapist and Midwifery - The Faculty of Health Sciences - Copenhagen University College - Copenhagen, Denmark , Wehberg , Sonja Research Unit for General Practice - Department of Public Health - University of Southern Denmark, Denmark , Christensen, Jeanette Reffstrup Research Unit for General Practice - Department of Public Health - University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
Abstract :
To examine the content validity of the Danish version of the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM-DK).
Materials and Methods. This cross-sectional study was performed in a hospital and a community rehabilitation centre. The content
validity of the COPM was assessed by relating the clients’prioritized occupational performance issues (OPIs) to the conceptual
model of the Canadian Model of Occupational Performance and Engagement (CMOP-E) and the levels of the Taxonomic Code
of Occupational Performance (TCOP). Six occupational therapy lecturers participated in classifying the OPIs using the TCOP.
Results. A total of 112 clients from a regional and community-based rehabilitation participated. The 56% regional participants
came from a hospital’s hand and knee surgery department. The remaining 44% participants came from a community-based
rehabilitation centre with in- and outpatient departments. There were 44% males, with a mean age of 65.2 years. They
prioritized 495 OPIs, of which 40% concerned self-care, 32% productivity, and 28% leisure. The prioritized OPIs were divided
into a total of 224 different OPIs. There were significant differences in which areas were prioritized in the various population
groups. Of the OPIs, 64.3% could be classified into the TCOP levels of occupation and activity, i.e., 1/3 of the OPIs were related
to tasks and actions, and thus beyond the scope of the COPM. The interrater agreement of the OPI classification was only fair
(kappa 0.3). Conclusion. The content validity of the COPM seems to depend on how and with which clients it is administered.
Caution must be taken to secure OPIs on the higher levels of the TCOP, while maintaining the clients’right to nominate OPI
preferences. Therefore, an introductory course and on-going support are recommendable. Bearing this in mind, the COPM
seems useful to identify individual clients’prioritized OPIs in a Danish context.
Keywords :
Looking & Content , Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) , A Danish Cross-Sectional Study , COPM-DK , TCOP
Journal title :
Occupational Therapy International