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Dive into the research topics where Paula Gardner is active.

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Featured researches published by Paula Gardner.


Disability and Rehabilitation | 2014

The role of social engagement and identity in community mobility among older adults aging in place

Paula Gardner

Abstract The purpose of this study was to understand how neighbourhoods – as physical and social environments – influence community mobility. Seeking an insider’s perspective, the study employed an ethnographic research design. Immersed within the daily lives of 6 older adults over an 8-month period, auditory, textual, and visual data was collected using the “go-along” interview method. During these interviews, the researcher accompanied participants on their natural outings while actively exploring their physical and social practices by asking questions, listening, and observing. Findings highlight a process of community mobility that is complex, dynamic and often difficult as participant’s ability and willingness to journey into their neighborhoods were challenged by a myriad of individual and environmental factors that changed from one day to the next. Concerned in particular with the social environment, final analysis reveals how key social factors – social engagement and identity – play a critical role in the community mobility of older adults aging in place. Implications for Rehabilitation Identity and social engagement are important social factors that play a role in community mobility. The need for social engagement and the preservation of identity are such strong motivators for community mobility that they can “trump” poor health, pain, functional ability and hazardous conditions. To effectively promote community mobility, the social lives and needs of individuals must be addressed.


Herd-health Environments Research & Design Journal | 2016

Evaluating Intention and Effect: The Impact of Healthcare Facility Design on Patient and Staff Well-Being.

Celeste Alvaro; Andrea Wilkinson; Sara N. Gallant; Deyan Kostovski; Paula Gardner

Objective: This post occupancy evaluation (POE) assessed the impact of architectural design on psychosocial well-being among patients and staff in the context of a new complex continuing care and rehabilitation facility. Background: Departing from typical POEs, the hospital design intentions formed the theoretical basis to assess outcomes. Intentions included creating an environment of wellness; enhancing connection to the community, the city, and nature; enhancing opportunities for social interaction; and inspiring activity. Methods: A pretest–posttest quasi experiment, including quantitative surveys, assessed the impact of the building design on well-being outcomes across three facilities—the new hospital, the former hospital, and a comparison facility with a similar population. Results: With the exception of connection to neighborhood (for patients) and opportunities to visit with others (for staff) and wayfinding (for patients and staff), impressions of the new hospital mirrored the design intentions relative to the former hospital and the comparison facility among patients and staff. Perceptions of improvement in mental health, self-efficacy in mobility, satisfaction, and interprofessional interactions were enhanced at the new hospital relative to the former hospital, whereas optimism, depressive symptoms, general well-being, burnout, and intention to quit did not vary. Interestingly, patients and staff with favorable impressions of the building design fared better on most well-being-related outcomes relative to those with less favorable impressions. Conclusions: Beyond the value of assessing the impact of the design intentions on outcomes, the approach used in this study would benefit evaluation strategies across a diversity of health and other public and large-scale buildings.


Archive | 2011

The Age-Friendly New York City Project: An Environmental Intervention to Increase Aging Resilience

Julie Netherland; Ruth Finkelstein; Paula Gardner

As the growing body of research affirms, resilience in aging is a multidimensional concept influenced by demographics, social support and connectedness, health status, psychological factors, and material resources. Most, if not all, of these factors are profoundly shaped by the social, cultural, and physical environments in which older adults live.


ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction | 2016

Accessible Play in Everyday Spaces: Mixed Reality Gaming for Adult Powered Chair Users

Katie Seaborn; Jamal K. Edey; Gregory Dolinar; Margot Whitfield; Paula Gardner; Carmen Branje; Deborah I. Fels

The advent of affordable and powerful mobile technology has allowed for explorations in mixed reality that merges virtual and physical space. However, the social and entertainment value and efficacy of mixed reality platforms for adult powered chair users has not been widely explored. In this article, we introduce the Mobility Games project, which aims to produce a series of inclusive entertainment technologies and services for people who use powered chairs. We describe our first offering: an accessible, social mixed reality game for co-located mobile play in everyday spaces. Findings from two exploratory field studies and a post hoc observer survey show that adult powered chair users found the game to be entertaining and used a variety of path strategies as they learned to play the game. An initial set of theoretically and empirically informed guidelines for making mobile mixed reality games accessible to adult powered chair users with diverse abilities is proposed.


Dementia | 2018

The role of music in the lives of older adults with dementia ageing in place: A scoping review

Melanie Elliott; Paula Gardner

The number of people around the world living with dementia is predicted to rise from 44 million to 135 million by 2050. Traditional treatments for dementia have been largely unsuccessful and prompted the emergence of alternative strategies. Music is emerging as an effective therapeutic strategy for older adults with dementia however, most of the work to date has focused on institutions. The purpose of this scoping review was to summarize what is known about the role and impact that music plays in the lives of community-dwelling older adults with dementia. Using a five-stage framework for conducting a scoping review, analysis revealed three ways in which music influences the lives of community-dwelling older adults with dementia: (a) reduced agitation, (b) improved cognition, and (c) enhanced social well-being. The concept of personhood provided a lens with which to conceptualize the findings and highlights the need for continued research.


human computer interaction with mobile devices and services | 2014

Off the couch and out of the hospital, mobile applications for acceptance and commitment therapy

Marjan Verstappen; Paula Gardner; Dora Poon; Tim Bettridge

This paper describes the research and concept development process involved in designing a mobile app for depressed youth learning to practice mindfulness based psychotherapy entitled Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) program at Trillium Healthcare Centre in Toronto. Our process involved identifying aspects of preexisting mobile applications for mindfulness that may be discouraging for youth with depression and devising strategies to overcome these negative messages within the ACT Application. We propose to present a working prototype of mobile application at the Mobile HCI conference.


Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy | 2016

Development of a Theory-Based Intervention to Increase Clinical Measurement of Reactive Balance in Adults at Risk of Falls.

Kathryn M. Sibley; Dina Brooks; Paula Gardner; Tania Janaudis-Ferreira; Mandy McGlynn; Sachi OʼHoski; Sara McEwen; Nancy M. Salbach; Jennifer Shaffer; Paula Shing; Sharon E. Straus; Susan Jaglal

BACKGROUND Effective balance reactions are essential for avoiding falls, but are not regularly measured by physical therapists. Physical therapists report wanting to improve reactive balance assessment, and theory-based approaches are recommended as the foundation for the development of interventions. This article describes how a behavior change theory for health care providers, the theoretical domains framework (TDF), was used to develop an intervention to increase reactive balance measurement among physical therapists who work in rehabilitation settings and treat adults who are at risk of falls. CASE DESCRIPTION We employed published recommendations for using the TDF-guided intervention development. We identified what health care provider behavior is in need of change, relevant barriers and facilitators, strategies to address them, and how we would measure behavior change. In this case, identifying strategies required selecting both a reactive balance measure and behavior change techniques. Previous research had determined that physical therapists need to increase reactive balance measurement, and identified barriers and facilitators that corresponded to 8 TDF domains. A published review informed the selection of the Balance Evaluation Systems Test (Reactive Postural Responses Section) as addressing the barriers and facilitators, and existing research informed the selection of 9 established behavior change techniques corresponding to each identified TDF domain. OUTCOMES The TDF framework were incorporated into a 12-month intervention with interactive group sessions, local champions, and health record modifications. Intervention effect can be evaluated using health record abstraction, questionnaires, and qualitative semistructured interviews. SUMMARY Although future research will evaluate the intervention in a controlled study, the process of theory-based intervention development can be applied to other rehabilitation research contexts, maximizing the impact of this work.Video Abstract is available for more insights from the authors (see Supplemental Digital Content 1, http://links.lww.com/JNPT/A123).


American Journal of Infection Control | 2014

Wheelchair cleaning and disinfection in Canadian health care facilities: "That's wheelie gross!"

Paula Gardner; Matthew P. Muller; Betty Prior; Ken So; Jane Tooze; Linda Eum; Oksana Kachur

BACKGROUND Wheelchairs are complex equipment that come in close contact with individuals at increased risk of transmitting and acquiring antibiotic-resistant organisms and health care-associated infection. The purpose of this study was to determine the status of wheelchair cleaning and disinfection in Canadian health care facilities. METHODS Acute care hospitals (ACHs), chronic care hospitals (CCHs), and long-term care facilities (LTCFs) were contacted and the individual responsible for oversight of wheelchair cleaning and disinfection was identified. A structured interview was conducted that focused on current practices and concerns, barriers to effective wheelchair cleaning and disinfection, and potential solutions. RESULTS Interviews were completed at 48 of the 54 facilities contacted (89%), including 18 ACHs, 16 CCHs, and 14 LTCFs. Most (n = 24) facilities had 50-200 in-house wheelchairs. Respondents were very concerned about wheelchair cleaning as an infection control issue. Specific concerns included the lack of reliable systems for tracking and identifying dirty and clean wheelchairs (71%, 34/48), failure to clean and disinfect wheelchairs between patients (52%, 25/48), difficulty cleaning cushions (42%, 20/48), lack of guidelines (35%, 27/48), continued use of visibly soiled wheelchairs (29%, 14/48) and lack of resources (25%, 12/48). CONCLUSION Our results suggest that wheelchair cleaning and disinfection is not optimally performed at many Canadian hospitals and LTCFs. Specific guidance on wheelchair cleaning and disinfection is necessary.


Disability and Rehabilitation | 2016

Problematising risk in stroke rehabilitation.

Mary Egan; Dorothy Kessler; Christine Ceci; Debbie Laliberte-Rudman; Colleen McGrath; Lindsey Sikora; Paula Gardner

Abstract Purpose: Following stroke, re-engagement in personally valued activities requires some experience of risk. Risk, therefore, must be seen as having positive as well as negative aspects in rehabilitation. Our aim was to identify the dominant understanding of risk in stroke rehabilitation and the assumptions underpinning these understandings, determine how these understandings affect research and practise, and if necessary, propose alternate ways to conceptualise risk in research and practise. Method: Alvesson and Sandberg’s method of problematisation was used. We began with a historical overview of stroke rehabilitation, and proceeded through five steps undertaken in an iterative fashion: literature search and selection; data extraction; syntheses across texts; identification of assumptions informing the literature and; generation of alternatives. Results: Discussion of risk in stroke rehabilitation is largely implicit. However, two prominent conceptualisations of risk underpin both knowledge development and clinical practise: the risk to the individual stroke survivor of remaining dependent in activities of daily living and the risk that the health care system will be overwhelmed by the costs of providing stroke rehabilitation. Conclusions: Conceptualisation of risk in stroke rehabilitation, while implicit, drives both research and practise in ways that reinforce a focus on impairment and a generic, decontextualised approach to rehabilitation. Implications for rehabilitation Much of stroke rehabilitation practise and research seems to centre implicitly on two risks: risk to the patient of remaining dependent in ADL and risk to the health care system of bankruptcy due to the provision of stroke rehabilitation. The implicit focus on ADL dependence limits the ability of clinicians and researchers to address other goals supportive of a good life following stroke. The implicit focus on financial risk to the health care system may limit access to rehabilitation for people who have experienced either milder or more severe stroke. Viewing individuals affected by stroke as possessing a range of independence and diverse personally valued activities that exist within a network of relations offers wider possibilities for action in rehabilitation.


Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology | 2017

MAPx (Mobility Aid Personalization): examining why older adults “pimp their ride” and the impact of doing so

Paula Gardner

Abstract We all do this. We personalize things. We buy leopard-printed seat covers and fuzzy dice for our cars, and display action figures and photographs in our offices. Studying older adults who have extended this process of personalization to their mobility devices, the purpose of the mobility aid personalization (MAPx) project is to examine MAPx and its impact on the health and mobility of older adults. Using a qualitative research design, field observations and interviews were conducted with 72 older adults to gain an in-depth understanding of device customization from an emic (insider’s) perspective. Findings illustrate that older adults personalize their devices for reasons of fun, function and fashion. MAPx – the process of purposefully selecting or modifying a mobility device to suit individual needs and preferences – was also found to promote health and mobility by encouraging device acceptance, increasing social participation, enhancing joy and preserving identity. MAPx makes an important contribution to our understanding of the complex relationship between older adults and assistive devices and provides a new approach to some old problems including falls, inactivity and social isolation. Encouraging MAPx is a promising rehabilitation strategy for promoting health and community mobility among the older adult population. Implications for Rehabilitation Personalizing an assistive device facilitates device acceptance, promotes health and well-beingand should be supported and encouraged in rehabilitative care. Choice, variety and access are critical aspects of assistive devices; vendors, manufacturers andpractitioners should work together to provide clients with a greater range of affordable optionsfor new devices. Function is more than mechanical or physical; social factors including social identity, stigma andsocial roles must be adequately considered and explicit in rehabilitative practice.

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Colleen McGrath

University of Western Ontario

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Jennifer Shaffer

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

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Mandy McGlynn

Toronto Rehabilitation Institute

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