The British Journal of Occupational Therapy (BJOT) has recently revised its submission guidelines to clarify what the journal seeks in a review. This provides a useful opportunity to reflect on the key features of different types of reviews and the value that a well-timed and expertly executed review adds to a fiel
Background: One indication of the growth and development of a discipline is the quality of its resea...
Articles pertaining to evidence-based practice have become increasingly visible in occupational ther...
Where is the evidence that occupational therapy intervention can make a difference? In short, it may...
The British Journal of Occupational Therapy (BJOT) has recently revised its submission guidelines to...
The British Journal of Occupational Therapy strives to publish high quality research and scholarly p...
In the past 20 years, evidence-based practice has been the new era of healthcare service. Although h...
Background/aim: Scoping reviews are a method of identifying, locating, analysing and summarising rel...
Research evolves around the need for scientific evidence on which to base clinical practice, ownersh...
As services are commissioned based on effectiveness, occupational therapists are under pressure to d...
Introduction: The 2014 WFOT Congress included over 150 wide-ranging, highquality papers specifically...
To shape its work, the Research Centre for Occupation & Mental Health is interested in research prio...
OBJECTIVE. We sought to identify and describe the number, topic, and publishing trends of systematic...
The Canadian Journal of Occupational therapy (CJOT) is the only Canadian refereed professional publi...
One thousand seven hundred and forty six articles were analysed from the American Journal of Occupat...
Where is the evidence that occupational therapy intervention can make a difference? In short, it may...
Background: One indication of the growth and development of a discipline is the quality of its resea...
Articles pertaining to evidence-based practice have become increasingly visible in occupational ther...
Where is the evidence that occupational therapy intervention can make a difference? In short, it may...
The British Journal of Occupational Therapy (BJOT) has recently revised its submission guidelines to...
The British Journal of Occupational Therapy strives to publish high quality research and scholarly p...
In the past 20 years, evidence-based practice has been the new era of healthcare service. Although h...
Background/aim: Scoping reviews are a method of identifying, locating, analysing and summarising rel...
Research evolves around the need for scientific evidence on which to base clinical practice, ownersh...
As services are commissioned based on effectiveness, occupational therapists are under pressure to d...
Introduction: The 2014 WFOT Congress included over 150 wide-ranging, highquality papers specifically...
To shape its work, the Research Centre for Occupation & Mental Health is interested in research prio...
OBJECTIVE. We sought to identify and describe the number, topic, and publishing trends of systematic...
The Canadian Journal of Occupational therapy (CJOT) is the only Canadian refereed professional publi...
One thousand seven hundred and forty six articles were analysed from the American Journal of Occupat...
Where is the evidence that occupational therapy intervention can make a difference? In short, it may...
Background: One indication of the growth and development of a discipline is the quality of its resea...
Articles pertaining to evidence-based practice have become increasingly visible in occupational ther...
Where is the evidence that occupational therapy intervention can make a difference? In short, it may...