Login / Signup

Self-management of daily life tasks in diploma-track youth with disabilities.

Elizabeth G S MunsellGael I OrsmondDaniel FulfordWendy J Coster
Published in: Disability and rehabilitation (2021)
Findings suggest that using measures of SMDLT and designing targeted interventions for SMDLT might help improve participation in independent living and productivity for diploma-track youth with disabilities.Implications for rehabilitationSuccessful transition from high school to adult roles requires the ability to self-manage the daily life tasks required for those roles, such as employment, post-secondary education, and independent living.The ability to self-manage daily tasks is distinct from mastery of discrete functional skills and should be assessed with measures that uniquely examine this domain.Social and communication skills, executive functioning, and behavioral regulation, are important contributors to the ability to self-manage life tasks for diploma-track youth with disabilities and should be incorporated into multifaceted interventions.Interventions to improve self-management of tasks should include teaching strategies and practice coordinating underlying skills in flexible ways that meet the varying demands of tasks and diverse environments.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • working memory
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • medical students
  • young adults
  • primary care
  • climate change
  • high school
  • mental illness
  • cancer therapy