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USC Chan Division of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy
USC Chan Division of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy
University of Southern California
University of Southern California
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Bethany A. Gruskin PhD, MSOT, OTR/L(she/her)

Bethany A. Gruskin PhD, MSOT, OTR/L

Occupational Therapist

HRA 500
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As an AOTA Fellow in the OT Faculty Practice, I provide Lifestyle Redesign interventions to clients from a variety of backgrounds. I enjoy learning more about my clients’ stories to therapeutically facilitate holistic progress towards collaborative goals. As a clinician, I strengthen the occupational therapy care I provide by drawing upon my extensive background in research.

To provide a brief background of my research experience, I joined the Back 2 Baby Basics (B2BB) research lab as an undergraduate research assistant. With a focus on early childhood temperament, my roles within this project included interacting directly with participants to collect data, coding videos for specific behaviors, entering and correcting information in datasets, and training new undergraduate research assistants. Upon graduation, I joined another Penn State project — the Study of Infant Emergent Sleep TrAjectories Family Foundations (SIESTA-FF) — as a full-time Human Research Technologist I. As a member of this project, I worked collaboratively to create operating procedures, ensure efficient protocols for data collection and entry, and recruit couples who were first-time parents. I worked directly with families through each stage of the project. As a project based in human development and family studies the terminology diverged, but ultimately, we were looking at occupations, co-occupations, roles, and routines within the emerging family unit.

With this foundation, I pursued my Master of Science in Occupational Therapy at the University of New England and graduated in May 2021. I went on to enroll as an Occupational Science PhD at the University of Southern California, immersed in Dr. Lawlor’s research lab. As a member of Dr. Lawlor’s Boundary Crossings research lab, I collaborated and engaged in narrative methodologies while considering stories of participation and access from individuals with complex identities.

My research interests are focused on the experiences of nesting as a type of place-making and resource seeking for first-time parents. Specifically, my dissertation explored parental engagement surrounding the activities required to prepare the physical, social, and material space for the arrival of a baby. I am also curious about the meaning ascribed to these activities and how they help with the transition into parenting roles. My long-term research goal is to consider the intersection between the Lifestyle Redesign Framework and parental participation in nesting, place-making, and resource seeking.

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