“…In this sense, the occupational interruption as a result of the socio-sanitary measures to control the pandemic, and the reconfiguration of occupations in homes observed in this study, result in our opinion in a new form of occupational dislocation (Pizarro et al, 2018); since it meant the temporary denial of territories other than the home, making it difficult to participate in meaningful occupations (Pizarro & Whiteford, 2021), in the ways that people are used to doing it, such as community, recreational, and instrumental ADLs, an issue that could lead to the loss of emotional ties and the sense of belonging to social groups other than the family. However, at the same time, this study shows that telehealth would be a means to maintain participation in significant occupations that are carried out in private territories due to the pandemic, such as education, health and work, an issue that was possible thanks to the fact that through virtuality, people exploited their capacity for creativity, resilience and reinvention of social ties (Kiepek et al, 2019;Freire-Pérez, 2021), skills that flourished in the digital encounter with others, in difficult moments such as the confinement experience lived.…”