Occupational Therapy: Overviewby Aimee Amodio | More from this Blogger 12 Sep 2009 10:14 AM Occupational therapy is similar in some ways to physical therapy, and different in others. According to the American Occupational Therapy Association, occupational therapy "enables people of all ages to live life to its fullest by helping them promote health and prevent-or live better with-illness, injury or disability." (From the AOTA website.) Occupational therapy can help patients develop or regain the fine-motor skills that allow us to do everyday tasks like tying shoes, writing, and using utensils. Other goals of occupational therapy may be improving basic reasoning skills or compensating for a permanent loss of function. Who needs occupational therapy? Patients may include:
Occupational therapy -- like physical therapy -- can involve physical exercises designed to improve strength and/or dexterity. OT may also include activities that exercise the brain more than the body. Computer programs may be used to help patients improve decision making, reasoning, perception, and problem solving skills. There are many situations in which occupational therapy may be useful. Some (like stroke) may be more obvious than others. The American Occupational Therapy Association lists six broad areas where an occupational therapist may practice:
The Physical Therapy series: Physical Therapy: Overview Types of Physical Therapy Getting the Most Benefit from Physical Therapy Learn more about Aimee Amodio ![]() Aimee is a fiction writer... dog lover... music lover... Relevanthealth tags User Comments No comments on this article yet. Be the first to comment! Discuss this article
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