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I need an Occupational Therapist - but what am I looking for?

While we’re all familiar with the term, Occupational Therapy remains an area where many professionals know they’ll need to appoint one - but what makes a great Occupational Therapist, who can truly support your client to get the best possible outcome from their rehabilitation? Steph Fleet, Specialist Rehabilitation Occupational Therapist and Head of Service Development and Customer Relationships at Think Therapy 1st, addresses some of the key questions.

What do Occupational Therapists do?

Occupational Therapists primarily focus on a person's occupations, encompassing all the tasks and activities they want and need to perform in their daily lives, ranging from simple actions like getting out of bed to more complex endeavours such as maintaining full-time employment or travel.

To achieve this, these highly skilled professionals analyse individuals' abilities and evaluate their surrounding environments.

Occupational Therapists possess a comprehensive knowledge of anatomy, physiology, various medical conditions, injuries, and diseases. Additionally, they are well-versed in neurosciences, cognition, perception, sensory function, and related disorders.

Furthermore, Occupational Therapists have expertise in psychology, mental health, sociology, and behavioural sciences, enabling them to understand how individuals adapt to changes resulting from injuries, illnesses, and disabilities.

They also have a deep understanding of communities and environments which enables them to pinpoint the barriers to completing any daily activities and occupations and can take it a step further by enabling the person to return to complete the things they want and need to do in the environments they need to participate in.

They achieve this by:

Restoring Skills:

Occupational Therapists work towards restoring an individual's skills to their pre-injury level or within their capabilities to complete the tasks. For example, if someone has limited upper limb mobility and wishes to tie their hair, an Occupational Therapist will identify activities that incorporate the physical abilities required for achieving this goal.

These activities are designed to be meaningful and varied, so there is opportunity for repetition and skill and strength transference between tasks.

Adapting Tasks:

If a person cannot regain the physical abilities required for a specific task, Occupational Therapists explore ways to adapt the task and teach alternative methods.

For example, they may suggest using hair clips instead of bands or provide equipment to stabilise the individual's arm in the necessary position or show someone an alternative way to get dressed.

Compensatory Techniques

In situations where adaption techniques are insufficient for the individual to perform the task independently, Occupational Therapists can introduce compensatory techniques. This may involve having a carer or support worker assist the person in tying their hair, or suggest specialist equipment or home adaptations.

Occupational Therapists are well-placed and provide pivotal roles in helping individuals return to their activities and occupations through restorative, adaptive and compensatory techniques that are all part of rehabilitation.

Isn’t a specialist OT the same as a rehab OT?

No. Specialist knowledge is a skill set gained in a particular area.

For example, specialising in mental health, the Occupational Therapists will be working with client groups experiencing high levels of anxiety and depression and techniques are taught to enable the person to participate in the environment. Social care specialists are highly skilled in equipment and housing adaptation.

Spinal and Neuro specialists are skilled in restoring neural pathways through functional activities. Specialists in trauma are skilled in adapting and compensating techniques to manage their pain and environment until the injury has healed or been repaired and they will also have experience of the mental health aspects of trauma with knowledge of PTSD and its impacts.

Typically, individuals are discharged from hospitals with adaptive and compensatory techniques in place. Even rehabilitation units with statutory funding have limited time and scope for therapy, as the ultimate aim is to facilitate the person's discharge.

On the other hand, rehabilitation specialist Occupational Therapists have expertise in multiple areas, such as neurology, complex orthopaedics and trauma.

They can identify how different symptoms interact with each other, as well as with a person's activities and environment.

These specialists focus their intervention on restoring abilities using adaptive and compensatory techniques, grading activities to improve specific cognitive or physical components. They address multiple goals within a single activity while ensuring the individual does not experience failure, cognitive overload, increased pain, or heightened fatigue levels.

While all Occupational Therapists possess these skills, rehabilitation specialists have honed them specifically for this client group.

When looking for a Specialist Rehabilitation Occupational Therapist, it is advisable to look for someone with several specialisms who can identify creative and dynamic therapy sessions in all the environments the individual needs to participate in whilst not doing for the person what they can do for themselves.

Why choose TT1st?

Think Therapy 1st (TT1st) provides exceptional rehabilitation services through their team of highly skilled and knowledgeable Specialist Rehabilitation Occupational Therapists who operate at an advanced or consultant level.

The growing business uses local Occupational Therapists (the current network comprises over 80 Occupational Therapists) because hands-on functional rehabilitation needs, at minimum, weekly sessions, but this can be up to three sessions per week if high-intensity rehabilitation is indicated.

Coordination of multidisciplinary and other service providers is also part of what TT1st do – although not alone.

TT1st pride themselves on not doing for the person, what they can do for themselves and use this as part of therapy to facilitate the person in being able to manage their ongoing needs or has a well-established support system in place. The goal is to create a lasting impact that extends far beyond the duration of therapy, promoting long-term independence and wellbeing.

Social Return’s Re-drawing Identity conference: Thoughts from The Compere

A little water and some reflection has flowed under the bridge since our ‘conference with a difference’ couple of months ago and we continue to receive fantastic feedback from attendees and from those who have heard about the day.

We are delighted by the impact it has had!

We wanted to create ‘a conference with a difference’ by shaking up the usual conference format with the aim of creating something deep, meaningful and immersive.

At the heart of this difference was the collaboration between our amazing presenters who gave generously of their time to meet with each other ensuring that topics and content was integrated and there was a flow to the day.

I know from presenter feedback that this was a very enjoyable process, from which we learned from each other along the way.

The selection of a theatre space as our venue and a meeting of minds about adding artistic content in terms of the drawings, by Graham Ogilvie, Grace, Currie’s, painting and original music content by Evernova (as well as the guest appearance of a glitterball!) served to strengthen and underpin the messages and learning around the topic of the day.

But beyond all of those aspects, the contributions - directly and indirectly - from people whose life changing injury profoundly impacted their identity, was the aspect that fundamentally impacted all of us across the day.

It was humbling and powerful to hear their stories and to view therapeutic inputs through the lens of authentic lived experience.

I am delighted that we were able to create and share something about such a central aspect for survivors of life changing injury and that the content resonated so meaningfully with those who are tasked with supporting recovery, rehabilitation and re-drawing identity.

97 attendees voted for Social Return to run another conference, so watch this space for information on the next one!

"Incredible conference hosted by Social Return Case Management yesterday. My brain was buzzing with ideas!" Becky Coupland

"A wonderful day at Social Return Case Management 's re- drawing identity conference with some team members. It was wonderful to present alongside such inspiring and interesting speakers and the day had a wonderful atmosphere.

"The structure was very creative with Evernova playing beautiful music, Graham Ogilvie drawing as we spoke and painting by Grace Currie. Well done Vicki Gilman and team for a unique event born of creativity, quirkiness and a good chunk of enthusiastic hardwork!" Lucy Fallon

"Great day in Leeds at #redrawingidentity. Fabulous speakers, inspirational client stories and left the venue feeling motivated and energised. I love thinking outside the box Good day at the office." Emma Fitzsimmons

"What type of conference has this kind of line up And a real life artist, musicians and SWEETIE BAGS?! A Social Return conference that’s what. And it was 10/10. Thank you @ VickiGilman and @SocialReturnCM as a Case Manager, what you did for us all today meant a lot." Caroline Phelps

"Possibly the best conference we have ever attended. Creative, thoughtful, Educational. Human. Inspiring. Well done @SocialReturnCM team." Connected Voice Advocacy

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