| Occupational Therapy –
Developing Strength for Tomorrow
Occupational Therapy makes it possible for
infants, children and adolescence with injuries, physical challenges
or developmental disabilities to live their life to their full potential
given essential skills that increase their quality of life and a
sense of independence. At Driscoll Children's Hospital’s Rehabilitation
Center, occupational therapy is specifically designed for those
who need frequent or high-intensity therapy. An interdisciplinary
focus and facility specifically designed for those who need frequent
or high-intensity therapy. An interdisciplinary focus and a facility
specifically equipped to handle rehabilitation help ensure that
accidents, disease or developmental disabilities don’t keep
any child from reaching his or her full potential.
What Occupational
Therapy Offers
Occupational therapy focuses treatment around purposeful activities
or occupation. For children, this means specific life skills and
tasks, rather than job-related functions. Occupational therapy helps
patients further develop or regain skills through specific exercises
and task-related activities.
Occupational therapists collaborate with other therapists, physicians
and specialists to maximize each child’s potential with specific
programs customized to each patients unique needs.
Therapists use age-appropriate play and activities to focus on strengthening
and enhancing fine motor skills, range of motion, muscle strength
and flexibility, positioning and posture, and other areas as needed.
Who Can Benefit
From Occupational Therapy
Occupational therapy can benefit infants, children and adolescence
who have:
- Rehabilitation needs, such as brain injury, spinal cord injury,
multiple trauma and neurologic insult or dysfunction
- Orthopaedic conditions, including limited range of motion or
mobility, decreased strength and endurance, fractures, burns,
sprains, and strains
- Connective tissue disease, such as juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
- Neonatal conditions in high risk infants
- Learning disabilities, including delayed fine and gross motor
development
- Sensory dysfunction
- Multiple handicapping conditions, such as:
- Cerebral palsy
- Muscular dystrophy
- Spina bifida
- Congenital anomalies
- Residual disabilities related to trauma or infection
Customized to Each Patients Needs
We create a customized occupational therapy program, based on the
child’s individual needs.
- Initial Evaluation measures development
objectively to create a program best suited for the patient. Therapists
review activities of daily living, wheelchair and adaptive equipment
needs, oral motor functions or feeding skills, fine motor skills,
cognitive skills and perceptual skills.
- Customized Treatments helps each child
maximize his or her potential for development, strength and movement
with the latest combination of rehabilitation and habitation techniques.
- Ongoing Consultations with patients,
family, parents, teachers, physicians ensure appropriate therapeutic
intervention, equipment and the best environment for the child.
How Occupational
Therapy Meets Patients Needs
Early therapeutic intervention, in all cases, helps reinforce development,
promote a healthy self-concept, strengthen cognitive processes and
prompt emotional maturation.
- Occupational therapy for patients of
all ages can increase independence and social adjustment.
- The ability to provide high-intensity
therapy allows patients to return home while still receiving the
frequency and intensity of therapy they may need on a daily basis.
- By strengthening essential life skills,
occupational therapists aid the child and his or her family to
maximize their potential.
All-In-One Advantage
Occupational therapists at Driscoll Children's Hospital use a strong
interdisciplinary approach to improve all of the patient’s
sensory motor functions. They also work closely with specialists
and therapists in other areas to create a comprehensive program
for each patient. Reinforcing independence in functional activities
through instruction and home-based exercise programs can increase
progress made by occupational therapy patients.
Family-Centered
Care – Partners in Treatment
Our occupational therapists believe strongly in the power of family
encouragement and involvement. Parent or those close to the patient
are encouraged to attend therapy sessions.
Instructing and educating the parents can often be as important
as the skills and practice the child receives. The family plays
an important role in reinforcing and following through with the
therapies at home. Therapists will work with the family to identify
and help obtain any appropriate equipment the child needs o function
at home.
A Staff Committed
to Meeting Your Needs
The success of occupational therapy depends on the staff who are
both well educated and committed to the success of each patient.
All our therapists hold bachelors or advanced degrees from university
programs and attend additional training courses each year to further
their specialized knowledge. |