THE MERCK MANUAL HOME HEALTH HANDBOOK
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Occupational Therapy (OT)

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Occupational therapy is intended to enhance a person's ability to do basic self-care activities, useful work, and leisure activities. This therapy focuses on the coordination of many abilities required for even simple activities:

  • The ability to feel and move
  • The ability to create and execute a plan
  • The ability to want to do the task and to persevere until it is completed

These abilities can be impaired in many ways.

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Occupational therapists may detect impairments by observing the person, by doing specific tests (such as balance tests), and by talking with other health care practitioners, family members, or caregivers. Therapists assess needs by observing the person doing a task in a natural environment. They try to identify potential problems with the social and physical environment. For example, family members' attitudes or inadequate lighting may interfere with the person's ability to do a task, or electrical cords across walkways may make walking hazardous.

People with impairments work with the occupational therapist to determine and prioritize goals and to select appropriate techniques and activities. For example, if people have difficulty eating with utensils, therapy may include activities that develop fine motor skills, such as inserting pegs on a peg board. A memory game may improve recognition and recall. Adaptive techniques can help people use their strengths to compensate for impairments. For example, a person with a paralyzed arm can learn new ways to dress, tie shoes, and fasten buttons. Activities are made more challenging as people improve.

Assistive devices: Occupational therapists recommend devices that can help people function more independently (assistive devices). For example, a person with arthritis can be fitted with a splint to prevent joints from freezing in an abnormal position (deformity) or with a device to support damaged joints, ligaments, tendons, muscles, and bones (orthoses). Therapists may construct as well as fit such devices. Or for a person who has had an arm amputated, therapists may recommend an artificial arm (prosthesis) that includes a pincer needed to hold a utensil. Most occupational therapists can recommend appropriate wheelchairs and train people who have had an arm amputated to use their artificial limb or other devices to help them with daily tasks.

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Last full review/revision July 2007 by Masayoshi Itoh, MD, MPH; Mathew H. M. Lee, MD

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