What does an occupational therapist do?

Occupational therapists enable individuals to participate in activities of daily life. Occupations represent the activities that one needs to do or wants to do. For children, occupations include participating in play, family routines, self-care tasks, school related activities, and social experiences with peers.

 
 
 

We provide evaluation and treatment for the following concerns:

 

Attention

Handwriting

Sensory processing difficulties

Regulation of arousal

Visual motor skills

Motor planning/ dyspraxia

Muscle weakness

Balance and coordination skills

Participation in
self-care routines

Social emotional skills