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Occupational Therapy

Our customized programs strive to equip patients and residents with the necessary skills for the highest quality of life through the treatment and enhancement of ADL/Self Care, functional mobility and balance.

Our Occupational Therapists and Occupational Therapy Assistants work on bathing/showering, dressing, toileting, personal hygiene, cooking, home and kitchen management. Treatment may also include education and training in use of adaptive equipment and durable medical equipment.

Occupational therapists are experts in the performance, physical, mental, and psychosocial aspects of illness and injury, and for short-term or post-acute residents, occupational therapy helps prepare for the return home.

An occupational therapist might address activities of daily living and provide education on energy conservation and task simplification and may also evaluate the resident’s home for safety after discharge, recommending adaptive equipment when necessary then helping the individual learn to use it.

Pursuing regular activities- like cooking, showering, or driving- are some of the areas our Occupational Therapists and Occupational Therapy Assistants work on with our patients as they continue recovery from illness or injury.

For long-term residents, and those with memory or cognitive disorders, occupational therapists focus on adapting activities to keep the resident as functional and independent as possible, providing them with dignity and enhancing their quality of life. Occupational therapists might provide equipment to assist with activities, modify the resident’s environment to maximize independence, and facilitate the resident’s participation in Therapeutic Recreation.

Customized, person-centered Occupational Therapy programs strive to equip patients with the necessary skills for the highest quality of life through the treatment and enhancement of ADL/Self Care, functional mobility and balance. Our Occupational Therapists and Occupational Therapy Assistants work on bathing/showering, dressing, toileting, personal hygiene, cooking, home and kitchen management. Treatment may also include education and training in use of adaptive equipment and durable medical equipment

Occupational Therapy outcomes may include:

  • Dressing, Bathing, & Grooming
  • Toileting
  • Homemaking
  • Cooking & Eating
  • Prevention of Further Disability
  • Adaptive Equipment
  • Increased Safety Awareness




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