Ron, I am a COTA student. I believe part of he problem is that media is not
being taught in OT school. There are two programs in our area. Our program
requires two media classes where we have to learn everything from knitting
to ceramics. Our teacher frowns upon "clothespins" and "cones" and makes us
up come up with a ideas that are functional and creative and meaningful to
the patient when we are treatment planning. The other program in the area
offers no media classes. At first, I could not understand why we were
learning so many crafts and why we were constantly forced to think outside
the box. Now that I am ready for my internship program, I see the benefit. I
have been taught to have a "bag of tricks" when I treat patients. Instead of
timing someone with a stopwatch for standing balance, I find out what table
top activities are meaningful to them and have them stand while engaging in
those activities. It is about taking the time to know your patients, however
briefly, and engaging them in activity that will sustain their attention and
interest. I know emphasis has been placed on productivity and profit seem to
have taken over some facilities. I think we can do both if we create our own
"bag of tricks" for our patients. It does have to be time consuming.Diane

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of Ron Carson
Sent: Saturday, November 29, 2008 04:36
To: Deann Bayerl, MS OTR/l
Subject: Re: [OTlist] AARGH!


I  sort  of  struggle  to  understand  how OT's who set up patients on
simple,  redundant and often inappropriate activities are not "bad". I
understand the productivity push, but I don't understand being so lazy
that the best a therapist can do is clothespins, pegs, etc.

And  I  don't think it's that so many OT's are physically lazy as they
are  mentally  lazy.  OT's have allowed themselves to be backed into a
corner   of   meaningless  and  silly  activity  that  is  often  more
diversional  than  therapeutic.  It  seems  that  some  OT's are quite
comfortable  in  the back seat of the rehab. In my opinion, these OT's
should be ashamed of their practice patterns.

Ron
--
Ron Carson MHS, OT

----- Original Message -----
From: Deann Bayerl, MS OTR/l <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, November 28, 2008
To:   [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subj: [OTlist] AARGH!

DBMOl> Ron,
DBMOl> I do understand your frustration, even more so from having spent some
time
DBMOl> in IP rehab.  Here are two of the problems outside of lack of
DBMOl> creativity....productivity and required IP pt rehab hours. Although I
DBMOl> preferred to work with pts on ADLs in the am, b/c they were the most
DBMOl> relevant, some of those pts had to be down to pt at an early hour &
you just
DBMOl> can't get to all of them (although you CAN shift your schedule around
from
DBMOl> day to day, but in my experience this was not often done). Thus the
next
DBMOl> part of the day was often working with pts in the rehab room, where
there
DBMOl> was a considerable push for working with more than one pt at a time.
DBMOl> Instead of working with them together, they were often set up a
separate
DBMOl> 'stations' and given a task that they could do without 1:1...thus the
DBMOl> towels, clothespins, bead sorting, etc. It takes thinking outside the
box to
DBMOl> set up a session that is both meaningful and therapeutic; which is
often not
DBMOl> the case on a day to day basis.  It's not that these are not good
OT/OTAs,
DBMOl> they just are not creative.  I've seen this in OT and I also saw this
for
DBMOl> many years in my previous profession as a teacher.  There are those
truly
DBMOl> dedicated to the profession and those that see it as a job that pays
the
DBMOl> bills.  No matter where you work, there will be people of both types.
The
DBMOl> best we can do is be the former and put in the extra effort to
provide
DBMOl> meaningful therapies and explain to our clients why and how the
particular
DBMOl> activities we choose are therapeutic and pivotal to OT.
DBMOl> d

DBMOl> -----Original Message-----
DBMOl> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
DBMOl> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
DBMOl> Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
DBMOl> Sent: Thursday, November 27, 2008 3:00 PM
DBMOl> To: [email protected]
DBMOl> Subject: OTlist Digest, Vol 48, Issue 2

DBMOl> Send OTlist mailing list submissions to
DBMOl>         [email protected]

DBMOl> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
DBMOl>         http://otnow.com/mailman/listinfo/otlist_otnow.com
DBMOl> or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
DBMOl>         [EMAIL PROTECTED]

DBMOl> You can reach the person managing the list at
DBMOl>         [EMAIL PROTECTED]

DBMOl> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
DBMOl> than "Re: Contents of OTlist digest..."


DBMOl> Today's Topics:

DBMOl>    1. AARGH! (Ron Carson)
DBMOl>    2. Re: AARGH! (Lehman, David)


DBMOl> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-

DBMOl> Message: 1
DBMOl> Date: Thu, 27 Nov 2008 06:37:53 -0500
DBMOl> From: Ron Carson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
DBMOl> Subject: [OTlist] AARGH!
DBMOl> To: [email protected]
DBMOl> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
DBMOl> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252

DBMOl> I  evaluated a home health patient who was just out of rehab
secondary
DBMOl> to  a  total  hip  replacement.  This  is  a 55 y/o who was
previously
DBMOl> independent.

DBMOl> During  the  eval,  I asked her if she receive OT in rehab. She
rolled
DBMOl> her eyes and explained that the OT's had her folding towels at a
table
DBMOl> and standing at a table playing cards.

DBMOl> I  will  NEVER,  EVER  understand why so many OT's have client's
doing
DBMOl> essentially  meaningless  activity  when there are so many other
NEEDS
DBMOl> and DESIRES.

DBMOl> Why  do OT's stand with patients at a table playing cards? It makes
NO
DBMOl> sense  because  it's contextually incorrect. Who plays cards
standing?
DBMOl> And why will OT's stand with patients but won't take the initiative
to
DBMOl> address  mobility  issues  such  as  getting  clothes from the
closet,
DBMOl> ambulating to the toilet, etc?

DBMOl> On that happy note <smile>, HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!

DBMOl> Ron



--
Options?
www.otnow.com/mailman/options/otlist_otnow.com

Archive?
www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]



--
Options?
www.otnow.com/mailman/options/otlist_otnow.com

Archive?
www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]

Reply via email to