Wow...as a graduate student in the OT profession I find myself appauled at the 
below comments.  Too many times we are not identifying with the patient on 
their needs, this is found through an easy interview or needs assessment.  I 
have recently done a project with the ALC here in stillwater, and the site is 
planning on implementing the program based on our practice of addressing the 
needs of the site, the needs of the community as well as the needs and desires 
of the students.  I do not want to graduate with this degree with an image such 
as the one below. and i will fight to change that.  I am fortunate to have 
worked and study under some wonderful OT's! Lets hope that the therapists 
talked about below realize their failures and make the necessary changes to 
embrace what OT is really for and how it is incredibly beneficial to the 
patient.  sincerely, sarah croft 
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ron Carson" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, March 19, 2009 7:04:48 AM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central 
Subject: [OTlist] How NOT to be an OT 

For  our  new  members,  let  me  explain  that  I like highlighting the 
"stupid"  OT  experiences  that  I run across. What follows are two such 
examples: 

1.  Patient  comes  home  from  rehab  after  a  fall with resultant hip 
pinning.  I  asked  him  about what OT did for him in rehab. He comments 
that  they  had  him  working  on  his  arms and doing things like pegs, 
sander,  and  shoulder  arc, etc. Now, here's the catch, the patient can 
NOT  dress  his affected LE and is too scared to take a shower. Now, I'm 
not  saying that his OT's didn't address these issues but the impression 
the  patient  walked away with are the "stupid" toys that many OT's play 
with.  I ask, did these OT's do BEST practice? Did they provide SKILLED, 
medically  necessary  therapy  services?  Did they address the patient's 
most important goals? 

2.  Another  patient, just out of rehab. 90 years old, previously living 
alone  and  now  temporarily  living with her son. During my home health 
eval,  I explained to the patient/son that as an OT, I am there to teach 
the  patient  how to be safe and independent in their home. I went on to 
explain  that  this  may include everything from car transfer to cooking 
and  that  what  I  do is based on the needs/desires of the patient. The 
son,  who was very nice, immediately said, "Mom can do those things like 
folding  clothes".  Now, I never mentioned folding clothes but I do know 
that  MANY  rehab  OT's  do  have  patients  standing at a table folding 
clothes.  Did  this  man  get  the  impression that OT is about teaching 
people  to  "fold  clothes"?  If  so,  what  a  SAD  statement about our 
profession. 

Thanks, 

Ron 



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