| occupational therapist |
Occupational therapists help children to overcome physical or social problems due to illness or disability, by concentrating not on what children are unable to do, but on what they may be able to achieve. They are skilled in adapting a child
Ãâó: www.ssc.mhie.ac.uk/viscot/gloss.html
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| occupational therapist |
means a person registered to practice occupational therapy. An occupational therapist treats neuromuscular and psychological dysfunction, caused by disease, trauma, congenital anomaly, or prior therapeutic process, through the use of specific tasks or goals directed activities designed to improve functional performance of the patient.
Ãâó: www.phs.org/healthplan/members/glossary.shtml
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| occupational therapy |
activities prescribed to promote recovery and rehabilitation
Ãâó: brachialplexus.wustl.edu/glossary.html
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| occupational therapy |
A therapy, treatment, or instructional support provided by an occupational therapist to the child, family, and/or pertinent members of the child's environment. Occupational therapy helps develop adaptive or physical skills that will aid in daily living and improve interactions with a person's physical and social world. It focuses on developing functional skills related to sensory-motor integration; coordination of movement; fine motor skills; self-help skills (dressing, self-feeding, etc. ...
Ãâó: www.ourspecialkids.org/definitions2.html
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| occupation |
Occupation describes the kind of work the person does on the job. For employed people, the data refer to the person's job during the reference week. For those who worked at two or more jobs, the data refer to the job at which the person worked the greatest number of hours. ...
Ãâó: atlas.library.arizona.edu/glossaryk_p.htm
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