Our Patient Services — Occupational Therapy         
            
            Like all healing therapies, occupational therapy is both an  art and a science, combining trained and reasoned judgment with insight born of  experience and vision.  Our goal is to foster  well-being and health in every client by enabling him or her to participate in  the occupations of everyday life.  We  believe that health has many dimensions and is not just the absence of  disease.  
            What is an Occupation?
            An occupation is much more than a  job or career.  It is everything we do  during the day that gives our lives meaning and through which we identify who  we are and what we care about.  An adult  might have the simultaneous or sequential occupations of parent, spouse,  employer, volunteer, homemaker, runner, etc -- all roles through which that  person defines who he or she is.  A child  might be a student, a playmate, a family member who routinely sets the table  for dinner or walks the dog, a mentor to a younger child, soccer player etc.  The activities with which we as people occupy  ourselves during the day are as diverse as we are.
            What Do Occupational Therapists Do?
            Occupational therapists believe each client is the true expert in his or her occupations. Our aim is to help our client to participate in those occupations  in a way that brings satisfaction. We do that by assessing what impediments might exist to  our client's participation in  an occupation  and then by designing a customized solution. 
            Solutions might include any or all of the following:
            
                - overcoming the disability through education, training and exercises
- adapting the materials used and/or utilizing new technologies
- changing the environment (physical, social, psychological)
- removing the barriers to successful participation.
              
                | Tools of Occupational Therapy Occupational therapists  choose from an array of approaches, tools and therapeutic modalities to help  clients to achieve their goals, including: 
                      Functional assessments
                      of the client, for example: * physical  abilities (strength, coordination, balance) and
 * cognitive abilities (memory, organizational  skills, coping skills)
 Physical demands analysis of the occupation -- this often leads to therapist-directed and  -supervised therapeutic exercises targeting the individual client’s symptoms  (stretching, range of motion, flexibility, endurance, and strengthening)  Transferable skills analysis Vocational  aptitude testing and interpretation Work conditioning, on-site interventions,  graduated return-to-work programmes and job search  Assessment of the physical environment (materials,  tools and equipment) and environmental  modifications (work site visit, ergonomic modifications) Assessment of the social, cultural and emotional  support systems available to the client Stress management and cognitive–behavioral       strategies (positive reinforcement, progressive relaxation, biofeedback) Health promotion and training/education  (proper body mechanics, back education)  Custom Splint manufacturing Complete Decongestive Therapy (CDT) for       Lymphedema including manual lymph drainage (MLD), bandaging and garment       fitting. | 
            
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            Who Can We Help?
            Occupational therapy always has the goal of enabling clients to  function independently, to exercise choice and control and to feel productive  and satisfied in their lives.  A client  might be someone whose ability to engage in the occupations of daily life is limited  by:
            
              - disability(congenital or acquired, for example  by stroke) 
- injury (motor vehicle accident or workplace  accident, for example) 
- progressive disease
- pain
- stress
- substance abuse.
Occupational therapists are team players.  We consult and co-ordinate with other  healthcare professionals, employers and families.              
            Our Education:
              
              Occupational therapists are university-trained professionals  who, since 2008, earn a master’s degree.  To practice in Nova Scotia, we must be registered members of the College of Occupational  Therapists of Nova Scotia (COTNS), the governing body that regulates the  practice of occupational therapy in the province.  To become a registered member of COTNS, we  must have graduated from an accredited course of study, completed at least 1000  hours of supervised fieldwork and passed the National Occupational  Therapy Certification Exam (NOTCE).  To  remain registered members of COTNS, we must maintain a continuing competency  portfolio.
              
            Our course of study is wide-ranging and includes the study  of musculoskeletal structure and function; neuroanatomical systems that relate  to motor, sensory, behavioural-emotional and perceptual-cognitive functions; theories  of occupational therapy practice; applied skills and technology; and how all  the foregoing apply to the practice of occupational therapy.
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