4.4 Life on the Job As an Occupational Therapist: Recent

4.4 Life on the Job As an Occupational Therapist: Recent

Resources for students from The American Occupational Therapy Association Your career in Occupational Therapy I Meeting the challenges of brain injury Life on the Job Lindsay Ross, MOT, OTR Graduate of the University of Texas Health Science as an Occupational Center, San Antonio, Texas Transitional Learning Center (TLC), a post-acute brain Therapist injury rehabilitation center I treat clients ages 18 and older who have experienced a brain injury, both traumatic and non-traumatic. My Recent Graduates Talk case load includes, but is not limited to, clients who have had a stroke, been in a motor vehicle accident, been assaulted, or had a gunshot wound to the head. About Their Work TLC is a community re-entry program. The occupation- al therapy department addresses dysfunction at both the impairment and activity and participation levels. TLC is a comprehensive, inpatient facility, so the clients receive therapy all day. An average day at TLC includes both individual and group therapy sessions. A client’s day begins at 6:00 am with getting up and performing dressing and grooming tasks, with the assistance of an occupational therapy assistant if necessary. When the clients are scheduled for occupational therapy, they may be working to improve impairments, such as those affecting perceptual and cognitive tasks, or they may be scheduled to work towards independence in activities and participation in meal planning and preparation, mobility, household management, or money manage- ment. These activities are performed in either a simulat- ed or community-based environment. The days at TLC vary a great deal during the week and flexibility is important. Working with clients with brain injuries can be both challenging and rewarding. I Making a connection at camp I see outpatient children from 0 to 5 years in age, focus- Stacey Lehrer, OTR/L ing on traditional occupational therapy services (sensory integration, gross and fine-motor skills, cognitive and Graduate of University of New Hampshire, Durham, perceptual skills, and activities of daily living skills) and New Hampshire a few school-aged children 6–18 after school with a Bay Cliff Health Camp, a 7-week residential summer focus on either traditional occupational therapy services therapy camp in Big Bay, Michigan as a supplement to services they receive in school or Bay Cliff serves children aged 3 to 17, and all campers pre-vocational skills when appropriate. receive some combination of intensive occupational I also participate weekly in “Kids Kicking Illness” therapy, physical therapy, and speech and language karate and monthly in aquatic therapy with inpatient pathology. This summer there were 6 occupational ther- children. I help out with inpatient evaluations and treat- apists and 2 Level II fieldwork occupational therapy ment when necessary. I also perform community evalua- students. There is a very wide range of diagnoses among tions at our facility and in the community for children campers, ranging from mild speech impairment to ages 3 to 5, to determine eligibility for pre-school severe physical disability. My caseload of 14 kids had services. In addition, I participate in delivering and con- disabilities including traumatic brain injury, spina bifi- sulting on constraint-induced movement therapy, which da, learning disability, ADHD, spinal-cord injury, and is a main focus of clinical research at our facility. cerebral palsy. Average salary for a new graduate is $45,000. The great thing about the camp setting is that you have the opportunity to interact with your children each day I A focus on cancer patients at meals, in their cabins, and at various activities in Mackenzi Sneddon, MS, OTR/L addition to their scheduled therapy times. On weekdays, Graduate of the Sage Colleges, Troy, New York therapy is from 9:00 to 11:45 a.m. and 2:30 to 5:00 p.m. There are various therapy groups, from money Acute-care oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering management to weightlifting, from cooking to dance, as Cancer Center, Manhattan, New York well as aquatic therapy. I treat patients of all ages throughout the hospital. All The salary for a new grad is $2,500 for 7 weeks patients must have a diagnosis of cancer to be admitted (including lodging and meals). Camp may not make to the hospital. I evaluate and treat patients with you rich, but it’s a wonderful opportunity to try out dif- various diagnoses such as brain cancer, orthopedic ferent therapy ideas and to really get to know some problems, deconditioning (overall weakness), after a great kids. bone-marrow transplant, and children with emotional, environmental, and developmental delays. I screen and treat patients with deficits in cognitive processing I Caring for children in the community (memory, problem solving, money management, vision, Christine Catanzariti, MS, OTR/L and perception) and upper-extremity function, as well Graduate of the Sage Colleges, Troy, New York as patients with difficulties with activities of daily living. Specialty inpatient children’s hospital, New York An average day includes evaluating and treating about metropolitan area eight patients at bedside, educating family members, I work at an urban children’s hospital that provides playing with children, and attending lectures, all of inpatient and community services to children from the which promote learning in this teaching hospital. My ages 0 to 18. The hospital specializes in infant (post position’s salary range is between $50,000 to $55,000. neonatal intensive care unit) and toddler care up to working with teenagers with a variety of diagnoses— I Teamwork in a fast-paced setting prematurity, cerebral palsy, HIV/AIDS, mental Rebecca J. Root, MOT, OTR retardation, genetic disorders, gastrointestinal/feeding Graduate of the University of Texas Health Science disorders, coma recovery/traumatic brain injury, weight Center at San Antonio, Texas management, musculoskeletal disorders, orthopedic problems, burns, etc. We also provide home care Inpatient acute care at Brackenridge Hospital, Austin, services and community early intervention and Texas pre-school programs, as well as after-school care for The acute-care setting is extremely fast-paced and con- medically fragile children. stantly changing. Patients with a wide variety of ages and diagnoses are encountered on a daily basis. I have treated patients ranging from as young as 15 years old up to individuals in their late 90s. Diagnoses treated patients, and staff to improve patients’ quality of life by include neurological, trauma, orthopedic, and general educating and providing meaningful activities within medicine conditions. In this type of setting you truly their everyday lives. Occupational therapists at this have to expect the unexpected. Patient stays range from facility are also responsible for splinting injuries of the 1 day up to 2 to 3 months depending on the condition upper and lower extremities. Although I mostly provide and funding. Treatment must be individualized to each services to patients within my assigned rotation, I also person’s unique situation. One aspect about this setting assist occupational therapists in other units of the hospi- that I truly enjoy is the teamwork. Co-treating with tal including trauma, surgical, orthopedics, neurology, physical therapists and speech and language patholo- pediatrics, vascular/plastics, and cardiology. This envi- gists is a common occurrence. Not only does the patient ronment is fast-paced and requires knowledge of medi- benefit from this interaction, but I am able to gain a cine and medical procedures an occupational therapist better understanding of the specific roles of the other must incorporate into evaluation and treatment of each therapy disciplines. patient. Entry-level salary at my facility is $42,640. A typical day at Brackenridge begins with checking for I new orders to evaluate patients, balancing out the The power of independence caseload, and then we are off. I average around 2 to 3 Jessica L. Happick, OTR/L evaluations of new patients a day, and treat a total of 8 Graduate of James Madison University in to 15 patients per day depending on the hospital census. Harrisonburg, Virginia Treatment times range from 15 minutes up to over an Franklin Woods Center, a sub-acute rehabilitation hour if necessary. facility in Baltimore, Maryland As a new grad, you can expect to earn around $45,000 We treat adult patients, ranging in age from 65 to 99. a year, but salaries vary by facility and location. As my My patients typically present with various types of med- first job after graduating from occupational therapy ical conditions, such as orthopedic procedures (i.e. hip school, I love the variety and exposure that this type of fractures or replacements, and total knee replacements), facility offers. stroke, myocardial infarction, heart surgery, congestive heart failure, and respiratory failure. I A spectrum of hospital services My day consists of evaluations, patient treatments, doc- Karlyn M. Goodman, OTR/L umentation, and collaboration with other health profes- Graduate of Sargent College of Health and sionals such as occupational therapy assistants, physical Rehabilitation Sciences at Boston University, therapists, physical therapist assistants, doctors, nurses, Massachusetts social workers, and administrators. Most patients Acute-care setting, Boston, Massachusetts receive treatment in the areas of dressing and bathing, strengthening, safe mobility, home management tasks Patients are typically 18 years or older with acute such as laundry and kitchen activities, using adaptive medical needs. Currently I am on a general medicine equipment, and improving activity tolerance. New grad- rotation where I evaluate and treat patients with a uates in this setting can expect to earn a salary ranging variety of diagnoses including congestive heart failure, from $40,000 to $50,000. stroke, coronary artery disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, failure to thrive, malnourishment, I love my new job because I get to help people become etc. Primarily I evaluate patients and determine appro- stronger, more functional, and more independent every priate discharge recommendations, typically among day so they may get back to their daily lives.

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