Archive for the ‘news’ Category

Sensory Sensitive Movie in Woodinville and Kent: SHREK

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Who doesn’t love Shrek? He’s green and misunderstood. He’s even better with the lights slightly up and the volume a little lower..oh, and you can BRING YOUR OWN SNACKS! WOW!!! This Saturday AMC cinemas will have a sensory sensitive showing of our favorite green ogre. Visit the website to check for locations and times:  http://www.autism-society.org/site/PageServer?pagename=sensoryfilms#theatres

AMC Entertainment (AMC) and the Autism Society have teamed up to bring families affected by autism and other disabilities a special opportunity to enjoy their favorite films in a safe and accepting environment on a monthly basis with the “Sensory Friendly Films” program.In order to provide a more accepting and comfortable setting for this unique audience, the movie auditoriums will have their lights brought up and the sound turned down, families will be able to bring in their own gluten-free, casein-free snacks, and no previews or advertisements will be shown before the movie. Additionally, audience members are welcome to get up and dance, walk, shout or sing – in other words, AMC’s “Silence is Golden®” policy will not be enforced unless the safety of the audience is questioned.

APRIL IS OT MONTH!!!!

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY HELPS INDIVIDUALS

LIVE LIFE TO ITS FULLEST

Occupational therapy enables people of all ages live life to its fullest by helping them promote health, prevent—or live better with—injury, illness, or disability. It is a practice deeply rooted in science and is evidence-based, meaning that the plan designed for each individual is supported by data, experience, and “best practices” that have been developed and proven over time.

At Seattle Therapy Network, we provide quality pediatric occupational therapy to address family-centered concerns. Using best practices, we help children participate better in school, home and the community. Carey Goldenberg and Tricia Groebner are registered and licensed occupational therapists at STN.

Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants focus on “doing” whatever occupations or activities are meaningful to the individual. It is occupational therapy’s purpose to get beyond problems to the solutions that assure living life to its fullest. These solutions may be adaptations for how to do a task, changes to the surroundings, or helping individuals to alter their own behaviors.

When working with an occupational therapy practitioner, strategies and modifications are customized for each individual to resolve problems, improve function, and support everyday living activities. The goal is to maximize potential. Through these therapeutic approaches, occupational therapy helps individuals design their lives, develop needed skills, adjust their environments (e,g., home, school, or work) and build health-promoting habits and routines that will allow them to thrive.

By taking the full picture into account—a person’s psychological, physical, emotional, and social makeup as well as their environment—occupational therapy assists clients to do the following:

  • Achieve goals
  • Function at the highest possible level
  • Concentrate on what matters most to them
  • Maintain or rebuild their independence
  • Participate in daily activities that they need or want to do.

Call today to make an appointment for an evaluation (206) 763-0352 or email us at info@seattle-therapy-network.com

Founded in 1917, the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) represents the interests and concerns of more than 140,000 occupational therapists, assistants and students nationwide. The Association educates the public and advances the profession of occupational therapy by providing resources, setting standards including accreditations and serving as an advocate to improve health care. Based in Bethesda, Md., AOTA’s major programs and activities are directed toward promoting the professional development of its members and assuring consumer access to quality services so patients can maximize their individual potential. For more information, go to www.aota.org.

Occupational Therapy in the New York Times!

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Watch How You Hold That Crayon

from the New York Times by Peg Tyre

NOAH LASCANO, 8, had a problem: His teachers couldn’t read his handwriting. His homework became a frustrating exercise in writing once, and then, at the teacher’s request, writing again, just for legibility.

Deidre Schoo for The New York Times

WARM UP Noah Lascano, 8, prepares for a writing session with a pediatric occupational therapist; teachers couldn’t read his homework.

His brother, James, 5, was struggling in kindergarten — even drawing stick figures was a task. When his mother, Paula Lascano, tried to cajole him into completing a few workbook assignments, he reported that “his hand got too tired.”

Like many parents, Ms. Lascano decided it was time for help, so 10 months ago she hired Casey Halper, a pediatric occupational therapist, to work first with James, and then with Noah, once a week. The boys manipulated stiff green putty, put pegs into boards, created chains of pennies and plastic connectors and wrote the alphabet — again and again.

These days, many little fingers are being drilled. Twenty-five years ago, pediatric occupational therapists primarily served children with severe disabilities like spina bifida, autism or cerebral palsy. Nowadays, these therapists are just as focused on helping children without obvious disabilities to hold a pencil.

In affluent neighborhoods in and around New York, occupational therapists have taken their place next to academic tutors, psychologists, private coaches and personal trainers — the army that often stands behind academically successful students.

Tim Nanof, legislative manager for the American Occupational Therapy Association, which has 38,000 members, said it’s hard to know exactly how many children are receiving these services. But parents, pediatricians, educators and early childhood experts agree that plenty of able-bodied children are receiving occupational therapy.

“Twenty years ago, you could find O.T.’s working with children at hospitals or schools for the blind or the deaf,” said Christine Berg, who oversees the curriculum for the Program in Occupational Therapy at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “Now, many pediatric O.T.’s see their role as promoting fitness and enhancing kids’ performance in school.”

Pediatric occupational therapy may be something like Pilates for the pint-size set — a regime of techniques that promise to bestow unique benefits on the practitioner. Or, like the increase in neuropsychological testing and in the use of drugs to enhance a child’s attention, the increase in therapy could suggest something may have gone awry in schools, in our level of academic expectations or perhaps in childhood itself.

“On one hand, I think it’s perfectly in line with the contemporary trend for parents and educators to seek high-priced specialists to treat the routine problems of childhood,” said Dr. Philippa Gordon, a popular pediatrician in Park Slope, Brooklyn, who is a medical adviser to the highly opinionated Park Slope Parents Web site. “On the other hand, I see that early intervention can keep little problems from becoming big ones.”

Linda Florin, who runs a private concierge service in Manhattan, paid a therapist $125 a week for nearly three years to help her son, Wyatt, now a first grader at Columbia Prep, improve his hand strength and control a pencil. She says it was money well spent. “School isn’t easy and it gets harder as they get older,” Ms. Florin said. “I wanted him to be able to keep up with everyone else.”

She also said the stigma is gone: “Back when I was a child, seeing an O.T.? Forget it. That was for kids who had spinal cord injuries.” Last year, she said, so many friends from her social circle were taking their children to occupational therapists that it seemed like a part of normal childhood.

“Seeing an O.T. was once an admission that something was seriously wrong with your child,” said Paula McCreedy, who, with her partner, Prudence Heisler, opened a branch of their busy Greenwich Village practice in Brooklyn Heights in part to meet the growing demand of private paying families seeking therapy. These days, she said, “many parents are finding that pediatric occupational therapists can help their children to be the best that they can be.”

In Manhattan, the brutally competitive nursery and kindergarten admissions process is leading many parents to sign up their toddlers for therapy. “Preschool admissions tests loom large,” said Margie Becker-Lewin, an occupational therapist on the Upper West Side. “In many cases, parents know there is nothing wrong with their child, but they feel caught in the middle.”

OT and Handwriting

help add sensory processing disorder to DSM-5

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

This is an excerpt from a recent letter sent out from Lucy Miller at the SPD Foundation:

Would you help us promote recognition of Sensory Processing Disorder by posting a comment on the APA website?
To make participating as simple as possible, we have created a web page that includes instructions for reaching the comment area of the APA site. We’ve also provided topic suggestions based on what we know the APA is considering in their final deliberations.
Every letter counts! The deadline for commenting is April 20, but please act now. Numbers matter. A mountain of immediate, supportive comments will make a significant impression on the committee.
And please help us pass the word! Forward this message and/or the link to our comment page to your colleagues, physicians, clients, and friends. If you have a website, blog or social networking page, those are great places to get the word out, too. The more people who comment supportively, the better.
For years, people have asked us, “What can I do to help get Sensory Processing Disorder into the DSM?” Now is the time when individuals everywhere can help and what they do will matter. Join the movement to get Sensory Processing Disorder included in the DSM-5. Post your comments to the APA. This is our last chance to be included in the DSM until 2025!