Occupational Therapy (OT)
Helps develop independence in daily activities including self-care, play, school tasks, and sensory processing through skill-building and environmental adaptations.
What Is Occupational Therapy?
Occupational therapy (OT) focuses on helping people participate in the activities (occupations) that matter to them. For children, these occupations include play, self-care (dressing, feeding, toileting), school tasks (writing, cutting, sitting), and social participation.
OTs assess how a child's motor skills, sensory processing, cognition, and environment affect their ability to do daily activities. They then develop strategies that might include skill-building exercises, environmental modifications, adaptive equipment, and sensory strategies.
OT is one of the most commonly recommended therapies for children with disabilities because it addresses practical, everyday challenges that directly affect quality of life and independence.
Who Benefits from Occupational Therapy?
autism
Addresses sensory processing differences, develops self-care independence, supports handwriting and fine motor skills, and helps with emotional regulation through sensory strategies.
cerebral palsy
Develops fine motor skills, recommends adaptive equipment for independence, addresses upper limb function, and modifies activities and environments to maximize participation.
down syndrome
Supports fine motor development, builds self-care skills accounting for low muscle tone, and helps with school readiness including pre-writing skills.
learning disabilities
Addresses handwriting difficulties, visual-motor integration, organizational skills, and sensory factors that affect learning and attention in the classroom.
spinal cord injury
Teaches new ways to perform daily activities with limited mobility, recommends adaptive equipment, and supports wheelchair skills and home modifications.
What to Expect in a Session
First Session
A comprehensive OT assessment (60-90 minutes) evaluates fine and gross motor skills, sensory processing, self-care abilities, and school performance. Standardized assessments and clinical observation are used.
Ongoing Sessions
Sessions are activity-based — your child practises skills through play, crafts, obstacle courses, and functional tasks. The OT adapts the difficulty level to challenge your child while ensuring success.
Your Child's Role
Your child actively participates in activities that build skills — this might include climbing, building, cutting, dressing dolls, writing, or sensory play depending on their goals.
Caregiver's Role
Caregivers learn strategies to support skill development at home. The OT provides a home program with activities to practise between sessions and may recommend equipment or environmental changes.
When to Start
Early Childhood (0-5)
OT can begin in infancy, especially for children with motor or sensory concerns. Early intervention OT supports developmental milestones and prevents secondary complications.
School Age (6-17)
School-based OT addresses handwriting, organization, sensory regulation in the classroom, and self-care skills like managing zippers and lunchboxes.
Adults (18+)
Adults benefit from OT for workplace adaptations, home modifications, adaptive equipment, and maintaining independence with progressive conditions.
General guidance: If your child is struggling with daily activities that peers manage independently, or if sensory sensitivities are affecting their participation, request an OT assessment.
| Item | Range | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Assessment | $200–$400 | Comprehensive OT assessment |
| Per Session | $120–$180 | 45-60 minutes |
| Insurance | Most extended health plans cover OT, typically $500-2,000/year | |
| Tax Credit | Eligible for Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC) when provided by a registered OT | |
Money-Saving Tips
- Many OT clinics offer sliding scale fees based on household income
- University training clinics provide supervised OT sessions at reduced rates
- Check if your child qualifies for provincially funded OT through school or early intervention programs
| Province | Status | Program | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| BC | Partially Funded | At Home Program / Autism Funding | Available through At Home Program and autism funding; CLBC may fund OT for adults with developmental disabilities.(Under 19) |
| AB | Partially Funded | FSCD / PDD | FSCD covers OT for children; PDD program funds OT services for adults with developmental disabilities.Up to Included in FSCD allocation up to $40K |
| SK | Partially Funded | Saskatchewan Health Authority | Available through health regions for children and hospital-based programs; limited community-based adult OT.(Under 18) |
| MB | Partially Funded | Children's DisABILITY Services | Funded through Children's DisABILITY Services for eligible children; Community Living disABILITY Services for adults. |
| ON | Partially Funded | Children's Treatment Centres / OHIP | Funded through children's treatment centres for children; hospital-based OT covered by OHIP; community OT for adults not publicly funded.(Under 18) |
| QC | Partially Funded | CISSS/CIUSSS | Provided through the public health system at no direct cost; long waitlists are common, especially in Montreal. |
| NB | Partially Funded | Extra-Mural Program | OT available through the Extra-Mural Program for home-based services; hospital outpatient OT also covered. |
| NS | Partially Funded | Nova Scotia Health Authority | Publicly funded for children through health authority and IWK Health Centre; limited adult community OT.(Under 18) |
| PE | Partially Funded | Health PEI | Available through Health PEI for children; AccessAbility Supports may fund OT for adults with disabilities. |
| NL | Partially Funded | Regional Health Authorities | Provided through regional health authorities for children; Janeway Children's Hospital a key provider in St. John's.(Under 18) |
| NT | Limited | Supplementary Health Benefits | Limited local OT services; some provided through Stanton Territorial Hospital and visiting therapists. |
| NU | Limited | Supplementary Health Benefits | Very limited availability; most OT services require medical travel to southern centres. |
| YT | Partially Funded | Child Development Centre | OT available through Child Development Centre for children in Whitehorse; limited adult and rural services.(Under 18) |
Evidence & Research
Occupational therapy has strong evidence for improving functional outcomes across many disability populations. Research supports OT for fine motor development, sensory interventions, self-care skill building, and environmental modifications. OT is recommended in clinical practice guidelines for autism, cerebral palsy, and intellectual disability.
Red Flags to Watch For
Be cautious of any provider who:
- Focuses only on clinic-based exercises without connecting to real-life functional goals
- Does not provide a home program or strategies for parents to use between sessions
- Uses a one-size-fits-all approach without individualizing therapy to your child's specific needs and interests
- Is not a registered occupational therapist (check your provincial regulatory college)
- Promises to 'fix' your child rather than focusing on building skills and adapting environments
How to Find a Provider
- 1
Ask your paediatrician or family doctor for a referral to OT at a children's treatment centre or hospital
- 2
Search your provincial OT regulatory college's online directory (e.g., COTO in Ontario, COTBC in BC)
- 3
Contact the Canadian Association of Occupational Therapists (CAOT) at caot.ca for resources
- 4
Check if your school board provides OT services for students with IEPs
- 5
Ask your provincial disability program (e.g., Ontario Autism Program, BC At Home) about funded OT
Conditions That Use Occupational Therapy
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