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How can an occupational therapist help a child with adhd

An occupational therapist, or “OT,” helps kids with ADHD improve certain skills, such as:

  • Organization
  • Physical coordination
  • Ability to do everyday tasks — such as take a shower, organize their backpack, or make their bed — quickly and well
  • Control their “energy” levels, hyperactivity, etc.

Occupational therapists typically have a master’s degree. They are certified in their field and licensed in the state where they practice.

An OT might work in a hospital, clinic, or private practice. Some are based at a school.

How to Find an Occupational Therapist

You can check with the American Occupational Therapy Association to find a qualified OT in your area. Or you can check with local hospitals. Your child’s doctor will often have a list of good OTs near you, too.

When you’re in the process of picking an occupational therapist, ask these questions:

  • What kind of training do you have?
  • Are you certified and licensed to practice in this state?
  • Are you specifically trained in pediatric occupational therapy or just OT?
  • How much experience do you have working with kids who have ADHD?
  • How will you evaluate my child?
  • What treatment goals do you recommend?
  • What types of therapy will your program involve?

The OT you choose should focus on your child’s needs and listen to your concerns. Make sure you’re comfortable with the therapist you pick.

The Occupational Therapy Session

The first thing the therapist does is evaluate your child. They usually do this with input from you and your child’s teachers.

During the evaluation, the therapist will look at how ADHD affects your child’s:

  • Schoolwork
  • Social life
  • Home life

The OT will also do a test to find out your child’s strengths and weaknesses. Then they’ll recommend ways to address their issues.

During a therapy session, the occupational therapist and your child might:

  • Play games, such as catching or hitting a ball to improve coordination.
  • Do activities to work out anger and aggression.
  • Learn new ways to do daily tasks like brushing teeth, getting dressed, or feeding themselves.
  • Try techniques to improve focus.
  • Practice handwriting.
  • Go over social skills.
  • Work on time management.
  • Set up ways to stay organized in the classroom and at home.
  • Come up with an analogy that helps your child understand hyperactivity and how to keep it in check. For example, a “hot engine/cold engine” analogy and how to cool a hot engine down.

If your child has ADHD, Occupational Therapy sessions can be really beneficial to their development. Read on to find out how we can help your child.

At Occupational Therapy Helping Children, we see a lot of kids in our clinics and in schools with ADHD. We work with parents and teachers, providing strategies to help kids with ADHD manage everyday life.

We help children with ADHD with:

  1. Organisation and planning

  2. Sensory processing difficulties

  3. Developing self-regulation skills

  4. Fine and gross motor skills

  5. Developing independence in everyday tasks

Let’s look into these five areas a bit more closely to see how we could help your child at Occupational Therapy Helping Children.

1. Organisation and Planning

We work with children to break tasks down into small achievable steps. This stops them from feeling overwhelmed by the task and not knowing where to start. These could be simple tasks such as managing daily homework, doing an assignment or organising their timetables. We find using visual information the best way to help kids with ADHD. For example, we might use simple visual charts, Post-It-notes, colour coding, and/or checklists.

2. Sensory Processing Difficulties

Studies have found that 40% of children with ADHD also have Sensory Processing Disorder (Ahn, Miller et. al., 2004). Children with sensory processing disorder (SPD)may be over- or under-responsive to sensory information; they may not be accurately interpreting sensory information or may have a sensory based motor disorder. As Occupational Therapists, we work with children with SPD to develop appropriate responses to sensation in active, purposeful and fun ways so the child can complete everyday activities at home and school. We also provide strategies for parents to help manage their children’s behaviour at home, and for teachers to help manage a child’s behaviour in the classroom. These might be simple things such as recommending ‘seamless socks’, heavy work activities, having calm down area at school or using a Movin’ Sit cushion to sit on.

3. Developing Self-Regulation Skills

Self-regulation means we are able to regulate our own feelings and behaviours. A child with poor self-regulation may have a meltdown over a small problem, like being told they have to stop playing with their favourite toy as the family are going out. At Occupational Therapy Helping Children, we use The Zones of Regulation® Curriculum to teach kids how to regulate their emotions and behaviour.

The Zones of Regulation® visual tool is divided into four different coloured areas that each represent a different emotion. For example the Blue Zone is seen as the sad, tired Zone and the Red Zone is when you are feeling angry. Children are taught to identify how they’re feeling and what Zone they are in. They then learn a range of strategies to help them get back in the Green Zone, which is when you’re calm, paying attention and well-regulated.

4. Fine and Gross Motor Skills

Fine motor tasks involve the small muscles of the hands. Occupational Therapists help develop children’s handwriting skills, pencil grip, hand strength, eye-hand coordination, finger dexterity, and in-hand manipulative skills. Improvement in these areas might help a child to use cutlery, tie up their shoelaces or improve the legibility of their writing.

Gross motor tasks involve the large muscles of the body. As Occupational Therapists, we help children use both sides of their body together in a coordinated manner, develop core strength, cross the midline, improve their balance and general coordination skills. Improvement in these areas may help children to do activities like riding a bike, swimming independently or improving their soccer skills and team participation.

5. Developing Independence in Everyday Tasks

Occupational Therapists work with kids so they can complete age-appropriate tasks. This could be getting themselves ready for school in the morning, making a snack or packing their school bag. We are trained in task analysis, which is breaking tasks into small achievable steps. This way the child is always feeling positive and keen to master the task. As Occupational Therapists, we use a range of different strategies to develop independence in children. These may include visual charts, checklists, repeating instructions and lots of repetition.

Occupational Therapists work with lots of kids with ADHD in a range of different areas. At Occupational Therapy Helping Children we help kids with ADHD in a variety of ways, including: 

If your child has ADHD and would benefit from some extra support, please contact us to see how we can best help your child. 

Occupational therapy can address physical, social, educational, and organizational deficits with a plan focused on your individual skills, needs, and activities. Read on to learn more about how they can help to lessen the effects that ADHD has on everyday life.

“Occupational therapists are good team players,” says Cara Koscinski, MOT, OTR/L , a pediatric occupational therapist and the author of six books on occupational therapy for children and young adults. .

If you haven’t yet considered including an occupational therapist (OT) on your treatment team, now may be a good time to investigate how an OT can help you manage symptoms and improve your quality of life.

Because ADHD causes such wide-ranging difficulties, treating it takes a highly-individualized, multi-modal approach.

If you have attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) or you’re close to someone who does, you know there’s hardly an area of your life it doesn’t touch: Career, school, family, finances, and physical and mental health… the list goes on.

Occupational therapy focuses on the skills that each person needs to be able to function independently in daily life.

An OT’s first step will be to talk with you to find out how ADHD impairs your (or your child’s) ability to succeed at home, at work, at school, in relationships, or in other areas.

Here are a few areas where evidence-based OT interventions have been instrumental in managing ADHD.

Time management

For someone with ADHD, complex projects, daily routines, time-consuming tasks, and deadlines are difficult — sometimes impossible — to manage. ADHD can make it harder to:

  • create and execute a plan for an activity
  • finish tasks in the right order
  • complete work within the necessary timeframe
  • recognize when it’s time to speed up or slow down
  • set aside the right amount of time for an activity

OT-tested tip

Keep an analog clock in each room to help you or your child track time visually.

What the science says

Research shows that OT is effective in improving time-processing and daily time management abilities.

In a 2018 study, a group of students ages 9-15 worked with an occupational therapist for 12 weeks to build their awareness of time and task management.

At the end of the intervention, students who worked with an OT showed a significant improvement in their awareness of time, their ability to orient themselves in time, and their ability to manage their time effectively during daily tasks.

Organizational skills

Succeeding in school and on the job usually requires consistent organizational skills. ADHD interferes with the ability to:

  • anticipate what you’ll need to complete a project
  • keep up with materials and schedules
  • separate complex tasks into smaller activities

“Occupational therapists are specialists in activity analysis,” Koscinski says. “This means taking a look at each activity and breaking it down into steps and performance factors or skills the child needs to succeed.”

Once a project has been broken into steps, an OT can help organize materials, develop simple systems, and create visual cues to help people track, remember, and follow through on one step at a time.

“Visuals are very important for kids with ADHD,” Koscinski explains.

OT-tested tip

Keep supplies well stocked. Store them in labeled containers or drawers that are easy for your child to reach, and help your child return all supplies to the labeled space where they belong.

An OT can work with a student to create an outline of the steps involved in a project, color-code different activities, make a model to demonstrate what’s expected, and show a student how to keep a clutter-free workspace.

What the science says

OT helps adults with organizational skills, too. In one 2020 study, a 7-week program of occupational therapy targeting routines and time management resulted in lower stress and fewer symptoms for women with ADHD.

Executive function

Children with ADHD often have difficulty with a complex set of interrelated thinking skills known as executive functions. These childhood difficulties often continue into adulthood, research shows.

Executive functions include:

  • working memory
  • planning skills
  • knowing how to stay attentive or shift attention
  • setting priorities
  • controlling impulses and distractions

OT-tested tip

Teach your child how to prioritize homework by helping them sort assignments first by the due date and then by how hard your child thinks the assignment will be. During homework sessions, help them tackle the hardest assignments first when their focus and energy levels are highest.

What the science says

A number of studies have shown that occupational therapy can be useful in building executive function.

  • In one 2020 study, researchers found that children who participated in a horseback riding intervention supervised by OTs showed improved executive functioning after the program.
  • Using a series of hands-on, engaging therapeutic activities called the Cog-Fun (Cognitive Functional) program, children working with parents and OTs experienced significant improvement in executive function after therapy.
  • A 2017 study that involved 44 students in China, along with their parents, found that a program targeting executive function skills was effective in improving executive function skills after 12 sessions. In the program, students used visual cues and repetition to practice their skills, while parents learned how to coach and support their children. (Studies show that parent involvement is vital to the success of OT interventions.)

Social skills

ADHD can have negative effects on social interactions. The disorder can cause people to act impulsively, interrupt others, and behave in aggressive ways.

An astute OT can be helpful in getting to the “why” underlying inappropriate social behavior. Koscinski explains that children with ADHD often “act out” because they’re frustrated. An OT working with a classroom teacher can ask:

  • Is the student sitting close enough to the teacher to hear and understand instructions?
  • Is the classroom environment over-stimulating the student?
  • Is the individualized education plan meeting the student’s needs, and is it being followed?
  • Is the student allowed to self-advocate in the classroom?
  • Does the student need to take a break or move around physically?

“Giving kids breaks to move is so important,” she emphasizes. “Movement increases oxygen in the brain and gets the wiggles out.”

Children with ADHD can take short breaks to return books to the library or run other errands. Better still, the whole class can participate in quick brain breaks to restore energy levels.

OT-tested tip

Keep play dates to a smaller number of children, one or two, so that your child is not overwhelmed. Try to choose children who have good social skills so your child has an example of these skills to model.

What the science says

While there needs to be more research on the specific activities that help, there’s some evidence that OT improves social skills among children with ADHD.

A 2020 systematic research review found that play skills improved and there were fewer inappropriate behaviors when therapy involved both children with ADHD and their peers.

Another 2015 study found that OT interventions led to a long-term improvement in social play skills when therapies were practiced at home and in the clinic.

Assistive devices

Occupational therapists are especially good at training people with ADHD how to use devices that enable them to function more smoothly in daily life.

Koscinski points to several objects that make life easier for kids who need wiggle room and let them expend excess energy during a productive day:

  • yoga balls
  • scooter boards
  • mini-trampolines
  • swings
  • air cushions
  • other personally-matched devices

OT-tested tip

A vibrating watch can be set to vibrate at regular intervals to remind an adult or child to stay on task or return to a task if they’ve been distracted.

What the science says

One 2013 study indicated that adults benefit from training on such assistive devices, too. Low-tech interventions such as weekly schedules and weighted blankets seemed to help most.