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Provide
interventions
to help a child appropriately respond to information coming through
the senses. Intervention may include swinging, brushing, playing in
a ball pit and a whole gamut of other activities aimed at helping a
child better manage his body in space.
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Facilitate play
activities
that instruct as well as aid a child in interacting and
communicating with others. For the OT specializing in autism, this
can translate specifically into structured play therapies, such as
Floortime, which were developed to build intellectual and emotional
skills as well as physical skills.
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Devise strategies
to help the individual transition from one setting to another, from
one person to another, and from one life phase to another. For a
child with autism, this may involve soothing strategies for managing
transition from home to school; for adults with autism it may
involve vocational skills, cooking skills and more.
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Develop adaptive
techniques
and strategies to get around apparent disabilities (for example,
teaching keyboarding when handwriting is simply impossible;
selecting a weighted vest to enhance focus; etc.)
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