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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "Randomized, controlled, peer-reviewed studies of OT efficacy?"
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[quote=Anonymous]NP. I get that OT can seem squishy and woo-woo, and generally unmeasurable. Obviously, it's very individual. We had nonexistent results with one OT and a few years later, tried again with a new therapist and are having a great experience. Was it maturity or OT? Probably both. Do what works for you. It seems a lot of the general backlash is around SPD. I've never had an OT try to diagnose anything (though I'm sure some do). It makes sense to me that different disciplines have their own terminology. And if you're not in the DSM, it's hard to fund research; but you need research to get into the DSM. I also think that misogyny plays a part in why OT isn't more highly regarded, frankly. [/quote]
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