Anonymous wrote:OP, the way to know whether your OT is scamming you for more business or being honest is this: Has s/he been providing goals (hopefully in writing), and then providing progress reports and doing evaluations every few months to see whether your child has made progress towards these goals?
It is one thing to keep going if you're working towards new goals, another if there are no stated goals and you are only getting vague reports as to your child's progress.
I would say waiting one year to reassess is BS.
(My sibling runs OT/PT departments in a hospital setting, and we've talked about these issues over the years as my DC has received therapy.)
Anonymous wrote:When he is writing like his peers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is 5 and has been in OT for mild sensory, low tone, and gross/fine motor skills issues since late last fall. He enjoys going and the therapist said she sees a lot of improvement overall. I was hoping that he will have improved enough to stop when he enters K. He'd fall short of a year, though by only a month or two, and I know they said they would reassess at the year mark.
In reading here, it seems many people believe that OT is something that could go on indefinitely unless parents put a hard stop to it. Would it be unwise to stop him when he starts school? He wouldn't qualify for OT through the school, so private OT is the only option.
HUH? You stop when they recommend to stop it.
Untrue. They're running a business. My son is 4. He has been in OT for about 7 months due to sensory issues. Unclear if he'd have made as much progress as he has without OT (we did it largely at the preschool's recommendation), but he is infinitely better. During the last few sessions, the therapist had been working with him on tracing and holding a pencil, despite him having no issues in those areas. We are stopping.
Anonymous wrote:When he is writing like his peers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is 5 and has been in OT for mild sensory, low tone, and gross/fine motor skills issues since late last fall. He enjoys going and the therapist said she sees a lot of improvement overall. I was hoping that he will have improved enough to stop when he enters K. He'd fall short of a year, though by only a month or two, and I know they said they would reassess at the year mark.
In reading here, it seems many people believe that OT is something that could go on indefinitely unless parents put a hard stop to it. Would it be unwise to stop him when he starts school? He wouldn't qualify for OT through the school, so private OT is the only option.
HUH? You stop when they recommend to stop it.
Untrue. They're running a business. My son is 4. He has been in OT for about 7 months due to sensory issues. Unclear if he'd have made as much progress as he has without OT (we did it largely at the preschool's recommendation), but he is infinitely better. During the last few sessions, the therapist had been working with him on tracing and holding a pencil, despite him having no issues in those areas. We are stopping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is 5 and has been in OT for mild sensory, low tone, and gross/fine motor skills issues since late last fall. He enjoys going and the therapist said she sees a lot of improvement overall. I was hoping that he will have improved enough to stop when he enters K. He'd fall short of a year, though by only a month or two, and I know they said they would reassess at the year mark.
In reading here, it seems many people believe that OT is something that could go on indefinitely unless parents put a hard stop to it. Would it be unwise to stop him when he starts school? He wouldn't qualify for OT through the school, so private OT is the only option.
HUH? You stop when they recommend to stop it.
Anonymous wrote:DS is 5 and has been in OT for mild sensory, low tone, and gross/fine motor skills issues since late last fall. He enjoys going and the therapist said she sees a lot of improvement overall. I was hoping that he will have improved enough to stop when he enters K. He'd fall short of a year, though by only a month or two, and I know they said they would reassess at the year mark.
In reading here, it seems many people believe that OT is something that could go on indefinitely unless parents put a hard stop to it. Would it be unwise to stop him when he starts school? He wouldn't qualify for OT through the school, so private OT is the only option.