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Occupational Therapy

Occupational Therapy and the Child with Down Syndrome

by Maryanne Bruni, BSc OT(C)

If you are a parent reading this, you likely have a child with Down syndrome, as I do. My intent with this article is to provide you with some information about how an occupational therapist (OT) may be able to help you and your child. Occupational therapists who work with children have education and training in child development, neurology, medical conditions, psychosocial development, and therapeutic techniques. Occupational therapists focus on the child’s ability to master skills for independence. This can include:

When your child is an infant, your immediate concerns relate to his health and growth, development of the basic motor milestones, social interaction with you and others, interest in things going on around him, and early speech sounds and responses. At this stage an OT may become involved to:

When your child is a toddler and preschooler, she will likely have some independent mobility and will be busy exploring her environment. To assist her development, you will want to provide her with many opportunities for learning, you will want to encourage the beginning steps in learning to feed and dress herself, you will want her to learn how to play appropriately with toys and interact with other children, you will be encouraging speech and language skills, and you will continue to provide opportunities for refinement of gross motor skills. At this stage an OT may become involved to:

Then your child enters the school system and the focus of your energies changes somewhat again! You help your child adjust to new routines, you attend school meetings to plan your child’s educational program, you focus on speech and communication, you help your child practice fine motor skills for school (such as learning to print), you expect your child to develop more independence in self-help activities, and you search out extracurricular activities that will expose your child to a variety of social, physical, and learning experiences. At this stage an OT may become involved to:

As parents we must be concerned with the well-being of our child in all respects. We have so many things to think about and keep track of: medical and dental needs, motor and communication needs, educational needs, advocacy, social and behavioral needs; the list seems to go on and on! We need the help of trained professionals to guide us and to work with our children to help them achieve their potential in life. An occupational therapist is one member of the team that we can rely on to provide professional assistance throughout the growth and development of our children. In Canada, occupational therapy services for children with Down syndrome can be accessed through hospitals, home care programs, infant development programs, specialty nursery schools, public schools, and through private therapy services.

(Editor’s note: In the US, OT services can be obtained through Early Childhood Intervention programs, public and private schools, and from private therapists.)

Further information about fine motor development can be found in my book Fine Motor Skills in Children with Down Syndrome, published by Woodbine House (800-843-7323) in 1998.

“Children are the hands by which we take hold of heaven.”