What are the responsibilities and job description for the Occupational Therapist position at NAPA Center?
Position Overview:
Occupational Therapists provide services to develop, enhance or restore functional skills of clients whose abilities to perform tasks of daily living are threatened or impaired by physical, cognitive, social-emotional, and sensory impairments.
Occupational Therapists at NAPA Center provide skillful intervention to infants, toddlers, children, and adolescents with a variety of diagnoses with a focus on improving the client’s development in the areas of fine and gross motor skills, play skills, social skills, and self-care skills within the professional scope of practice. The role will require all therapists to work as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
Requirements
- Minimum qualifications include completion of an Occupational Therapy degree, from an accredited University.
- Strong clinical experience - at least 2 years post graduate OT experience preferred, preferably in a pediatric setting with exposure to children and/or young adults with complex disabilities.
- Background clearance by the DOJ and FBI.
- Initial TB test clearance.
- CPR and First Aid certificates.
- Current license with the appropriate licensing board.
- Good physical health and fitness, including the ability to frequently perform, on a daily basis, the following movements over a 6-8 hour period without experiencing pain or abnormal fatigue:
- Lift, push or pull up to and including 50 pounds with hands and wrists as therapeutic handling is manually intensive
- Independently transfer dependent patients up to 85 pounds
- Independently offer contact guard assistance for ambulatory patients of up to 125 pounds
- Maintain extended periods of standing and/or sitting on the floor for up to 7 hours per day
- Move from floor to standing position back to floor frequently (6-7 hours) throughout the day
- Create a safe, professional, and supportive environment where clients, families and colleagues feel empowered to succeed.
- Ability to communicate confidently and effectively with clients and other medical professionals.
- Display a level of professional empathy towards clients and the ability to develop rapport.
- Maintain appropriate professional boundaries with clients and their families.
- Exercise discipline by completing all documentation, reporting requirements and training in an accurate and timely manner.
- Team player that can demonstrate the values for working as part of multi-disciplinary team to advance a client’s needs.
- Demonstrates the ability to take on additional responsibilities with time, including assessment and development of treatment plans for more complex cases, supervision of therapy aides/volunteers and additional clinic responsibilities.
- Ability to travel for periods of time for training/treating may be required. Assessment, diagnosis, and treatment with documentation of motor deficits, functional impairments, sensory impairments, and difficulties in motor skills primarily in the pediatric population.
Responsibilities
- Assessment, diagnosis, and treatment with documentation of motor deficits, functional impairments, sensory impairments, and difficulties in motor skills primarily in the pediatric population.
- Possess general knowledge of child development to assess and refer families to other disciplines when appropriate.
- Assess a client’s physical condition using a variety of standardized tools and objective/observational measures and identify primary impairments to determine a plan for treatment.
- Utilize multiple frames of reference to inform practice including but not limited to: neurodevelopmental, developmental biomechanical, sensory integration, motor learning, cognitive, and rehabilitation.
- Create tailored treatment plans to address client’s limitations, taking into account their age, abilities, client and family goals, and other medical/physical factors.
- Apply a range of therapy techniques to address presented conditions (including tailored exercises, passive and active stretching, basic level of gait analysis and training).
- Patient/caregiver training in the use of assistive technology devices, mobility devices, orthotic or prosthetic devices.
- Prescribe home exercise programs for patient/caregiver to promote carryover and continued progress in the community.
- Adapt environments and processes to enhance functional performance of clients.
- Actively participate in professional development including continuing education opportunities provided through the organization, from outside providers, as well as through opportunities offered as part of regular clinical supervision.
- Maintain impeccable documentation. Ensure that treatment notes are recorded accurately and timely in the electronic health record system, according to the policies of NAPA.
- Report writing including but not limited to evaluations, progress reports, school district annual IEP reports, assistive technology.
- Act as a member of an interdisciplinary team to create a comprehensive developmental approach to client-centered care.
- Develop rapport with clients to build a relationship of trust and mutual respect.
- Work closely with administrative staff to manage the schedule and ensure that time is being used productively.
- Provide input into the development of clinical practices and procedures.
- Act in accordance with all company, legal and industry policies and ethics.
- Comply with all professional development requirements for maintenance of registration as an Occupational Therapist with the appropriate licensing board.
- Work in a healthy and safe manner and encourage others to do the same
Company Values
All NAPA Center employees must demonstrate the company’s core values which include:
- Love – NAPA is a family business built on the love that parents have for their children. Embody NAPA’s spirit of love through kind actions, warmth and communication used every day.
- Share – strive to collaborate and educate as part of the NAPA team, so that our clients and their families leave NAPA with positivity and hope.
- Grow – evolve, engage and continue to learn, from our clients, our colleagues and our industry so that we truly offer the best therapy possible.
- Hope – believe in the potential of every child and commit to helping them succeed, giving families hope when others have failed.