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Services

At Quality Therapy Providers, we are proud to offer Speech, Occupational, and Physical Therapy as well as Social Services and a Medical Director.  We provide these services to patients across the lifespan. We serve toddlers, children, adults, and seniors who suffer from a wide array injuries, conditions, disorders and disabilities. It does not matter if what you are suffering from is acute, chronic, developmental, congenital, or contracted QTP can help!    

PROFESSIONAL STAFF

Medical Director:  Full Medical License in Pediatrics

Licensed Physical Therapists

Licensed & Certified Speech-Language Pathologists (CCC)

Licensed Occupational Therapists Registered

Licensed Therapy Assistants

Licensed Master Social Worker

Occupational Therapy​ Can Help With
- Pervasive Developmental Disorders

- Gross and Fine Motor Delays

- Developmental Delays
- Coordination & Balance Problems
- Attention & Concentration Issues
- Learning Delays

- Sensory Processing/Integration Disorders

- Activities of Daily Living Issues

- Neuromotor Function Problems

​and much more....

Occupational therapy is a health profession whose goal is to help people achieve independence, meaning and satisfaction in all aspects of their lives.

Occupational therapists:
  • Apply their specific knowledge to enable people to engage in activities of daily living that have personal meaning and value.

  • Develop, improve, sustain, or restore independence to any person who has an injury, illness, disability or psychological dysfunction.

  • Consult with the person and the family or caregivers and, through evaluation and treatment, promote the client's capacity to participate in satisfying daily activities.

  • Address by intervention the person's capacity to perform, the activity being performed, or the environment in which it is performed.

The occupational therapist's goal is to provide the client with skills for the job of living - those necessary to function in the community or in the client's chosen environment.

​​Information from the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA):

Common occupational therapy interventions include helping children with disabilities to participate fully in school and social situations, helping people recovering from injury to regain skills, and providing supports for older adults experiencing physical and cognitive changes. Occupational therapy services typically include:

  • an individualized evaluation, during which the client/family and occupational therapist determine the person’s goals, 

  • customized intervention to improve the person’s ability to perform daily activities and reach the goals, and

  • an outcomes evaluation to ensure that the goals are being met and/or make changes to the intervention plan.

Occupational therapy services may include comprehensive evaluations of the client’s home and other environments (e.g., workplace, school), recommendations for adaptive equipment and training in its use, and guidance and education for family members and caregivers. Occupational therapy practitioners have a holistic perspective, in which the focus is on adapting the environment to fit the person, and the person is an integral part of the therapy team. 

Physical Therapy​ can help with:
- Myofascial Release for relief of pain: shoulder, arm/hand, back/neck, and leg/foot

- Rotator cuff injuries

- Wrist and Forearm:Carpal tunnel, tennis elbow, trigger finger

- Work related injuries

- Sports related injuries

- Strokes resulting in weakness and difficulty moving such as walking or balancing

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and much more...

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Before considering surgery, you should consider Physical Therapy.  Physical Therapy is provided on a one to one basis with high quality, personal, hands-on-therapy.

What is physical therapy? According to the World Confederation for Physical Therapy (WCPT) Physical Therapy:

Physical therapy provides services to individuals and populations to develop maintain and restore maximum movement and functional ability throughout the lifespan. This includes providing services in circumstances where movement and function are threatened by ageing, injury, pain, diseases, disorders, conditions or environmental factors.  Functional movement is central to what it means to be healthy.

Physical therapy is concerned with identifying and maximizing quality of life and movement potential within the spheres of promotion, prevention, treatment/intervention, habilitation and rehabilitation. This encompasses physical, psychological, emotional, and social wellbeing. Physical therapy involves the interaction between the physical therapist, patients/clients, other health professionals, families, care givers and communities in a process where movement potential is assessed and goals are agreed upon, using knowledge and skills unique to physical therapists.

Speech and Language Therapy​ can help with:
​- Articulation Disorders

- Expressive Disorders

- Oral-Motor Difficulties

- Resonance/Voice Disorders

- Pronunciation Difficulties

- Communication Difficulties

- Speech Delays

- Language Disorders

- Fluency (Stuttering) Therapy

- Swallowing/Feeding

etc...

 What the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) says about the scope Speech-Language Pathology

Speech-language pathologists (SLPs) work to prevent, assess, diagnose, and treat speech, language, social communication, cognitive-communication, and swallowing disorders in children and adults.

  • Speech disorders occur when a person has difficulty producing speech sounds correctly or fluently (e.g., stuttering is a form of disfluency) or has problems with his or her voice or resonance.

  • Language disorders occur when a person has trouble understanding others (receptive language), or sharing thoughts, ideas, and feelings (expressive language). Language disorders may be spoken or written and may involve the form (phonology, morphology, syntax), content (semantics), and/or use (pragmatics) of language in functional and socially appropriate ways.

  • Social communication disorders occur when a person has trouble with the social use of verbal and nonverbal communication. These disorders may include problems (a) communicating for social purposes (e.g., greeting, commenting, asking questions), (b) talking in different ways to suit the listener and setting, and (c) following rules for conversation and story-telling. All individuals with autism spectrum disorder have social communication problems. Social communication disorders are also found individuals with other conditions, such as traumatic brain injury.

  • Cognitive-communication disorders include problems organizing thoughts, paying attention, remembering, planning, and/or problem-solving. These disorders usually happen as a result of a stroke, traumatic brain injury, or dementia, although they can be congenital.

  • Swallowing disorders (dysphagia) are feeding and swallowing difficulties, which may follow an illness, surgery, stroke, or injury

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