National Crayon Day
The therapists at Collaborative OT Solutions use crayons to help children improve their ability manipulate other similar important items as well such as pencils, utensils, toothbrush, & scissors.
The therapists at Collaborative OT Solutions use crayons to help children improve their ability manipulate other similar important items as well such as pencils, utensils, toothbrush, & scissors.
Occupational therapists can work with you and your child to improve visual skills by creating a play-based, individualized treatment plan that addresses their impacted visual skills.
March 17 is St. Patrick’s Day and in celebration, here’s a fun sensory bin for this fun holiday! You can customize any sensory bin to fit the interests of your child.
In therapy sessions at Collaborative OT Solutions you may see us using one of our favorite therapy interventions during Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, and Speech Therapy… Bubbles!
Our therapists at Collaborative OT Solutions enjoy taking a fun theme and making it functional! We utilize Birthdays, Seasons, favorite animals, and of course Holidays.
Are you looking for an activity that will promote your child’s language abilities? Children’s books are a fantastic and quickly accessible tool for enriching a variety of language skills.
Legos are loved by children and therapists alike! Whether your child is building a small original creation or tackling a 20-step, 5-foot structural piece there are plenty of benefits for your child’s development.
Collaborative OT Solutions (COTS) continues to be open for in-person and teletherapy services at our therapy clinic. Our entire COTS Team maintains the highest level of cleaning and sanitation.
Collaborative OT Solutions is following all San Diego County Health orders along with State and Federal Guidelines. The safety of our clients, families and staff are our highest priority!
Open for in-person therapy & teletherapy services for OT, PT, and Speech-Language therapy. We are excited to welcome Karyn Lewis Searcy, M.A., CCC and Katelyn Francis, M.S., CCC to our COTS team!
Therapists lean on parents to help clients with treatments, reports NBC 7’s Joe Little.
Did you know a there is a difference between picky eaters and problem feeders? A problem feeder usually will have a restricted variety of foods.
If your child has difficulties deciding if they are “left handed” or “right handed”, here are some great ways to work together to help them feel more confident.