409.838.6568   

HomeMissionProgramsStaffDirectorBoardContact

 

Shorkey K.I.D.S.
Field Trip
Family Support
Volunteers
Crenshaw Scholarship
Lending Library
Wish List
Past Events

 


Enrollment form


 

The Shorkey Center exists to provide services for the individual with special needs.
These services include effective physical, occupational, and speech rehabilitation;
direct education services including therapy for children with autism and other related
disorders; and parent assistance support.


 

  • Assessment of self-help skills, oral motor functioning, strength, movement, patterns, range of motion and fine motor skills
  • Treatment and home programming to promote activities for daily programming to promote activities for daily living and leisure
  • Evaluation and treatment of sensory integration dysfunction

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
Occupational Therapy (OT) is a health profession that helps individuals develop that result in increased independence in personal, social, academic and vocational pursuits. These skills include:

  • More effective motor performance for school or work tasks
  • Better organizational abilities for successful completion of assignments and job responsibilities
  • Increased capacities to perform self-care
  • Improved social skills
  • Coping strategies to assist children in managing the classroom and sensory environment
  • Analysis and adaptation of daily activities

The basic philosophy of Occupational Therapy rests on increasing quality of life and/or functional independence through activities that are functional and important to the individual. The role of the Occupational Therapist is to assist clients of all ages with debility/disability secondary to injury, trauma or congenital (birth) deficits to increase their level of functional independence to their maximum by using activities. Activities are chosen on grounds of interest, developmental level, physical ability and therapeutic goal.

Occupational Therapist
An Occupational Therapist can provide direct treatment to the client, whether it is in a clinical setting, home or school. He or she may also provide consultation services to assess needs and recommend specialized equipment, sensory activities (sensory diets), curriculum and task modifications and caregiver education to meet the needs of clients.

Occupational Therapists are an integral part of the rehabilitation team and work directly with other health care providers and educational professionals to insure that each client receives the best care and instruction possible. Team members include: physicians, nurses, teachers, social workers, physical therapists, psychologists, dentists, speech therapists, recreational therapists, optometrists, vision specialists and audiologists.

Occupational Therapy Assistants
Certified Occupational Therapy Assistants, or "COTAs", are health care paraprofessionals who work under the supervision of OTs. Their responsibilities include assisting OTs with implementation of treatment programs, training patients in exercise and activities of daily living, training in the use of specialized equipment, and reporting the patient's response to treatment.

EDUCATION
Occupational Therapists hold bachelor or master degrees and Occupational Therapy Assistants are trained at the associate degree level. Occupational therapy education includes the study of human growth and development, with specific emphasis on the social, emotional, and physiological implications of illness and injury. Occupational therapy practitioners must complete supervised clinical internships in a variety of health care settings, and are required to pass a national certification examination.

PRACTICE SETTINGS

  • Public and private schools
  • Private practitioner offices
  • Wellness centers
  • Home health agencies
  • Hospitals
  • Day treatment centers
  • Community mental health centers
  • Clinics

THE OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY PROCESS

What happens first?
Occupational Therapy can be recommended by a teacher/diagnostician or health care provider (MD, Dentist). This is called a referral. If a teacher makes the referral the process will be set in motion by the school's diagnostician. If a doctor or other health care provider makes the referral it will often be in the form of a prescription. The physician will usually tell the patient or parent whom to contact.

When the OT receives the referral from the suggested agency, she or he will begin a screening process. In the screening, the OT will be attempting to discover if occupational therapy is the appropriate service to perform an evaluation. She or he will determine this by talking with the child's parents, caregivers, and/or teachers. This is the best time to tell the therapist about your child. The OT will ask questions. The OT will need to know any precautions required to insure your child's safety and also any information that will help your child be most comfortable during the evaluation. If you forget to mention something in the screening interview, you may contact the OT at a number she/he will provide or send a letter through your child's teacher. The therapist will also ask to review available medical and/or school records.

What happens in the evaluation?
The evaluation is where the OT observes a child's performance. Overall performance of self-care, daily living skills, play, and school activities will be evaluated. The underlying skills will be evaluated as well. Some underlying skills are: muscle tone, muscle strength, amount of movement that a child can achieve, posture, attention span, eye-hand coordination, and sensory processing.

The therapist will use a variety of activities and tests to make accurate determination of skills. A child may be asked to attempt to undress and dress herself, feed herself, and perform a variety of pencil and paper tasks. The therapist may attempt to maintain the interest of the child throughout the evaluation by quickly changing activities, and promoting and allowing play. The therapist will attempt to involve the child in activities that best allow the underlying skills to be analyzed.

What happens after the evaluation?
Once the evaluation is complete, the tests graded, and the summary written, an appointment will be made for you and the therapist to go over the evaluation. The OT will tell you his or her findings, and recommendations and goals for treatment, if necessary.

What happens in treatment?
Answering this question is where a little understanding of Occupational Therapy is most helpful.

  • Occupational Therapy Definition: Individuals experiencing limitations, use meaningful and purposeful activity to achieve maximum independence.
  • The occupational therapist's role: to select appropriate, meaningful/purposeful activity in order to achieve the desired goals.
  • The theory behind Occupational Therapy: an individual with a limitation will try harder to overcome that limitation if involved in an activity that has meaning and purpose to that individual. Basically, this is saying that a person works harder and longer if he or she is interested in, or believes in, what they are doing.

For a child, play is what interests them most. So with children, play is more often than not, the type of treatment used. This play is not random, however. It is the job of the therapist, to not only select activities that are fun and meaningful, but also activities that will help the child achieve an increase in self-care, daily living skills, and other underlying skills.

The OT will also use specific handling techniques (touch) to support and promote postural alignment and control as well as apply sensory input to facilitate more normal muscle tone, flexibility and balance.

Throughout treatment sessions the OT will reassess skills to evaluate the child's progress toward goals and to determine further and future goals. Reassessment of skills is often done using some of the same tests used in the initial evaluation.

What treatment approaches does an OT use?
Occupational therapists use a variety of approaches to guide their clinical practice. They include:

  1. NEURO-DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACH is used for persons who have been born with a dysfunctional central nerves system (e.g. cerebral palsy) or who have suffered trauma or disease to the central nerves system (e.g. stroke or traumatic brain injury).
    Sensory input and developmental sequences are used to facilitate change in the sensory-motor organization of the central nerves system. This approach also includes cognitive information processing strategies to promote learning or relearning of movement control or perceptual/cognitive functional abilities.
  2. BIOMECHANICAL APPROACH deals with increasing strength, endurance and range of motion with clients who have intact central nerves systems, but who has dysfunction in musculo-sceletal, integument or cardio-pulmonary systems (e.g. hip/shoulder replacements and sport injuries, heart problems).
  3. REHABILITATIVE APPROACH aims at achieving the highest level of independence in spite of residual disability that has resulted for any reason. Here the Occupational Therapist will concentrate on assisting the client and family in finding ways to compensate for losses by adapted techniques and/or equipment e.g. blindness, post-stroke.
  4. SENSORY-MOTOR APPROACHES, or "Ready Approach". The Ready Approach was developed by Bonnie Hanschu and her associates at Developmental Concepts. It is a sensory-based perspective for viewing the behavioral and educational needs of children and adults with disabilities. The ready approach was developed after extensive exploration of the current research available in the fields of neurology, biology, and physiology. The ready approach advocates the use of the brainstem sensations (vestibular, proprioception, and tactile) in order to help the brain get into "a ready state" for learning and for interacting appropriately within the surrounding environment.

"Sensory Diets"
A sensory diet is a term for what we all do everyday, all the time, to keep ourselves alert, calm, and attentive.
For instance if your watching TV or listening to a lecture, and you get sleepy, you get up and move, or shake your head, or tap yourself to 'Wake up." This is giving yourself the right stimulation to get yourself awake. Another example is when you're very upset and you take a brisk walk. This is what a sensory diet is. Some children are not able to detect their needs. They may make adjustments to meet needs in a dysfunctional way. For example, a child may need movement to keep himself alert. A sensory diet gives these children sensations by providing scheduled opportunities to get the needed sensations that help them regulate their system. Therefore, the inappropriate sensory seeking behaviors can be diminished. A sensory diet must be done throughout the day in all environments, making it possible for the child to get sensation the brain needs. The sensory diet should not be used as an occasional treatment intervention, but should be a consequence of engaging in functional activity within the child's normal routine.

What are consultation services? Sometimes a child does not require direct (therapist-to-child) intervention. Rather, the OT only needs to be a part of a problem solving team to examine the environment and interactions with the child to help determine why the child may be experiencing delays or deficits and make recommendations.

The recommendations made by the Occupational Therapist should be tried, adjusted, and adapted by parents, caregivers and teachers, with ongoing evaluation by the occupational therapist consultant, the team members involved, and the child.

Consultation services may include recommendations for positioning equipment, sensory diets, classroom modifications, and/or adapted equipment.

School districts are required by law to provide Occupational Therapy services to eligible students. This requirement may be met through either direct services or consultation as indicated by the therapist and agreed upon by the ARD committee.

When do OT services end? Occupational Therapy services end when the child has reached all of his/her goals or when the child is no longer making progress toward the goals. The therapist often refers to this time as plateau. A child "plateau's" when he or she has climbed many mountains of achievement and has finally reached his or her full potential at that time). This does not mean that the child will be completely independent or free of limitations.

If self care and daily living skills remain impaired, the child may be placed on consultation services for a time so that the team can continue to problem solve together to achieve the child's maximum independence and to prevent further disability.

Interdisciplinary Team
Each member of the health care team provides a specific and crucial portion of your child's rehabilitation needs. Your child may have one or more of the following health care professionals working on their health care team. The roles of the team members are:

  • Doctor - performs a medical evaluation, and recommends management: i.e., therapy, braces, traction, decreased physical activity, surgery, or medications, and follows the overall general health of the child
  • Educational Diagnostician - determines eligibility for special school services through standardized testing.

Educational

  • Paraprofessional - implements classroom educational strategies under the direct supervision of the teacher. This person is usually known as the classroom or student's aide.
  • Equipment vendor - supplies, repairs, and orders all adaptive
    equipment for the child such as wheelchairs, walkers, canes, standing frames, tub chairs, etc.
  • Occupational Therapist - assesses self-help skills and activities of daily living, provides direct treatment and home/school programming, assesses the need for special equipment at home, in the classroom, or at work.
  • Orthotist - responsible for creating braces for the back, legs, ankles, wrists, hands, etc.; responsible, along with the PT and OT, for maintaining the braces in good working order
  • Parents - the most important part of the team, advocates for the child's needs, coordinates care for the child and provides stable support system
  • Physical Therapist - assesses strength, movement patterns, walking, joint mobility, balance and gross motor skills, provides direct treatment and home/school programming, and assesses the need for special equipment
  • Speech Therapist - assesses and treats oral motor deficits, and communication disorders
  • Teacher - develops and coordinates educational strategy to promote learning and cognitive development in the school setting. Responsible for the student's overall well being at school

COMMONLY USED ASSISTIVE DEVICES

  • Suspended Equipment Pencil Grips
  • Ball Chair Touch Screen
  • Slant Board Weighted Vest


IMPORTANT PHONE NUMBERS AND RESOURCE INFORMATION

  • Richard L. Shorkey Education & Rehabilitation Center of Southeast Texas
    855 South 8th Street
    Beaumont, Texas 77701
    409-838-6568
    Email: lgillespie@shorkey.org

    Provides physical therapy, occupational therapy, aquatics classes, wheelchair clinic and equipment loan program for children birth-21 years old, special needs daycare program, community training for parents, schools, and daycare personnel. Also provides education services including a learning clinic, early childhood clinic, art for the special needs child, diagnostic evaluations, language learning classes, and standardized test preparation along with child counseling and Transdisciplinary team assessment. Non-profit, United Way agency.
  • Beaumont State Center
    655 South 8th Street
    Beaumont, Texas 77701
    409-833-1485 or 1-800-317-5809
    TDD 409-784-5627

    Provides physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy, therapists/trainers can go to the child's house. Programs include: First Steps, Community Living Skills, Living Environment Adapted for People (L.E.A.P) Senior Services, Transition Services, Vocational Training, Job Quest, Home Services, In-Home & Family Support, Community Residential Services, and Respite Care
  • Texas Department of Health
    Martin Blum and Judy Melling
    3420 Fannin, Suite 100
    Beaumont, Texas 77701
    409-833-0072


    Case management services, will advise family on how to apply for Medicaid, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Chronically Ill and Disabled Children's Services (CIDC), CIDC spend-down program, etc.
  • Early Childhood Intervention
    Beaumont State Center
    655 South 8th Street
    Beaumont, Texas 77701
    409-833-1485 or 1-800-317-5809
    TDD 409-784-5627

    Federally and State funded program for children, birth to age 3, with disabilities or delays. ECI supports families to help their children reach their potential through developmental services. Beaumont State Center is the local site in Jefferson County, but it is also located in every county in Texas.
  • Texas Rehabilitation Commission
    5550 Eastex Freeway, Suite D
    Beaumont, Texas 77708
    409-898-3988


    For special needs people ages 16-adults. Wide range of services provided to help
    people become independent and employable
  • Catholic Charities (CCMS)
    P.O. Box 829
    Beaumont, Texas 77704
    409-835-1411


    Helps provide daycare funding for children of low-income parents. Can provide extra funding to the daycare center if the child is disabled. This extra funding can help pay for equipment, training for staff, etc.
  • Partners Resource Network, Inc.
    1090 Longfellow Drive
    Beaumont, Texas 77706

    A non-profit agency that provides training, information, referral, resources, consultation, and emotional support to parents of children with all types of disabilities
  • Shriners Hospital for Children
    6977 Main Street
    Houston, Texas 77030-9817
    713-797-1616

    Free orthopedic care, braces, etc. for children that qualify
  • Beaumont Independent School District
    Special Education Department
    3395 Harrison
    Beaumont, Texas 77706
    409-899-9972

    Special ed dept can provide services for hearing and visually impaired children from 0-21 years old, physically, mentally, or speech impaired children from 3-21 years old. Child can be tested on or after the 3rd birthday. The following areas are assessed: gross motor, fine motor, cognitive, speech, and self-help skills. Head Start program for 4 year olds from low-income families.
  • Region V Education Service Center
    3545 Highway 96 Bypass
    Silsbee, Texas 77656
    409-386-1111

    Provides services to school districts in Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Orange, Newton, and Tyler counties. Includes administrative services and training, computer services, and special education services, assistive/adaptive device evaluations.
  • Dr. Charles Dyer, DDS
    1120 Longfellow Drive
    Beaumont, Texas 77706
    409-898-8923

    Dentist specializing in services for special needs children.
  • Canine Companions for Independence
    P.O. Box 4568
    Oceanside, CA 92052
    1-800-572-2275

    National organization that provides dogs to help people achieve independent living. Takes 1 ½ to 2 years from time of application to receiving the dog.

     

REFERENCES

Sensory Integration, Toronto