dorothywitt2
Hi Rachel,
The book maybe Disabled Village Children Aothor David Werner
rachel.ohene wroteHello,
I am an Occupational Therapist in the US. I am interested in doing some volunteer work in another country. I'm interested in doing something in a developing country for 1-2 weeks. Im fairly new in my career, and specialize in dementia care currently. I'm most interested in taking my foundation as an OT, and applying it creatively to help those without access to therapy.
Two things:
1) Does anyone have a recommendation for a good resource book that provides helpful interventions when working in a developing country/environment? I remember learning about a book while I was in school, but can't for the life of me find the name of that book. The book had ideas on how to make wheelchairs and splints out of everyday items, etc.
2) Has anyone had a positive experience with an international therapy volunteer organization that they could refer me to? Im especially interested in SE Asia, Central and South America. Most of the organizations I've explored have an expensive fee for volunteering and don't seem to have a focus on therapy.
Thank you for any guidance or ideas regarding the above topics.
KosovaOT
Hello, Born in the US and have been developing OT in the country of Kosovo. Have lived there since 1999.
Peter.CanadianOT
Hello Everyone!!
It is great to see how OT is spread out across our globe.
I'm Peter Drzymala an OT of 23yrs. currently employed in the capacity as the Professional Practice Lead for LIH Sky City Rehabilitation Hospital in Kunming, China. It is a new 104-bed Rehab facility in the southern part of China that is scheduled to open in Jan. of 2017. Our intention is to bring high quality, evidence-based, client-centred rehabilitation to the population of China and also to provide Professional Development for OTs in China. It is an exciting and challenging opportunity. I would happy to answer anyone's queries about working in China and/or OT in China.
I am also looking to recruit and hire OTs who have at least two years of experience. Please contact me and I can provide more details.
Prakash.Indian OT
Hi,
Thanks to WFOT and Moderator for providing such an opportunity on OTION forum . My Name is Prakash Kumar Singh practicing as an Occupational Therapist at Bangalore, India.
Prakash.Indian OT
Hi Peter Sir,
My name is Prakash kumar Singh working as an Occupational therapist at Bangalore ,India . I am interested to work in China or UAE if there will be any opportunity available. I have 3 years experience . So, please provide me your Email address.
Thanking you sir,
Regards,
Prakash Kumar Singh,
Occupational therapist,
Email:
prakashsinghot@gmail.com
otjocelyncampbell
Hi Adam,
I enjoyed looking at all your amazing work on Linked-in/ (See my linkedIn for more info on these:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/adam-griffin-46381654?trk=nav_responsive_tab_profile)
I am a retired Canadian OT, I live in Toronto half time. I would be happy to answer your questions if I can, or maybe link you with someone.
please contact me at my email:
otjocelyncampbell@gmail.com if you want to dialogue further.
cheers,
Jocelyn
gingko
Hi, my name is Lorraine Finnegan and I have been an OT in California for 13 years. My background is mostly working with physical disabilities with the adult/geriatric population although I have been in Home Health for a major hospital group in Northern California for the past year.
I am an Irish Citizen and my husband and I (also an OT) are considering a move back to Ireland for a couple of years. Since I received my college education in the US and have no experience working as an OT in Ireland I was hoping there was an OT out there who could give me some insight into requirements for US OTs to work in Ireland. I have also contacted the Irish OT Association for information.
Any help would be appreciated!
OT-RICKY
Hi All, great to see so much diversity within our profession!
I am Audric, an OT in Australia. I have volunteered overseas as an OT in Nepal and Fiji, and am passionate about the role of OT in international development. I am particularly interested in the process in which allied health professions such as OT become established within a country. In the past I have built the capacity of local staff the provide strategies based in OT, however realise the long term goal is to have locally trained OTs in developing countries to fill this gap. This may be a complex question, however any input is appreciated.
Cheers.
ElisabethMichail
OT-RICKY
Hi Audric, I was really excited to read your post! I'm Elisabeth, also an OT from Australia who has volunteered in Fiji. I am also wanting to find ways to establish the occupational therapy profession in Fiji, as I understand this is not a readily available service but there may be great need for it. Have you since developed any further ideas on this? I am thinking about the potential of setting up an OT clinic in Fiji. If you are still interested in this, I would love to discuss this further with you, and anyone else who might be interested in this project.
Liz
ipsabrina
Hello All
I'm Sabrina, an OT from Hong Kong. I've been working in Hong Kong for a few years in geriatric in hospitals and community after graduation, and I'm moving to Melbourne, Australia early next year since I've got my skilled migration visa granted earlier.
However, I would like some advice for registration/job hunting as an overseas trained OT like me.
There's a requirement from the OT Council in Australia and New Zealand that after qualification credentialing, a period of half-year full-time supervised practice or equivalent has to be completed before getting the full registration as an OT. However, almost all the job posts I found they all require Full Registration, even jobs for Grade 1 OT (ie for new graduates/junior practitioners).
Wish those overseas trained OTs could share your experience and advice for me for the condition I'm facing!
Thank you very much! I am happy to share my experience too!
Have a nice day every one!
emmaajohnson
Hello, my name is Emma.
I'm an Occupational Therapy masters student studying at the University of South Australia. I want to move to the Netherlands and work there as an OT when I graduate at the end of 2017. If anyone has done a move like this before from Australia, Canada or America, I would love to hear about how it was for you? Whether it was difficult to adjust to work in The Netherlands and if your Dutch needs to be perfect? I'd love to hear from anyone who has anything to say/suggest on the matter.
Thank you!
emma.a.johnson1@gmail.com
julieschurgers
Dear all,
I would like to introduce myself, I am Julie, Dutch by origine, also studied OT there, I have worked in The Netherlands, Belgium, Canada as well as in some developing countries over the last 20 years, including Ecuador, Cuba, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, South Africa. Since 2004, I am pioneering in Zambia, where only since January 2016 (this year!!) inclusive education was made legal! There are hardly any rehabilitation services available, no community based rehab (CBR) services available. I am trying to work with Universities and Colleges for more understanding of disability, participation and integration in society, working on inclusive education, vocational skills and employability for people with disabilities and other vulnerable target groups, like street kids, youth with HIV/Aids, abused girls, children with developmental delay etc. I support various innovative projects, where we could use more OT hands, for example at Sani Sunshine Project (for adolescents with intellectual disabilities), and Palabana Project, where we are working towards inclusive education and employability, zee the websites, as well as my own Foundations website Livinglifeopportunities.org. We are always looking for extra hands, volunteers/ students etc. We can not provide a salary but accomodation, you can volunteer for up to three months without a special visa needed. I can only say that working in another country has enriched me personally as well as professionally, especially in Africa, where you still find conditions and circumstances you will not find anywhere else, together with a most pleasant culture and community feeling. Who ever is interested, plz contact me, ciao, Julie
Shan
julieschurgers
Hi Julie,
This post was created a while back so am hoping this reply will still reach you! I am an OT with 25 years of experience, recently doing some volunteer work in India, and currently located in Canada.
I would be very interested in learning more about your organization.
You can contact me at shannonmcindoe@icloud.com
Thanks!
Shannon
merve
Hello everyone!
My name is Merve and I am an Occupational Therapist in Turkey. I was born and grew up in Germany. After my graduation in 2014, I moved to İstanbul. Currently I am working with mentally disabled children and teenagers. İt is such a nice opportunity to be in contact with so many OT's around the world. Thank you for making this possible.
Thanks, and very best wishes,
Merve
Aileen_S
Hi everyone!
My name is Aileen and I am an Occupational Therapist in Germany. I would like to apologize for my weak English, i am still improve my english skills.
Currently I am working as an teacher in a new University of Applied Sciences in Germany, it is a Project of the Goverment to change the way of studing occupational therapy in Germany. Normaly you go to a special OT-School and you have a kind of education there to become an OT, normaly you don´t graduated with an Bachelor degree in Occupational therapy.
I am an Occupational Therapist since 2011 with an "first degree" of an Occupatiobal Shool from Germany. After my graduation i moved for around two mounth to india, to work as an volunteer OT in an Old Age Home and in a Programm to empower Womens for work.
Befor I moved to my new job in April 2016, i worked as an OT in mental health care in a acute-psychiatry, who specialized on the therapy of people with schizophrenia.
During my work in the hospital i studied Occupational Therapy in the Netherlands.
So, now i have my Bachelor degree in Occupational Therapy :-)
And i want to go to canada. I would like to see how Canadian OT´s work with mentally disabled adults, i want to learn some skills and bring them to Germany.... The German OT´s need more information and Skills for working like all international OT´s do it (occupation- based, evidence-based....)
In mental health working spaces, the most OT´s work still just with handcraft...
So, i am happy for each advice, like good Books, Programms, Studies or something else.
I plan to go in 2018 (just fpr a half year) for OT-abroad to canada, i hope i can connect here with some OT´s from Canada who worked with mentally disabled people and i hope I can visit some working places as an volunteer or internship, during my work and trawel.
Or maybe someone of you knew how i can work as an OT- Assistant or something like this just during the time, to earn enough mony for living in Canada during the time.
Thanks you!
best wishes
Aileen
KelG04
Hi,
This forum has so much potential to connect OT's with interests & skills to utilise in different countries! It was interesting to read through all the posts.
I am an OT from Australia, with a background in adult, physical rehab, community health, & acute settings. I'm sorry I can't offer information regarding visa & work requirements here, but would suggest contacting OT Australia, the national professional association,
https://www.otaus.com.au/contact for help. Melb. Victoria has additional contact details there also.
I'm moving to Chiang Mai, Thailand mid year. Does anyone have information or any useful OT resources/contacts for Thailand??
Thanks!
Valerie Kiley
Hi everyone,
I am interesting in helping set up fieldwork placements for youth mental health promotion and prevention in makerspaces. Is anyone an OT educator, practitioner or student that could help start some conversations around that?
Val
NDYOWAAWE
Yeah
Val we can partner in that
Jorieke
Peter.CanadianOT wroteHello Everyone!!
It is great to see how OT is spread out across our globe.
I'm Peter Drzymala an OT of 23yrs. currently employed in the capacity as the Professional Practice Lead for LIH Sky City Rehabilitation Hospital in Kunming, China. It is a new 104-bed Rehab facility in the southern part of China that is scheduled to open in Jan. of 2017. Our intention is to bring high quality, evidence-based, client-centred rehabilitation to the population of China and also to provide Professional Development for OTs in China. It is an exciting and challenging opportunity. I would happy to answer anyone's queries about working in China and/or OT in China.
I am also looking to recruit and hire OTs who have at least two years of experience. Please contact me and I can provide more details.
hello Peter, I tried to sent you a personal email. Did you receive? I would like to get in contact with you because I might move to Shenzhen, china. Kind regards, Jorieke
Kristi
Hi all,
I am a US licensed OT and plan to start work with a school in the Netherlands. Does anyone know the appropriate way to handle US state licensure in this case? Of course, my NBCOT certification and requirements will be up do date but is it best to place my state license on inactive status?
Thanks for any advice!
dezsic
Hi, I am an occupational therapist working in the United States. I am interested in working as an occupational therapist in another country. Does anyone know if there are certain resources to look at job postings? Thanks
iigbo1
Hello everyone my name is Ike Igbo, Dr.OT, I recently moved to Malawi from the USA and was curious if anyone knew of opportunities in Southeastern Africa for OTs.
Thanks