Occupational Therapy in Bergen County, NJ

At The Spine & Health Center, our occupational therapy services help patients of all ages regain independence, rebuild functional skills, and return to the activities that matter most in their daily lives. Whether you are recovering from an injury, managing a chronic condition, or supporting a child’s developmental journey, our experienced occupational therapists are here to guide every step of the process.

What Is Occupational Therapy?

Occupational therapy (OT) is a client-centered healthcare profession focused on helping individuals participate fully in the occupations — or meaningful activities — of everyday life. The term “occupation” in OT does not simply mean a job; it refers to every activity that occupies your time and brings purpose to your day, from getting dressed and cooking breakfast to working at your desk or playing with your children.

OT practitioners assess how physical, cognitive, sensory, and environmental factors affect a person’s ability to perform these daily activities. They then design individualized treatment plans to restore, improve, or adapt performance so that patients can live as independently and meaningfully as possible.

At The Spine & Health Center, our occupational therapy program works closely alongside our physical therapy, chiropractic, and acupuncture teams to deliver a truly integrated approach to healing. We treat patients across our Park Ridge, Montvale, and Closter locations.

What Does Occupational Therapy Do?

Occupational therapy addresses a wide spectrum of challenges that prevent people from engaging in the activities they need or want to do. The scope of OT is broad, covering physical rehabilitation, cognitive retraining, sensory processing, fine motor skill development, and adaptive strategies for daily living.

Conditions Treated with Occupational Therapy

Our occupational therapists at The Spine & Health Center are trained to work with patients managing:

What Happens During an OT Session?

Every patient’s occupational therapy journey begins with a comprehensive evaluation. Your therapist will review your medical history, assess your functional abilities, observe how you perform specific tasks, and talk with you about your personal goals and what activities are most important to your daily life.

From there, your individualized treatment plan may include:

  • Therapeutic exercises to improve strength, flexibility, coordination, and range of motion
  • Fine motor skill training for tasks such as writing, typing, buttoning clothes, or using tools
  • Cognitive rehabilitation strategies for memory, attention, and executive function
  • Adaptive equipment recommendations to make daily tasks easier and safer
  • Home modification suggestions to improve safety and independence
  • Activity modification and energy conservation techniques
  • Sensory integration therapy (especially for children)
  • Manual therapy and soft tissue techniques to address pain and restore movement


Our OT team collaborates with specialists across all of our services to make sure your care plan addresses the whole picture — not just the symptom, but the underlying cause. Read more about our root cause approach in our blog: Chiropractors Aren’t Just Back Doctors — We’re Root Cause Doctors for the Whole Body.

What Is Occupational Therapy for Kids?

Pediatric occupational therapy is one of the most rewarding — and most in-demand — areas of OT practice. When children struggle with developmental milestones, sensory processing, fine motor skills, or daily self-care tasks, occupational therapists play a vital role in helping them grow, thrive, and participate fully in school and family life.

What Does Pediatric OT Help With?

Children may benefit from occupational therapy if they are experiencing difficulties with:

  • Handwriting, drawing, or other fine motor tasks
  • Self-care skills such as dressing, feeding, brushing teeth, or using the bathroom independently
  • Sensory sensitivities — being overly sensitive or under-responsive to touch, sound, light, or movement
  • Attention and focus challenges that affect learning and social participation
  • Coordination and motor planning (difficulty with activities like catching a ball, using scissors, or navigating playground equipment)
  • Developmental delays identified by a pediatrician or early intervention specialist
  • Social participation and play skills
Physiotherapist assists a young boy with musculoskeletal disorders using mobility aids during rehabilitation exercises

Our team understands that children aren’t simply small adults — they need a specialized, play-based approach that makes therapy feel fun and engaging while achieving meaningful clinical outcomes. Our therapists use evidence-based techniques tailored to each child’s unique sensory profile, developmental stage, and family environment.

 

Pediatric OT pairs naturally with our pediatric physical therapy services, and in many cases children benefit from both disciplines working in tandem. If your child has been experiencing issues with posture, core strength, or movement alongside their fine motor or sensory challenges, the two programs complement each other beautifully. We also offer pediatric chiropractic care for children whose musculoskeletal development may be contributing to functional difficulties.

 

Learn more about healthy development milestones in our blog post: Is This Normal? Supporting Healthy Development Milestones with Pediatric Chiropractic Care in Bergen County.

Early Intervention Matters

Research consistently shows that the earlier children receive occupational therapy, the better their long-term outcomes. If you have noticed that your child is falling behind peers in fine motor skills, struggling with self-care, or showing signs of sensory sensitivities, do not wait to seek an evaluation. Early OT can make a transformative difference in a child’s confidence, independence, and academic success.

 

We also encourage parents to explore our what we treat page for a full overview of the conditions our multidisciplinary team addresses across all ages.

What Is the Difference Between Occupational Therapy and Physical Therapy?

This is one of the most common questions we receive from new patients, and it is a great one. While occupational therapy (OT) and physical therapy (PT) share some overlap, they are distinct disciplines with different core focuses.

 

Occupational Therapy

Physical Therapy

Primary Focus

Restoring ability to perform meaningful daily activities (occupations)

Restoring movement, mobility, strength, and physical function

Who It Helps

Children and adults with physical, cognitive, sensory, or developmental challenges

Patients with injuries, surgeries, pain, or movement dysfunction

Common Treatments

Fine motor training, adaptive strategies, cognitive rehab, sensory integration

Therapeutic exercise, manual therapy, stretching, strength training

Where It Works

Home, school, workplace, and community activities

Mobility, sports, physical performance, and structural recovery

Typical Patients

Stroke patients, children with developmental delays, adults after surgery

Back pain, sports injuries, ACL recovery, post-operative rehab

Put simply: physical therapy focuses primarily on the body’s structural and mechanical function, while occupational therapy focuses on how a person performs the activities that give life meaning. In practice, the two disciplines complement each other powerfully — and many patients at The Spine & Health Center benefit from both.

For example, a patient recovering from a wrist fracture may work with a physical therapist to restore grip strength and range of motion, while simultaneously working with an occupational therapist to relearn how to type, cook, or perform work-related tasks with their recovering hand. This integrated approach is exactly what sets our clinic apart.

We explore the distinction between physical therapy and chiropractic care in our page, Physical Therapy vs. Chiropractor: Which Is Right for You? — a useful resource if you are navigating which type of care might benefit you most.

Senior woman, resistance band and exercise with physical therapist for fitness, wellness and muscle.

Conditions We Address with Occupational Therapy

Our occupational therapists at The Spine & Health Center have experience treating a broad range of conditions across all age groups:

Orthopedic & Post-Surgical Conditions

 

Neurological Conditions

Chronic Pain & Whole-Body Health

How Occupational Therapy Fits Into Your Comprehensive Care Plan

The Spine & Health Center is proud to offer a truly integrated, multidisciplinary approach to health and wellness in Bergen County. Occupational therapy does not exist in a vacuum — it thrives when coordinated with other evidence-based treatments.

 

Depending on your individual needs, your OT program may be combined with:

 

Our team will work with you to determine the right combination of services at the right time in your recovery journey. You can explore the full list on our services page or review everything we treat on our what we treat page.

Frequently Asked Questions About Occupational Therapy

Occupational therapy is a healthcare profession dedicated to helping people participate in the everyday activities — called “occupations” — that are essential or meaningful to them. These activities include self-care tasks like bathing and dressing, productive work like writing or computer use, and leisure pursuits like hobbies and exercise. OT practitioners evaluate the physical, cognitive, sensory, and environmental factors affecting a person’s ability to engage in these activities, then create individualized plans to restore or enhance that participation.
Occupational therapy assesses a patient’s functional abilities and designs treatment to help them perform daily tasks more effectively and independently. A session may involve therapeutic exercises for fine motor strength, hand therapy following a wrist injury, sensory integration techniques for a child who is overwhelmed by certain textures, cognitive retraining exercises for a stroke survivor, or adaptive equipment training for someone with arthritis. OT bridges the gap between clinical treatment and real-world function — it’s not just about getting better, it’s about getting back to the life you want to live.
Occupational therapy for kids focuses on helping children develop the skills they need to participate fully in school, home, and social environments. Pediatric OT addresses fine motor delays (such as difficulty holding a pencil or cutting with scissors), sensory processing challenges, self-care skill deficits (like dressing or feeding), attention and behavioral regulation difficulties, and developmental delays. Therapists use play-based, engaging activities tailored to each child’s developmental level, making therapy fun while building the foundational skills children need to thrive. OT for kids works best when started early, so if you have concerns about your child’s development, early evaluation is strongly encouraged.

Physical therapy (PT) focuses on restoring movement, strength, flexibility, and physical function — typically following injury, surgery, or musculoskeletal dysfunction. Occupational therapy (OT) focuses on restoring a person’s ability to perform meaningful daily activities by addressing physical, cognitive, sensory, and environmental barriers. While PT works to fix how the body moves, OT works to ensure the body can do what daily life demands. The two are highly complementary — PT rebuilds the physical foundation while OT ensures that foundation translates into real-world independence and function. Many patients benefit from both. You can read more on our dedicated page: 

Physical Therapy vs. Chiropractor: Which Is Right for You?

Why Choose The Spine & Health Center of New Jersey?

  • Multidisciplinary coordination our OT team works closely with physical therapists, chiropractors, acupuncturists, and specialists under one roof
  • Pediatric expertise we are experienced in working with children of all ages and developmental stages
  • Convenient Bergen County locations we serve patients across Park Ridge, Montvale, and Closter
  • Evidence-based, individualized care Every treatment plan is tailored to your specific goals, lifestyle, and functional needs
  • Insurance-friendly We work with most major insurance providers to make your care as accessible as possible

Read our patient testimonials and patient reviews to hear directly from the patients whose lives our team has helped transform.

 

You can also learn more about our clinical team on our about us page and our team page.

Ready to Get Started? Schedule Your Occupational Therapy Evaluation Today.

Whether you are seeking OT for yourself or your child, our team is ready to help. We accept most major insurance plans and offer convenient scheduling across all three of our Bergen County locations.

 

Book your appointment online: Book an Appointment

Visit us at one of our three convenient locations: Park Ridge | Montvale | Closter

Have questions? Visit our FAQ page or contact us directly.

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