Professor points to the clavicle bone on a skeleton in front of several students.

Doctorate of Occupational Therapy

Occupational Therapy students are creative, patient and understanding and should be interested in helping others. Students will enjoy working with people of all ages with physical, emotional, or environmental challenges to help them participate more fully in life. Blending science, research, and art are important for students as they will be expected to help children and adults facing physical and mental challenges to be as active as possible at home, school, work, and play.

Accreditation

UTMB Occupational Therapy Doctorate Program is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE) of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA), located at 6116 Executive Boulevard, Suite 200, North Bethesda, MD 20852-4929. ACOTE’s telephone number, c/o AOTA: 301-652-6611. Website: https://acoteonline.org

View More: Accreditation Statement

NBCOT Pass Rate/Graduation Rate

https://www.nbcot.org/Educators-Folder/SchoolPerformance

Department News

Occupational Therapy students featured by AOTA in their research on Dry Needling practices.

May 24, 2021, 09:21 AM by UTMB School of Health Professions

Screenshot of an article abuot dry needling

The systematic review of students and faculty in the Department of Occupational Therapy (OT) on Dry Needling in OT Practice was featured in February 2021 by the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA).

Led and mentored by OT faculty Drs. Claudia Hilton and April Cowan, students Rachel Bynum, Olivia Garcia, Emily Herbst, Mary Kossa and Katrina Liou completed the the systematic review as part of the requirements for their research courses. It was later published in the American Journal of Occupational Therapy and then used to make the determination of the appropriateness of including dry needling as an occupational therapy intervention.

Comparable to acupuncture, Dry Needling is an emerging intervention practice of deep insertion of needles into the muscles to reduce and treat myofascial pain, increase range of motion and improve musculoskeletal function of various body areas that include the back, neck and lower/upper extremities.

In a typical dry needling session, these thin needles are inserted into trigger points of targeted muscles and connective tissues with the aim of remediating muscle function and improving activity and participation (American Physical Therapy Association, 2013).

For further reading, please read: Effects of Dry Needling on Spasticity and Range of Motion

Pre-Recorded Virtual Open House

We invite you to view our pre-recorded Virtual Open House session to learn more about the Entry-Level Doctorate Occupational Therapy (OTD) program at UTMB Galveston.

Request More Information

Our program is here to provide you with additional info.

Request Info

Attend Open House

Learn more about our academic program(s)!

Register Now

Are You Ready?

Complete and submit your application online! Apply Today!!

Entry-Level OTD

Contact Us

Department of Occupational Therapy
301 University Blvd.
Galveston, TX 77555-1142
O: SHP/SON 3.702
P: 409-772-3062 or 409-772-3060
F: 409-747-1615
E: ot.admissions@utmb.edu

Admissions Questions:
409-772-3062 or 409-772-3060

OT's 50 Anniversary

Check out our commemorative booklet of the UTMB OT department!

Image of the Occupational Therapy 50th anniversary article.


Site managed by the School of Health Professions • Last Updated: 16-JUL-2024

UTMB SHP Mission

The mission of the School of Health Professions (SHP) is to provide and promote quality education, research, and service in an environment that fosters collaboration and mutual respect. The School of Health Professions envisions a school that provides quality education in the health professions and encourages innovation.

Connect With Us

School of Health Professions
301 University Blvd.
Galveston, TX 77555

Facebook logo Twitter logo Instagram logo LinkedIn logo