The child is 12 years old and the evaluation included the Developmental Test of Visual Motor Integration, the Motor Free Visual Perception Test, and portions of the Bruininks-Oseretsky Test. By all of these measures the child was functioning within appropriate developmental parameters. The school OT reported that the child could write legibly, could change for Physical Education class, and manipulate all school materials functionally.
So why was I recommending accommodations to the middle school curriculum?? It is true that the child had excellent grades and good handwriting - but these were not the real problems. The problem could be found in the child's inability to participate.
OT evaluation included a review of the child's attendance record. Minimum days of instruction is180 days, and this particular child missed either part or full day of instruction on 52 days, for a total absentee impact of approximately 30%. The child has severe migraine headaches and an underlying seizure disorder. The neurologist believes that triggers for the migraines include eye strain, high contrast visual input, and light.
So as long as the child is not having migraines, participation and performance is excellent. As soon as the child has a migraine, participation and performance plummets. So the problem with the OT evaluation completed by the school therapist is that it was done under non-migraine conditions and was swinging at the wrong issues at the wrong time.
The most appropriate assessment tool is the attendance record that clearly shows how this disability impacts the child's abilty to participate in the curriculum. The child will be at risk for more severe and long term deficits if this high level of school absence continues. The parents have been working near full time to keep the child 'caught up' with school work, but of course all the increased stress at home contributes to migraine incidence. This kind of intervention plan is not functional for the long term.
The child requires accommodations including preferential seating while copying, increased time for testing, use of sunglasses in school, use of colored paper for handouts, and anti-glare screens on computers. Other specific issues will likely come up so the OT needs to be involved on a consultative level on an ongoing basis. Some of these strategies may hopefully decrease triggering events that can lead to migraines, and subsequent loss of participation.
So just because the test scores are all normal does not always mean that participation and function are normal. And sometimes the evidence can be found in places where we are not typically accustomed to looking.
In the case the occupational therapist needs to help the educational team understand the impact of the disability on participation. Too often, schools look at situations like this and don't want to provide assistance because the child is 'doing fine.' Again, the concept of 'doing fine' can't be always narrowly interpreted as how a child performs on a typical standardized test at a specific point in time.
ARTICLES TAKEN FROM:
UNCONVENTIONAL OT ASSESSMENT
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