“I am helping kids experience success like I've never seen” 

 

Lynda Steed, OTR/L

 

My client is a 5-year girl who required surgery one week after birth to correct a deformity. She had extensive early intervention of PT & OT to addressed delayed milestones and sensory processing. When she came to me, she had ‘plateaued’ and discharged about a year before. Her mother’s concerns were irrational behavior easily triggered with minimal stimulus, difficulty with transitioning, hypermobile joints, fearful/wallflower reports from pre-school, lengthy melt-downs that were very difficult to calm down, and her greatest concern: bowel incontinence. Megan had daily complaints from her preschool about bowel-movements in her underwear, no appropriate reporting to the teacher and the same occurred at-home. Although, she was above-average intelligence, she had no concern for bowel accidents and would justify them with “I’ll just change my panties”. Her family was very frustrated.

When I started with her, it was actually before the Online Brain and Sensory Foundations course; so our focus was on overall-strengthening to reduce joint mobility and gentle exposure to sensory input to improve her sensory processing. Megan made excellent progress in strengthening, but she continued to have irrational fears, meltdowns, and no gains in bowel-training. I began taking the Online Brain and Sensory Foundations course four months into her treatment and began using the rhythmic movements with her for 15 minutes a session.

I continued to faithfully complete all positions for 15 minutes a session two times a week.
Initially, Megan would resist the direction to do Rhythmic Movement , but within two weeks, she was happy to participate in the movements both actively and passively. She began to transition between activities easily and had lessened ‘tantrums’ when she was overwhelmed or didn’t get her way. She began to be a much easier child to work with. The most profound change occurred after 4 weeks of Rhythmic Movement, only two times a week for 15 minutes (At this time here was no home movement program being done for Megan). She became bowel-trained. Her mother reported the last two weeks before she discharged: she had no accidents.

Jenny Jolley, MS, OTR/L
Founder & Occupational Therapist
Imagination Station & On-Track Therapy

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