New Hampshire Revised Statutes 326-C:1 – Definitions
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In this chapter and RSA 328-F, unless the context otherwise requires:
I. “Board” means the occupational therapy governing board established in RSA 328-F.
II. “Occupational therapist” means a person currently licensed to practice occupational therapy in the state of New Hampshire.
III. “Occupational therapy assistant” means a person currently licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy, under the supervision of an occupational therapist, in the state of New Hampshire.
IV. “Occupational therapy” means the care and services provided by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant who are licensed pursuant to this chapter. Areas of occupation include but are not limited to:
(a) Activities of daily living, which are the routine activities a person completes to meet their basic health and survival needs.
(b) Instrumental activities of daily living, which are activities a person completes to live independently and participate in the community.
(c) Health management.
(d) Rest and sleep.
(e) Education.
(f) Work.
(g) Play.
(h) Leisure.
(i) Social participation.
V. “Practice of occupational therapy” means the therapeutic use of everyday life occupations and activities with persons, groups, or populations to support occupational performance across their lifespans.
(a) Practice of occupational therapy includes but is not limited to:
(1) Evaluation, analysis, and diagnosis of occupational performance, as well as interventions designed to address occupational performance and engagement in occupations.
(2) Assessment of occupations, occupational performance, and engagement which may include client performance skills (motor, process, social interaction), performance patterns (habits, roles, routines, rituals), contexts (environments and personal factors), and client factors (body functions and structures, values, beliefs, and spirituality).
(3) Identification, development, remediation, or compensation of physical, neuromusculoskeletal, sensory-perceptual, emotional regulation, social interaction, visual, mental, and behavioral skills; cognitive functions; pain and pain management; praxis and developmental skills to improve or enhance occupational performance and engagement.
(4) Compensation, modification, or adaptation of occupations, activities, performance patterns, and contexts, including the application of universal design and ergonomic principles to improve or enhance occupational performance and engagement.
(5) Habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of physical and mental health and wellness for clients with all levels of ability-related needs. This includes occupational skills or performance abilities and patterns that are impaired, in decline, at risk of decline or impairment, or have not yet developed.
(6) Health promotion, injury and disease management, and disability prevention through the identification and remediation of client skills, habits, roles, routines as well as current or potential contextual barriers impacting occupational performance and engagement.
(7) Therapeutic exercises, including tasks and methods to increase motion, strength, endurance, and enhance healthy routines to support occupational performance and engagement.
(8) Assessment, design, fabrication, application, fitting and training in seating and positioning, assistive technology, adaptive devices and orthotic devices, and training in the use of prosthetic devices.
(9) Application of physical agent and mechanical modalities and use of a range of specific therapeutic procedures (eg., wound care management; techniques to enhance sensory, motor, perpetual, and cognitive processing; manual therapy techniques) to enhance occupational performance and engagement.
(10) Education and training of persons, including family members, caregivers, groups, populations to address occupational performance and engagement.
(11) Consultative services to persons, groups, populations, programs, organizations and communities to address occupational performance and engagement.
(12) Advocacy directed toward promoting opportunities for occupational performance and engagement that empower clients to seek and obtain resources to fully participate in their everyday life occupations.
(13) Care coordination, case management, and transition services.
VI. Occupational performance refers to the way occupations and related activities are completed in everyday life.
I. “Board” means the occupational therapy governing board established in RSA 328-F.
Terms Used In New Hampshire Revised Statutes 326-C:1
- person: may extend and be applied to bodies corporate and politic as well as to individuals. See New Hampshire Revised Statutes 21:9
- state: when applied to different parts of the United States, may extend to and include the District of Columbia and the several territories, so called; and the words "United States" shall include said district and territories. See New Hampshire Revised Statutes 21:4
II. “Occupational therapist” means a person currently licensed to practice occupational therapy in the state of New Hampshire.
III. “Occupational therapy assistant” means a person currently licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy, under the supervision of an occupational therapist, in the state of New Hampshire.
IV. “Occupational therapy” means the care and services provided by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant who are licensed pursuant to this chapter. Areas of occupation include but are not limited to:
(a) Activities of daily living, which are the routine activities a person completes to meet their basic health and survival needs.
(b) Instrumental activities of daily living, which are activities a person completes to live independently and participate in the community.
(c) Health management.
(d) Rest and sleep.
(e) Education.
(f) Work.
(g) Play.
(h) Leisure.
(i) Social participation.
V. “Practice of occupational therapy” means the therapeutic use of everyday life occupations and activities with persons, groups, or populations to support occupational performance across their lifespans.
(a) Practice of occupational therapy includes but is not limited to:
(1) Evaluation, analysis, and diagnosis of occupational performance, as well as interventions designed to address occupational performance and engagement in occupations.
(2) Assessment of occupations, occupational performance, and engagement which may include client performance skills (motor, process, social interaction), performance patterns (habits, roles, routines, rituals), contexts (environments and personal factors), and client factors (body functions and structures, values, beliefs, and spirituality).
(3) Identification, development, remediation, or compensation of physical, neuromusculoskeletal, sensory-perceptual, emotional regulation, social interaction, visual, mental, and behavioral skills; cognitive functions; pain and pain management; praxis and developmental skills to improve or enhance occupational performance and engagement.
(4) Compensation, modification, or adaptation of occupations, activities, performance patterns, and contexts, including the application of universal design and ergonomic principles to improve or enhance occupational performance and engagement.
(5) Habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of physical and mental health and wellness for clients with all levels of ability-related needs. This includes occupational skills or performance abilities and patterns that are impaired, in decline, at risk of decline or impairment, or have not yet developed.
(6) Health promotion, injury and disease management, and disability prevention through the identification and remediation of client skills, habits, roles, routines as well as current or potential contextual barriers impacting occupational performance and engagement.
(7) Therapeutic exercises, including tasks and methods to increase motion, strength, endurance, and enhance healthy routines to support occupational performance and engagement.
(8) Assessment, design, fabrication, application, fitting and training in seating and positioning, assistive technology, adaptive devices and orthotic devices, and training in the use of prosthetic devices.
(9) Application of physical agent and mechanical modalities and use of a range of specific therapeutic procedures (eg., wound care management; techniques to enhance sensory, motor, perpetual, and cognitive processing; manual therapy techniques) to enhance occupational performance and engagement.
(10) Education and training of persons, including family members, caregivers, groups, populations to address occupational performance and engagement.
(11) Consultative services to persons, groups, populations, programs, organizations and communities to address occupational performance and engagement.
(12) Advocacy directed toward promoting opportunities for occupational performance and engagement that empower clients to seek and obtain resources to fully participate in their everyday life occupations.
(13) Care coordination, case management, and transition services.
VI. Occupational performance refers to the way occupations and related activities are completed in everyday life.