Outspoken OT

Episode 9: Meaning vs. Medicine: OT’s First Fight (1790-1899)

17 min · 1. dec. 2025
episode Episode 9: Meaning vs. Medicine: OT’s First Fight (1790-1899) cover

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OCCUPATION UNDER PRESSURE, PART 1: MEANING VS. MEDICINE, OT'S FIRST FIGHT (1790–1899) DESCRIPTION Most occupational therapists were taught that their profession began in 1917. A founding meeting. Six people. A new organization. The official birth of OT. But that is not where the story starts. In this episode — the first in an eight-part series called Occupation Under Pressure — Michelle goes back to where the real roots of occupational therapy actually begin: the late 18th and 19th centuries, a period historians call the Age of Enlightenment, when society first started asking whether compassion, meaningful activity, and human dignity belonged in the practice of healthcare. The answer, it turned out, was complicated. Because at the exact same moment that reformers were arguing that what people do shapes their health, medicine was moving in the opposite direction — into labs, microscopes, and strict scientific measurement. The body was becoming a set of parts to fix rather than a person to understand. And the tension between those two ideas — meaningful activity on one side, biomedical reductionism on the other — created a fault line that runs directly from the 1790s into every OT clinic operating today. This episode traces that fault line through the movements that quietly built occupational therapy before it had a name. The Moral Treatment Movement, where William Tuke and Philippe Pinel replaced asylum restraints with structured daily routines and purposeful activity. Benjamin Rush, the father of American psychiatry, prescribing occupation-based therapy in the 1790s. The settlement house movement, which modeled community participation as health. The Arts and Crafts Movement, which pushed back against industrial dehumanization and brought intentional making back into clinical settings. And the tuberculosis sanatoria of the 19th century, where graded activity programs created the three core principles OT still practices today — grade the activity, use meaningful tasks, and expect functional improvement through participation rather than rest. But the Hard Take in this episode is not really about history. It is about a misunderstanding that has followed OT for over a century and is now being used against the profession by the very systems it operates within. Michelle's argument is direct: OT did not just drift from its roots. It misinterpreted them. Occupation was never supposed to mean ADLs. It was never supposed to mean functional task performance. It was supposed to mean meaningful work — identity-shaping, dignity-restoring, agency-building human engagement. And the moment OT narrowed its own definition, it handed the system a box to trap it in. The weekly challenge is small, specific, and deliberately uncomfortable: pick one client, replace one ADL-based justification with a meaning-based one, and document the life problem instead of the impairment. One session. One shift. One reclaiming of the profession's actual origin story. This is Part 1 of Occupation Under Pressure. The series gets more complicated from here. IN THIS EPISODE * Why OT's origin story starts in the 1790s, not 1917 — and why that distinction matters * The Age of Enlightenment and the first arguments that meaningful activity shapes health * The rise of biomedical reductionism — and why the tension it created with occupation-based practice has never been resolved * The antivivisection movement and the moral roots that eventually became OT's professional values * The Moral Treatment Movement: William Tuke, Philippe Pinel, and Benjamin Rush — what they were actually prescribing * Settlement houses, Toynbee Hall, and why community participation as health is not a modern idea * The Arts and Crafts Movement as clinical rebellion — how intentional making replaced busywork in hospitals * The tuberculosis sanatoria and the birth of graded activity: Otto Walther, Marcus Paterson, and the three principles that still define OT practice today * The Hard Take: OT didn't lose its way — it misinterpreted where it came from, and the system is now punishing that misunderstanding * Why occupation was never supposed to mean ADLs — and what it was actually supposed to mean * How OT was built on activism and resistance, and what happened when the profession went quiet * Your weekly challenge: document meaning, not movement — for one client, in one session KEY FIGURES MENTIONED William Tuke, Philippe Pinel, Benjamin Rush, John Ruskin, William Morris, Otto Walther, Marcus Paterson KEY MOVEMENTS AND CONCEPTS Age of Enlightenment, Moral Treatment Movement, Antivivisection Movement, Settlement House Movement, Arts and Crafts Movement, Tuberculosis Sanatoria, Biomedical Reductionism, Graded Activity KEY LOCATIONS AND INSTITUTIONS Toynbee Hall (London, 1884), Nordrach Colony, Brompton Hospital THE THREE PRINCIPLES BORN IN 19TH CENTURY TB CARE 1. Grade the activity based on the person's physiological response 2. Use real, meaningful activities — not artificial exercise 3. Expect functional improvement through participation, not rest YOUR CHALLENGE THIS WEEK Choose one client. Replace one ADL-based justification in your documentation with a meaning-based one. Not endurance for bathing — but identity, purpose, mastery, and motivation. Not functional task performance — but occupational engagement. One client. One session. One shift toward the profession's actual origin story. SERIES CONTEXT This is Part 1 of Occupation Under Pressure, an eight-part series tracing the real sociopolitical history of occupational therapy — the complicated, messy, deeply human version that most therapists were never taught in school. The full historical document this series is based on is available inside the BOT Portal. Next episode: the story moves into 1900–1919, the era that transformed occupation from a philosophy into a formal profession — and introduced the forces, the figures, and the founding moment that most OT curricula compress into a single paragraph. The tension between meaning and medicine does not get resolved. It gets institutionalized. CONNECT AND CONTINUE THE CONVERSATION If this episode made you rethink something you were taught about your own profession, share it with a colleague who needs to hear the real story. Leave a review, send a message, and stay outspoken.

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episode Episode 13: When Occupational Therapy Got a Seat at the Table (1970s and 1980s) cover

Episode 13: When Occupational Therapy Got a Seat at the Table (1970s and 1980s)

EPISODE 13 OCCUPATION UNDER PRESSURE PART 5: WHEN OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY GOT A SEAT AT THE TABLE (1970S–1980S)   EPISODE DESCRIPTION Picture occupational therapy in 1970. Not the profession — the room. A small hospital space with metal filing cabinets, paper charts, and a therapist in a white uniform. No electronic medical record. No OTPF. No ADA, no IDEA, no Section 504. No Medicare recognition as we know it. No MOHO, no PEO, no occupational science. No widespread licensure. No standardized language. Nothing that modern OT practitioners would recognize as normal. If you asked that therapist what occupational therapy would look like fifty years later, she probably would not have recognized half of it. That is because the 1970s and 1980s were not just another chapter in OT history. They were the decades occupational therapy stopped reacting to the world and started helping shape it. This is Part 5 of Occupation Under Pressure, and it covers one of the most consequential periods in the profession's history — a period defined not by war or epidemic but by something more durable: political power, theoretical identity, and the realization that OT did not have to wait for permission to matter. The episode opens in the social upheaval of the early 1970s — Vietnam ending, trust in institutions collapsing, civil rights movements reshaping who got a seat at every table. Disabled Americans were asking questions that made many people uncomfortable. Why were they being institutionalized, segregated, excluded from schools, transportation, employment, and public life? And — critically — they were offering an answer that reframed everything: maybe the problem was not the person. Maybe the problem was the world built around them. Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act passed in 1973, prohibiting disability discrimination in federally funded programs for the first time in American history. But laws on paper do not enforce themselves. In 1977, disabled activists occupied federal buildings for twenty-six consecutive days — wheelchair users sleeping on government floors, refusing to leave until the regulations were enforced. It was the longest nonviolent occupation of a federal building in U.S. history. While therapists were treating clients in clinics, the people they served were outside rewriting history. AOTA was moving too. In 1972 the organization relocated near Congress and the NIH — not for office space but for proximity to the decisions that shaped healthcare. Licensure laws began spreading. The Black Occupational Therapy Caucus was established. OTAs gained voting rights within AOTA. In 1975, OT was officially recognized as a related service under the Education for All Handicapped Children Act — opening entire career paths overnight and giving thousands of children access to services they had never had before. The profession's intellectual landscape was transforming simultaneously. Mary Reilly's ideas were spreading. Elizabeth Yerxa was challenging foundational assumptions. Ann Mosey was organizing theory. Gary Kielhofner was preparing to introduce the Model of Human Occupation. OT was not just getting larger — it was becoming more reflective, more theoretically ambitious, and more determined to articulate what it actually was. Which created a new problem. Ask ten therapists to define OT and you got ten different answers. AOTA launched Uniform Terminology to establish a common language — an effort that would eventually evolve into the OTPF — but researchers later found remarkably low agreement among practitioners about the terminology itself. The profession had grown faster than its ability to define itself. The 1980s brought rapid expansion in home health, early intervention, preschool services, and Medicare recognition. The Paralympics arrived in the United States. Accessible air travel became law. And occupational therapy kept showing up wherever participation, access, and inclusion were being discussed. By the end of the decade, OT had moved beyond hospitals, beyond rehabilitation gyms, beyond being a supporting character in someone else's healthcare story. The profession had political influence, theoretical models, legal recognition, and a growing scientific foundation. It was not knocking on the door anymore. It had entered the building. Michelle's Hard Take reframes the era's most important achievement. The theories mattered. The licensure mattered. The terminology mattered. But the deeper shift was something harder to put in a textbook: the profession stopped waiting for permission. For decades OT had largely fitted itself inside structures someone else built. The 1970s and 1980s were the first time OT helped build the structures themselves. And the question Michelle leaves on the table is whether modern practitioners understand that the same capacity for influence has not gone anywhere. The weekly challenge asks you to identify one system you interact with every day — not a patient, not a treatment plan, a system — and instead of asking how to work within it, ask what you would change if you had the authority to redesign it from scratch.   IN THIS EPISODE * What OT actually looked like in 1970 — and why fifty years of change is almost unrecognizable from that starting point * The early 1970s social landscape: Vietnam, institutional distrust, civil rights movements, and the question of who gets a seat at the table * The disability rights movement reframes disability: not a medical problem to fix but an access problem to solve * Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act (1973) — the first federal prohibition of disability discrimination * The 504 Sit-In of 1977: twenty-six days, federal buildings occupied, the longest nonviolent occupation of a government building in U.S. history * AOTA's 1972 relocation near Congress and the NIH — proximity as political strategy * The spread of licensure laws: Florida, New York, Puerto Rico as the first U.S. jurisdiction requiring OT licensure * The Black Occupational Therapy Caucus and OTA voting rights within AOTA * The Education for All Handicapped Children Act (1975) — OT as a federally recognized related service, entire career paths created overnight * The theoretical revolution: Mary Reilly, Elizabeth Yerxa, Ann Mosey, Gary Kielhofner, and the emergence of MOHO * The language problem: Uniform Terminology, low inter-rater agreement, and a profession that grew faster than its ability to define itself * The 1980s expansion: home health, early intervention, preschool services, Medicare recognition, accessible air travel, the U.S. Paralympics * The Hard Take: the profession's biggest achievement was not the theories or the licensure — it was stopping waiting for permission * Why modern practitioners may be underestimating how much power they actually have * Your weekly challenge: stop asking how to work within the system and start asking what needs to change   KEY FIGURES Mary Reilly, Elizabeth Yerxa, Ann Mosey, Gary Kielhofner   KEY EVENTS, LEGISLATION, AND DEVELOPMENTS 1972 — AOTA relocates near Congress and the NIH 1972 — Black Occupational Therapy Caucus established; OTAs gain voting rights in AOTA 1973 — Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act 1975 — Education for All Handicapped Children Act; OT recognized as a related service 1977 — The 504 Sit-In: twenty-six days, federal buildings occupied nationwide 1970s–1980s — Spread of state licensure laws; Puerto Rico becomes first U.S. jurisdiction requiring OT licensure 1980s — Rapid expansion in home health, early intervention, preschool services, Medicare recognition 1980s — U.S. Paralympics; accessible air travel legislation MOHO introduced; Uniform Terminology launched; OTPF foundations established   YOUR CHALLENGE THIS WEEK Identify one system you interact with every single day. Not a patient. Not a treatment plan. A system — a referral process, a school procedure, a discharge workflow, an insurance requirement, a community program. Instead of asking how to work within it, ask what you would change if you had the authority to redesign it from scratch. Write down three changes. History is full of therapists who assumed systems were fixed. The people who changed the profession were the ones who realized they were not.   SERIES CONTEXT This is Part 5 of Occupation Under Pressure, an eight-part series on the real sociopolitical history of occupational therapy. Part 1 covered 1790–1899: occupation before OT existed. Part 2 covered 1900–1919: the birth of the profession. Part 3 covered 1920–1939: the first identity crisis. Part 4 covered 1940–1969: reconstruction, reductionism, and the rise of rehabilitation medicine. This episode covers the 1970s and 1980s: political influence, theoretical identity, and the realization that OT did not have to wait for permission to matter. Next episode: the 1990s and 2000s arrive — and the profession that spent two decades building influence is about to face a new kind of pressure. Evidence-based practice, managed care, reimbursement restructuring, and the return of the identity question in a new form. OT had gotten a seat at the table. Now it had to decide what to say.   CONNECT AND CONTINUE THE CONVERSATION If this episode made you think differently about the power you already have inside the systems you work in every day, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Leave a review, send a message, and stay outspoken.

I går14 min
episode Episode 12: OT Does Not have to Choose Between Science and Occupation (1940-1969) cover

Episode 12: OT Does Not have to Choose Between Science and Occupation (1940-1969)

PART 4: OT DOES NOT HAVE TO CHOOSE BETWEEN SCIENCE AND OCCUPATION (1940–1969)   EPISODE DESCRIPTION World War II. Polio epidemics. The birth of rehabilitation medicine. The discovery of neuroplasticity. And some of the worst ethical violations in the history of modern healthcare — all happening at the same time, in the same system, often to the same vulnerable populations occupational therapy was built to serve. The period from 1940 to 1969 is one of the most consequential in OT history — and one of the most misunderstood. This is Part 4 of Occupation Under Pressure, and it covers the three decades that built modern rehabilitation. When World War II produced casualties on a scale medicine had never encountered, Colonel Howard Rusk — with support from President Franklin Roosevelt — helped develop a systematic rehabilitation model grounded in the idea that recovery requires more than medicine. It requires engagement, purpose, structure, meaning, and participation. Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation became a formal medical specialty in 1947. Occupational therapists were trained through emergency wartime programs and deployed throughout VA hospitals across the country. The work looked different from the arts-and-crafts era — splint fabrication, ADL training, adaptive equipment, upper extremity rehabilitation, work re-entry, veteran reintegration — but the underlying premise had not changed. Then polio arrived. Children and adults across the country lost movement, independence, and function. Iron lungs became a symbol of an era defined by fear and dependence. And once again, occupational therapists stepped into the gap — becoming leaders in neuromuscular rehabilitation, pediatric intervention, activity-based strengthening, and functional retraining. Meanwhile, science was making a discovery that would eventually reshape everything. Researchers were beginning to demonstrate that the nervous system could change. Donald Hebb's foundational principle — that neurons that fire together wire together — offered the first scientific explanation for something occupational therapists had been observing clinically for decades. Purposeful activity was not simply keeping people busy. It was reshaping the brain itself. But while rehabilitation science was advancing, healthcare was also producing some of its darkest chapters. The Guatemala Syphilis Experiments. Henrietta Lacks. Willowbrook State School. The Jewish Chronic Disease Study. Vulnerable populations — people with disabilities, institutionalized individuals, minority communities — were exploited in the name of scientific progress. These violations eventually forced the development of the Nuremberg Code, the Declaration of Helsinki, informed consent standards, and research oversight frameworks that still govern healthcare today. And in parallel, disabled people themselves were organizing — building the earliest foundations of what would become the disability rights movement. OT was present throughout all of it. And the profession was growing — more scientific, more medically integrated, more sophisticated than it had ever been. Willard and Spackman's textbook was published. OTA education was formally established. Research infrastructure expanded. By any external measure, the profession was thriving. But by the late 1960s, therapists were beginning to ask a question that would ignite the next major shift in OT history: in becoming what the healthcare system needed, had the profession drifted away from what it was originally meant to be? Michelle's Hard Take pushes back on the most common framing of this era — that it was the period when OT became too medical and lost its roots. Her argument is more precise and more uncomfortable: the problem was not that OT became more scientific. The problem was that the profession began confusing its tools with its purpose. Goniometry, splints, biomechanical frameworks, sensory integration protocols — these are powerful tools. But they were never the destination. The destination has always been the person. The participation. The life. The weekly challenge asks you to take one intervention you use almost automatically and ask a single question: what is this actually helping the person get back to? Not the impairment. The life. Then put that answer in your documentation. IN THIS EPISODE * World War II and the scale of injury that forced healthcare to ask not just how to save lives but how to rebuild them * Colonel Howard Rusk, President Roosevelt, and the development of systematic rehabilitation medicine * PM&R becomes a formal medical specialty in 1947 — and OT's role inside it * What OT practice actually looked like in the wartime VA system — how far it had evolved from the arts-and-crafts era * The polio epidemics of the 1940s and 1950s — iron lungs, mass disability, and OT's leadership in neuromuscular rehabilitation * Donald Hebb and the discovery of neuroplasticity — the first scientific explanation for what OT had been doing all along * The ethical violations running parallel to rehabilitation progress: Guatemala, Henrietta Lacks, Willowbrook, the Jewish Chronic Disease Study * The Nuremberg Code, the Declaration of Helsinki, and the birth of informed consent * The early disability rights movement — National Federation of the Blind, Paralyzed Veterans of America, community mental health advocacy * How OT responded to the scientific revolution: biomechanical frameworks, kinesiology, sensory integration, bottom-up models * Willard and Spackman, OTA education, expanding research infrastructure — the profession at its most organized * The question emerging by the late 1960s: where did occupation go? * The Hard Take: the problem was not scientific integration — it was confusing the tools with the purpose * Why rehabilitation methods are the vehicle, not the destination * Progress without humanity is dangerous. Humanity without progress is limited. OT has always lived between those two realities. * Your weekly challenge: reconnect one intervention to one life role KEY FIGURES AND CONCEPTS Colonel Howard Rusk, President Franklin Roosevelt, Donald Hebb, Willard and Spackman Neuroplasticity, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Biomechanical Approaches, Sensory Integration, Bottom-Up Intervention Models, Informed Consent, Disability Rights Movement KEY EVENTS AND DATES 1940s–1950s — Polio epidemics and OT's expansion into neuromuscular rehabilitation 1947 — PM&R established as a formal medical specialty 1940s–1960s — Guatemala Syphilis Experiments, Henrietta Lacks, Willowbrook State School, Jewish Chronic Disease Study Post-WWII — Nuremberg Code and Declaration of Helsinki developed Mid-20th century — Earliest foundations of the disability rights movement established YOUR CHALLENGE THIS WEEK Pick one intervention you use almost automatically. Strengthening. Balance training. Sensory work. Cognitive rehabilitation. Upper extremity recovery. Then ask yourself one question: what is this actually helping the person get back to? Not the impairment. Not the body structure. The life. The role. The routine. The relationship. The identity. The occupation. Then put that answer in your documentation, your goal writing, and your clinical reasoning. Rehabilitation methods are not the destination. They are the vehicle. This week, reconnect one intervention to one life role — and remember why the intervention mattered in the first place. SERIES CONTEXT This is Part 4 of Occupation Under Pressure, an eight-part series on the real sociopolitical history of occupational therapy. Part 1 covered 1790–1899: occupation before OT existed. Part 2 covered 1900–1919: the birth of the profession. Part 3 covered 1920–1939: the first identity crisis. This episode covers 1940–1969: reconstruction, reductionism, and the rise of rehabilitation medicine. Next episode: the 1970s and 1980s arrive, and occupational therapists begin pushing back — hard. The philosophical revolution that follows will challenge everything the profession had spent three decades building. And the debate it ignites will sound remarkably familiar. CONNECT AND CONTINUE THE CONVERSATION If this episode reframed something you thought you understood about OT's relationship with medicine, share it with a colleague who is still choosing sides. Leave a review, send a message, and stay outspoken.

15. juni 202620 min
episode Episode 11: The Fight That Never Ended, OT's First Identity Crisis (1920-1939) cover

Episode 11: The Fight That Never Ended, OT's First Identity Crisis (1920-1939)

THE FIGHT THAT NEVER ENDED: OT'S FIRST IDENTITY CRISIS (1920–1939) EPISODE DESCRIPTION Have you ever sat through a faculty meeting, a conference presentation, or a social media debate about whether OT is too medical or not medical enough — and wondered why the profession is still having this conversation? The answer is in this episode. The years between 1920 and 1939 were the first time occupational therapy looked in the mirror and asked what it actually was. The profession was barely three years old when the forces pulling it apart became impossible to ignore. Medicine was growing more scientific, hospitals more structured, rehabilitation more measurable — and OT found itself caught between the values that created it and the system it was trying to join. Meaning, purpose, identity, creativity, and participation on one side. Measurement, standardization, efficiency, and medical legitimacy on the other. Both sides were right. At the same time. And that is exactly what made it so hard. This is Part 3 of Occupation Under Pressure, and it covers the two decades that gave the profession its first formal organizational structure, its first educational standards, and its first open internal division. In 1921 the National Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy became AOTA. In 1935 AOTA partnered with the American Medical Association to establish educational standards — a move that brought credibility and recognition and immediately raised new questions about how much medicine should shape a profession built on something medicine had historically struggled to measure. Out of that tension came two identifiable camps. The Diversionists, who believed crafts and meaningful occupation were therapeutic in themselves — restorative of identity, purpose, and agency. And the Therapists, who argued occupation was primarily a vehicle for improving measurable function, strength, endurance, and performance. The profession was not divided over whether occupation mattered. It was divided over why it mattered. And that distinction, Michelle argues, is the fault line that every subsequent OT debate has been running along ever since. The episode also places this identity crisis inside its full historical context — the height of the American eugenics movement, the beginning of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, segregation embedded throughout healthcare and education, and the forced closure of OT's first school for training African American practitioners. While occupational therapy was fighting to define itself, it was doing so inside a society actively debating whose lives were worth valuing. That context matters for understanding both what the profession was up against and what it was fighting for. The Hard Take challenges the framing of the entire debate. Michelle's argument is not that OT should choose between science and meaning, between the medical model and the social model, between function and participation. Her argument is that the false choice itself is the problem — and that OT was never designed to pick a side. It was designed to bridge. The profession's future, she contends, depends on becoming more rigorous and more scientifically precise while refusing to trade away the thing that made it irreplaceable in the first place: the capacity to see a person's whole life and help put it back together. The weekly challenge asks you to find one place in your practice where you have accepted a false choice — and build a bridge instead. IN THIS EPISODE * How occupational therapy transformed organizationally between 1920 and 1939 — from NSPOT to AOTA, from emerging practice to national profession * The 1935 AOTA-AMA partnership: what it gave OT and what it cost * The emergence of the Divertionist versus Therapist divide — and why the debate was never really about crafts * Why the question was never which side was right but how to bring both sides together * The eugenics movement at its American peak — Carrie Buck, forced sterilization, and the broader context of whose lives were considered worth supporting * The Tuskegee Syphilis Study, segregation in healthcare, and the closure of OT's first school for African American practitioners * The Hard Take: OT's greatest threat was never medicine or measurement — it was uncertainty about its own identity * Why Michelle does not think OT was ever supposed to be anti-medical — and what the founders were actually trying to build * The false choice that has followed OT for a century: medical model or social model, function or meaning, science or occupation * Why the future of OT depends on refusing to separate rigor and humanity * OT's mental health scope of practice reality: recognized in every state, formally credentialed in almost none * The precision rehabilitation argument: why OT should be leading those conversations, not running from them KEY FIGURES AND ORGANIZATIONS Eleanor Clarke Slagle, American Occupational Therapy Association (formerly NSPOT), American Medical Association KEY EVENTS AND CONCEPTS 1921 — NSPOT becomes AOTA 1932 — Tuskegee Syphilis Study begins 1935 — AOTA-AMA educational standards partnership The Divertionist versus Therapist divide The American eugenics movement at its peak Buck v. Bell and forced sterilization Segregation in OT education YOUR CHALLENGE THIS WEEK Find one place in your practice where you have accepted a false choice. One intervention, one patient, one session. Build a bridge. Use a meaningful occupation and measure it. Address mental health while targeting function. Combine participation with objective outcomes. Combine meaning with measurement. Then ask yourself: what happened when I stopped choosing and started integrating? Document it. Reflect on it. Because that is exactly what OT was trying to figure out in the 1920s and 1930s — and the answer still matters today. SERIES CONTEXT This is Part 3 of Occupation Under Pressure, an eight-part series on the real sociopolitical history of occupational therapy. Part 1 covered 1790–1899: the philosophical roots of occupation before the profession existed. Part 2 covered 1900–1919: the forces and founding moment that made OT a formal profession. This episode covers 1920–1939: the first identity crisis — and the debates that never really ended. Next episode: the world hands OT another defining challenge. War returns. And the question is no longer what kind of profession OT wants to be — it is whether the profession can prove its value fast enough to survive what is coming. The wheel of change moves slowly. It always has. But it only moves because someone is willing to push it. CONNECT AND CONTINUE THE CONVERSATION If this episode made you rethink a debate you thought was modern, share it with someone who needs the historical context. Leave a review, send a message, and stay outspoken.

11. juni 202617 min
episode Episode 10: Occupation Under pressure: The Birth of a Profession (1900-1919) cover

Episode 10: Occupation Under pressure: The Birth of a Profession (1900-1919)

EPISODE DESCRIPTION The early 1900s were not a quiet time to be building a new profession. America was industrializing, medicine was becoming increasingly scientific and measurable, and two completely opposing philosophies about disability and human worth were competing for dominance in the same cultural landscape. One said certain people were a burden on society. The other said every person deserved opportunity, dignity, and the chance to participate in life. Occupational therapy was born on the side of that second argument. In this episode, Part 2 of the eight-part series Occupation Under Pressure, Michelle traces the forces that transformed occupation from a philosophy into a formal profession. From the early reformers who prescribed meaningful activity before OT had a name, to the Reconstruction Aides who served soldiers returning from World War I with injuries medicine could stabilize but could not fully rehabilitate, to the six individuals who gathered at Consolation House on March 15, 1917 and founded what would become AOTA — this is the story of why occupational therapy exists. But this episode does not stop at the history. Michelle's Hard Take challenges one of the most common narratives in OT education: that the profession was born because medicine failed. Her argument is more precise — and more uncomfortable. Medicine did not fail. Medicine was incomplete. And the distinction between those two things has enormous consequences for how occupational therapists understand their role in modern healthcare, position themselves within medical systems, and make the case for their own value. This episode also confronts the tension that has followed OT for over a century: the pull between scientific rigor and human-centered practice, between proving legitimacy within medicine and preserving the profession's original mission. It is a tension that was present at the founding. It is still present today. WEEKLY CHALLENGE: The weekly challenge asks you to do one thing: pick one patient and document the participation problem — not just the impairment. Because that is exactly what the founders were doing in 1917. And it is still exactly what the profession exists to do. IN THIS EPISODE: * Why occupational therapy emerged during the same era as the eugenics movement, and what that contrast reveals about the profession's founding values * The early contributors who shaped OT before it had a name: Herbert Hall, Susan Tracy, Adolf Meyer, and William Rush Dunton Jr. How World War I created a problem medicine alone could not solve — and why that problem became the tipping point for a new profession * The founding of NSPOT on March 15, 1917 — who was in the room and why it mattered The Hard Take: OT was not born because medicine failed — it was born because survival and participation are not the same thing * Why Michelle argues the future of OT depends on thriving within medicine, not positioning itself against it * The scope of practice reality: OTs can address mental health in all 50 states, yet most states still do not formally recognize them as mental health providers * What precision rehabilitation actually means — and why the concepts OT has always practiced are healthcare concepts, not soft concepts Your weekly challenge: document the participation problem, not just the impairment KEY FIGURES MENTIONED Herbert Hall, Susan Tracy, Adolf Meyer, William Rush Dunton Jr., George Barton, Eleanor Clarke Slagle, Susan Cox Johnson, Thomas Kidner, Isabel Newton KEY DATES 1. 1907 — INDIANA PASSES THE FIRST INVOLUNTARY STERILIZATION LAW IN THE UNITED STATES 2. 1910 — SUSAN TRACY PUBLISHES STUDIES IN INVALID OCCUPATIONS 3. 1917 — THE UNITED STATES ENTERS WORLD WAR I; RECONSTRUCTION AIDES ESTABLISHED 4. MARCH 15, 1917 — FOUNDING OF THE NATIONAL SOCIETY FOR THE PROMOTION OF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY AT CONSOLATION HOUSE SERIES CONTEXT NEXT EPISODE: OT enters the 1920s and 1930s and faces its first real identity crisis. The question shifts from whether OT belongs in healthcare to what kind of profession it is going to be. A profession rooted in meaning? A profession rooted in medicine? Michelle warns that fight never really ended. YOUR CHALLENGE THIS WEEK Pick one patient. Ask yourself: what problem am I solving that medicine cannot? Then look at your documentation. Did you document the participation problem — or only the impairments? This week, document the life problem. Document the reason OT exists. CONNECT AND CONTINUE THE CONVERSATION If this episode challenged how you think about OT's place in healthcare, share it with a colleague who needs to hear it. Leave a review, send a message, and stay outspoken.

8. juni 202617 min
episode Episode 9: Meaning vs. Medicine: OT’s First Fight (1790-1899) cover

Episode 9: Meaning vs. Medicine: OT’s First Fight (1790-1899)

OCCUPATION UNDER PRESSURE, PART 1: MEANING VS. MEDICINE, OT'S FIRST FIGHT (1790–1899) DESCRIPTION Most occupational therapists were taught that their profession began in 1917. A founding meeting. Six people. A new organization. The official birth of OT. But that is not where the story starts. In this episode — the first in an eight-part series called Occupation Under Pressure — Michelle goes back to where the real roots of occupational therapy actually begin: the late 18th and 19th centuries, a period historians call the Age of Enlightenment, when society first started asking whether compassion, meaningful activity, and human dignity belonged in the practice of healthcare. The answer, it turned out, was complicated. Because at the exact same moment that reformers were arguing that what people do shapes their health, medicine was moving in the opposite direction — into labs, microscopes, and strict scientific measurement. The body was becoming a set of parts to fix rather than a person to understand. And the tension between those two ideas — meaningful activity on one side, biomedical reductionism on the other — created a fault line that runs directly from the 1790s into every OT clinic operating today. This episode traces that fault line through the movements that quietly built occupational therapy before it had a name. The Moral Treatment Movement, where William Tuke and Philippe Pinel replaced asylum restraints with structured daily routines and purposeful activity. Benjamin Rush, the father of American psychiatry, prescribing occupation-based therapy in the 1790s. The settlement house movement, which modeled community participation as health. The Arts and Crafts Movement, which pushed back against industrial dehumanization and brought intentional making back into clinical settings. And the tuberculosis sanatoria of the 19th century, where graded activity programs created the three core principles OT still practices today — grade the activity, use meaningful tasks, and expect functional improvement through participation rather than rest. But the Hard Take in this episode is not really about history. It is about a misunderstanding that has followed OT for over a century and is now being used against the profession by the very systems it operates within. Michelle's argument is direct: OT did not just drift from its roots. It misinterpreted them. Occupation was never supposed to mean ADLs. It was never supposed to mean functional task performance. It was supposed to mean meaningful work — identity-shaping, dignity-restoring, agency-building human engagement. And the moment OT narrowed its own definition, it handed the system a box to trap it in. The weekly challenge is small, specific, and deliberately uncomfortable: pick one client, replace one ADL-based justification with a meaning-based one, and document the life problem instead of the impairment. One session. One shift. One reclaiming of the profession's actual origin story. This is Part 1 of Occupation Under Pressure. The series gets more complicated from here. IN THIS EPISODE * Why OT's origin story starts in the 1790s, not 1917 — and why that distinction matters * The Age of Enlightenment and the first arguments that meaningful activity shapes health * The rise of biomedical reductionism — and why the tension it created with occupation-based practice has never been resolved * The antivivisection movement and the moral roots that eventually became OT's professional values * The Moral Treatment Movement: William Tuke, Philippe Pinel, and Benjamin Rush — what they were actually prescribing * Settlement houses, Toynbee Hall, and why community participation as health is not a modern idea * The Arts and Crafts Movement as clinical rebellion — how intentional making replaced busywork in hospitals * The tuberculosis sanatoria and the birth of graded activity: Otto Walther, Marcus Paterson, and the three principles that still define OT practice today * The Hard Take: OT didn't lose its way — it misinterpreted where it came from, and the system is now punishing that misunderstanding * Why occupation was never supposed to mean ADLs — and what it was actually supposed to mean * How OT was built on activism and resistance, and what happened when the profession went quiet * Your weekly challenge: document meaning, not movement — for one client, in one session KEY FIGURES MENTIONED William Tuke, Philippe Pinel, Benjamin Rush, John Ruskin, William Morris, Otto Walther, Marcus Paterson KEY MOVEMENTS AND CONCEPTS Age of Enlightenment, Moral Treatment Movement, Antivivisection Movement, Settlement House Movement, Arts and Crafts Movement, Tuberculosis Sanatoria, Biomedical Reductionism, Graded Activity KEY LOCATIONS AND INSTITUTIONS Toynbee Hall (London, 1884), Nordrach Colony, Brompton Hospital THE THREE PRINCIPLES BORN IN 19TH CENTURY TB CARE 1. Grade the activity based on the person's physiological response 2. Use real, meaningful activities — not artificial exercise 3. Expect functional improvement through participation, not rest YOUR CHALLENGE THIS WEEK Choose one client. Replace one ADL-based justification in your documentation with a meaning-based one. Not endurance for bathing — but identity, purpose, mastery, and motivation. Not functional task performance — but occupational engagement. One client. One session. One shift toward the profession's actual origin story. SERIES CONTEXT This is Part 1 of Occupation Under Pressure, an eight-part series tracing the real sociopolitical history of occupational therapy — the complicated, messy, deeply human version that most therapists were never taught in school. The full historical document this series is based on is available inside the BOT Portal. Next episode: the story moves into 1900–1919, the era that transformed occupation from a philosophy into a formal profession — and introduced the forces, the figures, and the founding moment that most OT curricula compress into a single paragraph. The tension between meaning and medicine does not get resolved. It gets institutionalized. CONNECT AND CONTINUE THE CONVERSATION If this episode made you rethink something you were taught about your own profession, share it with a colleague who needs to hear the real story. Leave a review, send a message, and stay outspoken.

1. dec. 202517 min