es888w
01-07-2008, 06:31 AM
Would a PT outpatient clinic hire an OT graduate as a PT? Except for hospitals, where can an OT find jobs? At the hospital where I volunteer, there are 15 PTs vs. 2-3 OTs. I am applying to PT schools and considering one OT school in case I don't get into PT, but I don't know if this is wise... Thanks for any feedback.
PT2MD
01-07-2008, 06:03 PM
Would a PT outpatient clinic hire an OT graduate as a PT? Except for hospitals, where can an OT find jobs? At the hospital where I volunteer, there are 15 PTs vs. 2-3 OTs. I am applying to PT schools and considering one OT school in case I don't get into PT, but I don't know if this is wise... Thanks for any feedback.
This is going to sound silly but it's the only way I can answer it. An OT cannot work as a PT and a PT cannot work as an OT. The licensures are completely distinct and separate from each other. The job descriptions often overlap in different settings, but an OT cannot be a PT nor vice versa.
They do work together in many inpatient and outpatient settings.
crockdub
01-09-2008, 09:44 PM
I volunteered in a private outpatient PT clinic that employed an OT. She primarily did hand therapy. For all I know, she may have rented space from them.
frenchymmd
01-18-2008, 06:52 PM
I worked as a secretary at a private PT clinic for a while. We employed one OT. she was also certified in hand therapy. She only did hands and elbows. We legal couldn't schedule any other "body parts" with her. You could get employed by a PT clinic, but you won't be able to do the full range of things that a PT does.
PTDoc
01-31-2008, 03:20 PM
It depends on the philosophy of the clinic in which you are interested. Some areas/clinics believe OT's are the "hand therapists" or "upper extremity" therapist. Others believe the Physical Therapists should be the one treating musculoskeletal injuries of the upper extremity and allow the OT's to work on what they are trained the most in - improving indepence in ADL activities.