Kinesiotherapist
Help recovered patients continue to improve strength and movement.
Sometimes an accident, illness, or disability prevents someone from being able to cook meals, complete schoolwork, or run errands—“easy” tasks that most people take for granted. As an Occupational Therapist, you can help people improve their performance on everyday activities and regain their independence.
As an Occupational Therapist you will usually work within the patient’s home, workplace, school, or wherever they spend their days. For children, this might mean coaching them to relearn to grip a pencil so they can do homework, or improving their motor skills so they can play at recess. For adults, you might provide therapy that increases their ability to prepare and eat meals, get dressed, get in and out of the bath, work in the garden, or type on the computer.
To be an Occupational Therapist, you have to be caring, patient, optimistic, and practical. When a patient feels frustrated or depressed from not being able to perform basic tasks, you need to be the one to encourage them to keep trying. When someone seems to have reached their physical limit, maybe a simple mechanical device could help them extend their reach or ease their pain.
This career offers a really concrete way to help people. And the best part is that rather than doing everything for your patients, you are helping them increase their strength, dexterity, and confidence every day so they can do these tasks on their own. The goal is that, after a while, they won’t even need you anymore.
Trustworthy: You are known for your personal integrity and honesty.
Reliable: You can always be counted on to do a good job.
Levelheaded: You hold your emotions in check, even in tough situations.
Nationally: $49,000 – $103,000
Main education level: Advanced
source: US Dept of Labor