Occupational Therapy changes the trajectory of recovery, moving us from symptom management to meaningful function. In a country like South Africa, where families and schools are under enormous pressure, functional gains matter deeply. Occupational Therapists translate diagnosis into daily life.
A recent reflection from my clinical work…
Over the past few months I’ve been reflecting on the role of Occupational Therapy in mental health, particularly in my work with children and families. As a child and adolescent psychiatrist, I prescribe medication daily and I value it,it can reduce anxiety, lift mood and improve attention. It stabilises the storm. But there are places medication simply cannot go. It cannot teach a child how to organise their school day, regulate a sensory system, rebuild confidence after depression, or help a family restore rhythm to daily life. Again and again I’m reminded that this is where Occupational Therapy changes the trajectory of recovery, moving us from symptom management to meaningful function.
In a country like South Africa, where families and schools are under enormous pressure, functional gains matter deeply. OTs translate diagnosis into daily life. You turn overwhelm into strategy and help children re-enter participation, in the classroom, at home and in their sense of self. Yet too often I see hesitation about occupying the mental health space. From where I stand, your work is not an add-on, it is central to recovery. Psychiatry cannot medicate a child into meaningful participation. That requires the relational, practical, activity-based interventions that are the superpower of Occupational Therapy. My encouragement to OT colleagues: step fully into the mental health arena. When psychiatry and OT work side by side, families don’t just stabilise,they function. And that is where real recovery lives.

