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PHQP_0026 Avoiding Pediatric Occupational Therapy

PHQP_0026 Avoiding Pediatric Occupational Therapy

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In PHQP_0026 Avoiding Pediatric Occupational Therapy, Jeff unpacks why more preschool play could help avoid school-age pediatric occupational therapy. Episode Video Watch Now: PHQP_0026 Avoiding Pediatric Occupational Therapy Episode Notes Balanced And Barefoot: How Unrestricted Outdoor Play Makes for Strong, Confident, and Capable Children The Avoiding Pediatric Occupational Therapy Transcript Welcome to the Playvolution HQ Podcast. I'm Jeff Johnson. Thanks for pushing play on with the show. So, update on something I saw. So, episodes and episodes ago I reported on seeing something called the, I called the water punch game, the water bottle punch game. So, kids were, they had a partially full bottle of water and they were just holding it up and dropping it and punching it. And that went on, I saw a bunch of kids playing it and there were only a couple kids playing it. And then over the last couple months, I guess it's been, there's this one kid I see and this seems to be his go-to hanging out when his friends aren't really able to play, thing to do outside. And he's, he's really evolved as a player of this game or evolved the game, I guess. Now it's, it's multiple, multiple strikes on the bottle before it hits the ground. So, he'll, he'll toss it up the air, up in the air and then he'll bat it up and then it'll be coming down and he'll bat it with an elbow and then maybe get it with a knee and then maybe his heel and then he'll punch it farther away from him. So, it'll be four or five strikes before the bottle hits the gun. It's kind of like, like, like dribbling a soccer ball. And, and it's, it's really great. And this kind of relates back to the proprioception episode we did a little bit ago. This kid has a wonderful awareness of where his body parts are in space in relation to his other body parts, as well of, as well as where other things in the environment are in space. So, it's kind of neat to see that, that game evolve and change over, over time. On with the podcast, topic one, only topic for, for this episode is avoiding pediatric occupational therapy. So, what I'm talking about here is not avoiding it for those who need it. I'm talking about preventing the need for it, I guess is what I'm talking about. And maybe I could have worded the title different, but you know, it is what it is. So, occupation, pediatric occupational therapy is a wonderful thing and very valuable for kids who need it. And it would be nice if we lived in a world where fewer kids needed it. And over the, over the last couple of decades, there's been a huge uptick in the number of kids that are needing, needing this kind of, kind of therapy, this kind of assistance. Human children have never been more sedentary than they are now in 2025, something I say just about every episode. And that has, has made this uptick in pediatric occupational therapy necessary. When kids don't move, they don't build the physical skills that they need, the sensory systems they need don't get wired with their brains, and they have a hard time living in their bodies in the world. And that's basically what pediatric occupational therapy does, is it helps kids who are having a hard time navigating their bodies, navigate their bodies and the world a little bit better. But that's also what, what play does. Play is the evolutionary strategy for giving us all of those skills. And then we end up with kids who lack those skills, and then we have these therapeutic settings to, to help them catch up. But again, it'd be nice if we could avoid, avoid the therapeutic settings altogether. One of the reasons for this uptick is also more screen times, because we are usually sedentary when we are in front of our screens. And so shoving young children in front of screens has really done them a developmental disservice. And look, I'm, I'm pro screen. I, there are a lot of valuable things that can come from screens,

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