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Current as of January 01, 2026 | Updated by Findlaw Staff
Sec. 6.5. “Occupational therapy services” means services that are provided to promote health and wellness, prevent disability, preserve functional capabilities, prevent barriers for occupational performance from occurring, and enable or improve performance in everyday activities, including services that do the following:
(1) Establish, remediate, or restore a skill or ability that is impaired or not yet developed. Occupational therapy services include identifying speech, language, and hearing that are impaired or not yet developed, but does not include the remediation of speech, language, and hearing skills and abilities.
(2) Modify or adapt a person or an activity or environment of a person or compensate for a loss of a person's functions.
(3) Evaluate factors that affect daily living activities, instrumental activities of daily living, and other activities relating to work, play, leisure, education, and social participation. These factors may include body functions, body structure, habits, routines, role performance, behavior patterns, sensory motor skills, cognitive skills, communication and interaction skills, and cultural, physical, psychosocial, spiritual, developmental, environmental, and socioeconomic contexts and activities that affect performance.
(4) Perform interventions and procedures relating to the factors described in subdivision (3), including the following:
(A) Task analysis and therapeutic use of occupations, exercises, and activities.
(B) Education and training in self-care, self-management, home management, and community or work reintegration.
(C) Care coordination, case management, transition, and consultative services.
(D) Modification of environments and adaptation processes, including the application of ergonomic and safety principles.
(E) Assessment, design, fabrication, application, fitting, and training in assistive technology, adaptive devices, and orthotic devices, and training in the use of prosthetic devices. However, this does not include the following:
(i) Gait training.
(ii) Training in the use of hearing aids, tracheoesophageal valves, speaking valves, or electrolarynx devices related to the oral production of language.
(iii) Remediation of speech, language, and hearing disorders.
(iv) Fabrication of shoe inserts.
(F) Assessment, recommendation, and training in techniques to enhance safety, functional mobility, and community mobility, including wheelchair management and mobility. However, this does not include gait training.
(G) Management of feeding, eating, and swallowing to enable eating and feeding performance.
(H) Application of physical agent modalities and use of a range of specific therapeutic procedures used in preparation for or concurrently with purposeful and occupation based activities, including techniques to enhance sensory-motor, perceptual, and cognitive processing, manual therapy techniques, and adjunctive and preparatory activities for occupational performance. However, manual therapy does not include spinal manipulation, spinal adjustment, or grade 5 mobilization.
Cite this article: FindLaw.com - Indiana Code Title 25. Professions and Occupations § 25-23.5-1-6.5 - last updated January 01, 2026 | https://codes.findlaw.com/in/title-25-professions-and-occupations/in-code-sect-25-23-5-1-6-5/
FindLaw Codes may not reflect the most recent version of the law in your jurisdiction. Please verify the status of the code you are researching with the state legislature before relying on it for your legal needs.
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