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Occupational Therapy Assistant

Help people with illness, injury, or disability to participate in everyday activities and regain independence, working under the supervision of a qualified occupational therapist.

Canonical page: /careers/occupational-therapy-assistant
Physical demand

Moderate

People contact

Very high

Time to entry

3–12 months for an entry support role; 3–4 years to qualify as a full occupational therapist

What you do

Occupational therapy assistants (OTAs) work alongside qualified OTs in hospitals, community health teams, social services, and care homes. You support patients in developing skills for daily living — cooking, washing, using public transport, returning to work. Practical tasks include carrying out group sessions, teaching adaptive techniques, fitting equipment such as grab rails and perching stools, and recording patient progress. Many OTAs build strong specialist knowledge in areas such as hand therapy, learning disabilities, or older adult rehabilitation.

Why this career is resilient

Occupational therapy requires nuanced assessment of how physical and mental conditions affect someone's ability to manage daily life — a uniquely human judgement that cannot be automated. Allied health professions face consistent NHS shortfall, and social care pressures mean growing demand in community and domiciliary settings. HCPC regulation and structured career progression create long-term stability.


Routes in

Employer-funded training

Some employers — particularly the NHS, emergency services, and larger care providers — run their own funded training programmes. You apply for a job and train as you work.

Duration: Varies

Access to Higher Education

A one-year full-time (or two-year part-time) qualification designed for adults who did not take A levels. Recognised by universities and many nursing/allied health programmes.

Duration: 1 year full-time, 2 years part-time

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