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GREATER BALTIMORE MEDICAL CENTER, INC.

Low Vision Occupational Therapy Assistant

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Pediatric Occupational Therapist

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Low Vision Occupational Therapy Assistant

Phone, Open Hours, Reviews & Information

GREATER BALTIMORE MEDICAL CENTER, INC.

(443) 849-2658

6569 North Charles Street, Towson, Maryland 21204, United States

 

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GREATER BALTIMORE MEDICAL CENTER, INC. has primary practice address at 6569 North Charles Street, Towson, Maryland 21204, United States. GREATER BALTIMORE MEDICAL CENTER, INC. works hard to the highest-quality services described below.

To make an appointment or if you have any questions please call at (443) 849-2658 for any inquiries or visit us to experience firsthand the quality services that have made us a staple in the Baltimore community since they started to work on Oct 29 2024.

Healthcare Provider works as Low Vision Occupational Therapy Assistant and Occupational Therapist, with a primary focus on Pediatric Occupational Therapist services. The license number is registered in State, which confirms the professionalism and compliance with healthcare standards. Source: NPPES NPI Registry

According to the official NPPES profile of the HealthCare Provider, the HealthCare Provider updated information on Apr 18 2025 last time, our records are a testament to our ongoing commitment to maintaining current and useful information for our customers. Pharmacy Near Me Team also tried to manually add and verify doctor appointment hours and other information with additional updates from Healthcare Insurance Companies Data. The data for this page is updated on weekly basis. Our data is cross-referenced with multiple healthcare databases(NPPES, FDA, Census, NUCC, States Divisions of Medical Quality Assurance’s Profiles Data, Health Insurance companies) to ensure the highest level of accuracy. Also, the page is reviewed quarterly by our Team to ensure accuracy.

An occupational therapist is a person who has graduated from an entry-level occupational therapy program accredited by the Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE) or predecessor organizations, or approved by the World Federation of Occupational Therapists (WFOT), or an equivalent international occupational therapy education program; has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience required by the occupational therapy program; has passed a nationally recognized entry-level examination for occupational therapists, and fulfills state requirements for licensure, certification, or registration. An occupational therapist provides interventions based on evaluation and which emphasize the therapeutic use of everyday life activities (i.e., occupations) with individuals or groups for the purpose of facilitating participation in roles and situations and in home, school, workplace, community and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for the purpose of promoting health and wellness and are provided to those who have or are at risk for developing an illness, injury, disease, disorder, condition, impairment, disability, activity limitation, or participation restriction. Occupational therapists address the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory, and other aspects of occupational performance in a variety of contexts to support engagement in everyday life activities that affect health, well-being, and quality of life.

Occupational therapists provide services to infants, toddlers and children who have or who are at risk for developmental delays or disabilities. Occupational therapy is concerned with a child's ability to participate in daily life activities or "occupations." Occupational therapists use their unique expertise to help children with social-emotional, physical, cognitive, communication, and adaptive behavioral challenges and to help children to be prepared for and perform important learning and school-related activities and to fulfill their rule as students. Through an understanding of the impact of disability, illness, and impairment on a child's development, plan, ability to learn new skills, and overall occupational performance, occupational therapists design interventions that promote healthy development, establish needed skills, and/or modify environments, all in support of participation in daily activities.

Occupational therapy assistants contribute to the completion of an individualized occupational therapy low-vision evaluation under the direction and supervision of the occupational therapist to identify factors that may facilitate, compensate for, or inhibit use of vision in occupational performance. Clients are engaged in the identification of strengths, limitations, and goals as they relate to low vision to optimize independence and participation in desired occupations. Occupational therapy assistants also contribute to the development and implementation of an individualized occupational therapy low-vision intervention plan in collaboration with the occupational therapist, client, and relevant others that reflects the client's priorities for occupational performance.

Source: NUCC, CMS