Category Archives: Inside Therapro

Stay connected with everything happening at Therapro—from product launches and company news to conference highlights, community involvement, and special events we attend or host.

2022 By The Numbers!

As we make the transition out of the year 2022 and into the year 2023, the team at Therapro took a moment to reflect on some of the many accomplishments that made the previous year great. The numbers say it all!

Four

Live and in-person conferences started to gain traction again in 2022, and the Therapro team was excited to get back out there. Therapro joined attendees at 3 in-person conferences and 1 virtual conference this year. In 2023, we hope to continue to build on that momentum. We are excited to explore new conference opportunities, including ATIA 2023, where we plan to exhibit our latest and ever-growing selection of assistive technology products.

Therapro had the opportunity to support 30 different organizations through donations in 2022. As a team of therapists, supporting our professional state organizations has always been one of our core missions. Through 2022, Therapro received requests for support from professional organizations like the Kansas Speech-Language Hearing Association, the Washington Occupational Therapy Association (WOTA), the Texas Occupational Therapy Association (TOTA), the Massachusetts Occupational Therapy Association (MAOT), and the New Hampshire Occupational Therapy Association. 2022 also brought us some unique opportunities to help. Boxes full of the games Trunks and Novenops made their way to to a group supporting the Marshall Fire victims in Boulder Valley, Colorado and many chews were sent to support a service trip to Belize.

Ensuring our professionals and parents have access to the most up-to-date products available is a top priority at Therapro. Over the last year, Therapro added over 115 new products to our website including Happy Senso, My Motor Mats, the Busy Bee Sensory Plush, Just Right! A Sensory Modulation Curriculum®, and Comfy Chairs. With this, we have expanded the selection of the products available in our articulation, social language, and math categories. We have also worked toward making sure the most updated versions of publications are available including, Is It Sensory Or Is It Behavior? 2nd Edition. New products are added often. Be sure to check the new products section of our website regularly for updates!

Staying connecting is important to all of us at Therapro. Our many social media outlets have allowed us to stay up to date on what is happening on the ground and has provided us with the opportunity to share Therapro updates as they are happening. In 2022 we shared 600+ posts across our LinkedIn, Twitter, Pinterest, Facebook, and Instagram pages. We have also sent out 50 Theragrams, our biweekly newsletter. Stay connected with us by following @Therapro and signing up for our Theragram!

600 plus

Therapro’s free webinar series launched back in 2019 and has been gaining attention ever since. In 2022 we covered topics including sensory, treatment strategies, conversational skills, bike riding, assistive technology, and math skills. This year we had 3,860 people register for the 10 free webinars we offered. The 2023 webinar lineup is shaping up to be another stellar year; we are looking forward to bringing you topics including apraxia, dyslexia, trauma-informed care, and many more sensory topics!

2022 has been a great year for Therapro, and we are looking forward to all that 2023 will bring. Therapro wishes our many customers a happy and healthy New Year!

Looking Back at the Beginnings of Therapro

It has been 43 years since Therapro’s President, Karen Weihrauch left her teaching position at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) for her new home in Boston.  In those 43 years a lot has changed, including the founding of Therapro! She reflected on those changes in her recent reunion message to her former occupational therapy students at their class of 1979 reunion in Milwaukee, WI.  Read on for her full remarks and to take a look back at the beginnings of Therapro!

Dear UWM OT Class of 1979,

It is hard to believe that it has been 43 years since we were all together in the OT pediatric class! I remember your class very well for many reasons but here are the two prominent reasons that come to mind. First, I remember your enthusiasm for learning which in turn made teaching all of you a joy. In addition, it was my last year teaching at UWM and my last year of living in Wisconsin. For all of us, it was the ending of something familiar and the embarking on exciting careers ahead. 

I cannot help but think how much pediatric OT has changed since I taught you 43 years ago. What I taught was based on a medical model, not a school-based model which is what we now know of pediatric OT.  School based OT was just emerging and we all have had to make many adjustments to our therapeutic approach. 

When I came to Boston to get my doctorate in OT at Boston University, I also began to work part-time in the Brookline Public Schools. The caseload and the number of evaluations quickly escalated. I could foresee that OT services would become an important part of the academic program for struggling students. We, as OTs, had much to offer. 

However, I noticed that there were some missing parts that we needed to become part of this practice area. I could not find any resources to help me nor were there any relevant supplies or equipment related to working in the schools. When I complained about this to my husband, Paul, he began to think of it as a possible business idea and we created Therapro, Inc. to fill this void. 

35 years later, and 76 years old, I am still an OT utilizing my OT skills to preside over a company that is considered “The Therapy Resource for Families and Professionals.”

OT is a great profession, and I am so glad that you are part of it!!

My Very Best to each of you,

Karen Conrad Weihrauch, PhD, OTR/L

Making April Autism ACCEPTANCE Month

Claire McCarthy

April brings the beginnings of warm weather. It brings more time spent outside and the return of the birds who went south for winter. It also brings Autism Awareness Month. Fundraisers are held for local and nationwide autism related organizations. Facebook and Instagram are full of memes, posts, stories, and quotes about autism. This is all great, but what happens on May 1st? What happens when the posts get buried under cute animal videos and the fundraising moves onto the next mission?

Now, don’t get me wrong. I think awareness is wonderful. However, most of the world is very aware of autism now. They know organizations exist for it. There are plenty of tv shows and movies that portray autistic characters. We see autism in the news. What we need to be striving for is Autism Acceptance. We need to be striving for a world where autistic individuals are valued as community members, coworkers, and friends. A world that values and honors autism 365 days a year instead of 30.

To begin the move towards Autism Acceptance, there are some key terms we should know.

  • Neuro diversity: a viewpoint that brain differences are normal, rather than deficits
  • Neurodivergent: people who have diagnoses such as ADHD, autism, OCD, dyslexia, etc.
  • Neurotypical: individuals of typical developmental, intellectual, and cognitive abilities
  • Ableism: discrimination in favor of able-bodied or neurotypical people

Most of us on this blog are familiar with autism. For those who may not be, it is defined as “a developmental disorder of variable severity that is characterized by difficulty in social interaction and communication and by restricted or repetitive patterns of thought and behavior”. It is deficit based. There is nothing wrong with acknowledging the challenges seen in an autistic individual. However, let’s flip that around with a quote from NeuroTribes and define neurotypical: “Neurotypical syndrome is a neurobiological disorder characterized by preoccupation with social concerns, delusions of superiority, and obsession with conformity. There is no known cure.” Makes one think a little, doesn’t it?

To continue on a path of autism acceptance, we also need to target the myths around autism. One I hear all the time is, “S/he can’t be autistic. S/he speaks so well.” The DSM-5 and DSM-5-TR say nothing about verbal communication deficits in regards to autism. “Accompanying language impairment” can be added to an autism diagnosis, but having typical spoken language skills does NOT mean an individual is not autistic.

Another common misconception is that every child who receives an autism diagnosis must receive Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) services and must be eligible for an Individualized Education Plan (IEP) when they reach 3 years of age. Yes, ABA is one of the few evidence based autism specific teaching methods. This research dates back to the 1960s when autism rates were 1 in 2,500 people. This research was done on individuals that would be considered “low functioning” and often had accompanying Intellectual Disability. Autistic learners needs to be seen as individuals the same way that neurotypical learners are seen.

That last paragraph brings me to another issue that gets in the way of autism acceptance- functioning levels. Parents and therapists are so quick to get caught up in levels. Many people think that a functioning level can tell you all about the autistic individual. One of the problems with levels, though, is that it makes it harder to see past the diagnosis. When someone is diagnosed with “high functioning autism” people have a hard time understanding their challenges, honoring how hard that individual works day to day to appear high functioning, and sees less need for services. When someone is diagnosed with “low functioning autism” people don’t see their competence, assume lower intellectual capacity, and lower their expectations for the individual.

What can we do as therapists, parents, family members, and friends to change from Autism Awareness to Autism Acceptance? A simple place to start is to change our vocabulary. Try to ditch “red flags” or “symptoms” and replace them with “characteristics” or “learning profile.” Don’t be afraid to use “the A word” in your every day life. Talk about individuals being autistic the same way you would talk about someone wearing glasses or having black hair. Encourage children to ask questions about themselves or others. Using statements such as “don’t stare” or “mind your business” inadvertently tell children that what the autistic child or adult is doing is “wrong” or something to be ashamed of.

Along the lines of observing behaviors, remember that all behaviors serve a purpose. A tantrum or “noncompliance” is not the child being difficult or trying to upset an adult. They are letting us know they have had enough, do not understand what we are trying to do, or do not understand why we are trying to do something. Self-stimulating behaviors should not be a target in therapies. These are physical needs to self-regulate and make sense of a neurotypical world. The more an autistic individual suppresses the need to stim the more the individual will need to eventually “get it out” and it will likely be in a way that is not fun for them or others such as self-injurious behavior or a meltdown.

Some people may be reading this and thinking, “But what about all of the challenges? What about those who may never be able to live independently or have challenging behaviors day after day?” This blog is in no way saying that these challenges should be ignored. In fact, that would be just as ableist as saying the positive characteristics of autism should be ignored. What needs to be thought about is that we are not out there to “cure autism” or “teach a child to look typical.” We are out there to make an autistic person who has challenges become an autistic person with as little barriers in their life as possible.

One of the best things we can do is to listen to autistic voices. Autistic adults and children can teach us more about autism than any study or textbook can even begin to. Families who have loved ones with autism are also a wonderful resource. If it hasn’t been said clearly enough, the best thing to remember is that autistic individuals are just that- individual. They will all have different thoughts, feelings, and beliefs in regards to THEIR autism. Autism Acceptance begins with understanding that and valuing each individual for exactly who they are.