Question
What behavioral observations should occupational therapy practitioners prioritize during mental health evaluations?
Answer
During occupational therapy evaluations in mental health settings, behavioral and observational data offer crucial insights that complement verbal information. Practitioners should observe speech patterns, including tone, rate, and coherence. Pressured, tangential, or slowed speech can indicate underlying psychiatric symptoms such as mania, depression, or disorganized thinking. Mood assessment should be verbal and visual; offering a mood chart can help patients better articulate their feelings when verbal expression is limited.
Affect—the patient’s visible emotional expression—should be evaluated for appropriateness and range, including whether it appears flat, blunted, or labile. Physical behaviors such as restlessness, fidgeting, or frequent movement can point to internal distress or side effects from medication. Eye contact is another valuable indicator, though it must be interpreted in the context of cultural norms and individual comfort levels. Attention and engagement throughout the session are key markers; sustained attention versus distractibility can guide how the evaluation is paced and structured. These observations inform clinical reasoning, enhance therapeutic engagement, and contribute to accurate assessments and effective care planning.
This Ask the Expert is an edited excerpt from the course, Assessments In Mental Health, presented by Olivia Petrucci MS, OTR/L.