Season 5 Episode 5: Serving the Community Beyond the Caseload
In this episode of OT Coaching Confidential, Alyce sits down with Mary, an occupational therapist running her own private practice across several rural towns. After stabilising her caseload and building systems that support sustainable rural service delivery, Mary finds herself asking a new question. Not how to build a practice, but how she can best serve her community beyond individual therapy sessions.
Working in regional areas often means therapists see the gaps in services very clearly. Schools needing support, education assistants feeling overwhelmed, and limited access to professional development and therapy services. Mary shares how she is beginning to explore new ways to contribute to her community, including developing educator workshops that support school staff to better understand regulation, behaviour, and practical strategies for supporting students. We also explore the role rural therapists can play in growing the future workforce, including hosting student placements and increasing awareness of rural practice opportunities.
This conversation reflects a common shift many therapists experience after building a stable service. Once the day-to-day clinical work is running well, new possibilities begin to emerge around education, mentoring, and community support.
We explore:
- Moving from building a private practice to expanding community impact
- Supporting educators and school staff through workshops and training
- The realities and opportunities of rural occupational therapy practice
- Hosting student placements and strengthening the future workforce
- Recognising the expertise that comes from building a service independently
Key takeaways
Building a sustainable clinical caseload often creates space to explore broader community initiatives.
Supporting the adults around the child can have a powerful impact on outcomes for children.
Rural therapists often hold valuable knowledge about community needs that can inform education and training programs.
Student placements can play an important role in increasing awareness of rural practice and strengthening local services.
Therapists working independently may underestimate the expertise they have developed through building and sustaining a service.
Mentioned in this episode:
- Educator workshops and school-based training
- Student placements in rural communities
- Master timetable and structured scheduling approaches for rural practice
Brought to you by Alyce Svensk at The OT Coach Australia.
Supporting occupational therapists and allied health professionals to build confidence, clarity, and connection through mentoring, supervision, workshops, and The OT Coach Academy.
If this conversation resonated with you and you’d like support through supervision, business mentoring, or reflective practice, visit www.theotcoach.au to explore how The OT Coach Australia can support you.