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Abbreviation | AOTA |
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Founded | October 19, 1917[1] |
Type | Professional association |
13-1526422[2] | |
Legal status | 501(c)(6)[2] |
Purpose | To advance occupational therapy practice, education, and research through standard-setting and advocacy on behalf of its members, the profession, and the public.[2] |
Sherry Keramidas[3] | |
Subsidiaries | The Fund to Promote Awareness of Occupational Therapy (501(c)(3)), American Occupational Therapy Association Political Action Committee (527)[2] |
Revenue (2019) | $21,469,960[2] |
Expenses (2019) | $19,272,678[2] |
Endowment | $286,293 (2019)[2] |
Employees (2018) | 85[2] |
Volunteers (2018) | 800[2] |
Website | www |
Formerly called | National Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy |
The American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) is the national professional association established in 1917 to represent the interests and concerns of occupational therapy practitioners and students and improve the quality of occupational therapy services. AOTA membership is approximately 63,000 occupational therapists, occupational therapy assistants, and students.
The National Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy was the founding name of the AOTA. Occupational therapy was launched as a new profession at the first meeting of the National Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy at Consolation House, Clifton Springs, New York in March 1917. The Society was founded by a small group of people from diverse backgrounds. There was George Edward Barton (1871-1923) an architect, William Rush Dunton (1865-1966) a psychiatrist, Eleanor Clarke Slagle (1870-1942) a social worker and occupational therapist, Thomas B Kidner (1866-1932) a vocational educator, Susan Cox Johnson (1875-1932) an arts and crafts teacher, Susan E. Tracy (1864-1928) a nurse, Herbert James Hall (1870-1923) a physician and Isabel Gladwin Newton Barton (1891-1975) the secretary and author. Their wide ranging interests, including moral treatment, pragmatism, habit training, mental hygiene movement, curative occupations and the arts and craft movement, laid the foundations for occupational therapy.[4] [5] The founders' vision was the 'advancement of occupation as a therapeutic measure; for the study of the effect of occupation upon the human being; and for the scientific dispensation of this knowledge'.[6]
AOTA designated April as Occupational Therapy Month.[7]