Cognitive Retraining in Adult Occupational Therapy
Cognitive retraining (cognitive rehabilitation) is a therapy used by Occupational Therapists to improve or compensate for impaired thinking skills so adults can perform daily activities safely and independently.
Goal: Not just thinking better, but functioning better in real life (ADLs, IADLs, work, and social roles).
Who Needs Cognitive Retraining?
- Neurological Conditions
- Stroke (CVA)
- Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
- Parkinson’s Disease
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Brain Tumors
- Epilepsy
- Psychiatric Conditions
- Schizophrenia
- Major Depressive Disorder
- Bipolar Disorder
- Anxiety Disorders
- Neurodegenerative Disorders
- Alzheimer’s Disease
- Vascular Dementia
- Frontotemporal Dementia
- Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI)
- Medical & Other Conditions
- Post-ICU Cognitive Syndrome
- Long COVID (“Brain Fog”)
- Substance Abuse
- Aging-related Cognitive Decline
Common Cognitive Areas Affected
- Attention
- Memory
- Executive Function
- Problem Solving
- Orientation
- Perception
Why Cognitive Retraining Is Important
- Improves Independence
Safe performance of ADLs & IADLs and reduced caregiver burden. - Enhances Occupational Performance
Supports return to work, social participation, and community reintegration. - Prevents Complications
Reduces falls, medication errors, and improves safety awareness. - Improves Quality of Life
Boosts confidence and emotional well-being. - Supports Long-Term Adaptation
Teaches coping strategies for permanent deficits.
Role of the Occupational Therapist
- Assess cognitive deficits during daily activities
- Create individualized, meaningful interventions
- Train caregivers
- Modify environments for safety
- Monitor progress and adjust strategies