Partnership expands international academic pathways, enabling Camosun kinesiology students streamlined entry into UWS’s Doctor of Chiropractic program.
The Community Solution Education System has entered a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Camosun College opening opportunities to develop academic pathways for Camosun students to all six institutions within the nonprofit system.
“The Community Solution was founded with the belief that cooperation among colleges and universities benefits both students and institutions,” said Michael Horowitz, Ph.D., chancellor of The Community Solution Education System. “This partnership with Camosun bridges educational opportunities internationally, allowing students to advance their professional goals and contribute to their communities in a meaningful way.”
The first of these is a formalized pathway for Camosun kinesiology students to access the Doctor of Chiropractic program at University of Western States (UWS).
“We are thrilled to collaborate with Camosun to develop pathways for students to further explore the field of chiropractic care,” said Nathan Long, Ed.D., president of UWS. “This partnership showcases our shared commitment to advancing whole-person health both in the U.S. and in Canada. As a proud member of The Community Solution Education System, we understand the critical role strategic relationships like this have in the advancement of student success and community impact. I look forward to seeing the relationship between UWS and Camosun blossom.”
The MoU will help establish a pathway for undergraduates to further their studies in chiropractic health care. The agreement creates a framework of benefits and collaborative offerings including the exchange of materials, joint research agendas and collection of data, and access to interdisciplinary grant opportunities. Additionally, Camosun kinesiology students enrolling in the chiropractic doctoral program at UWS are eligible to receive transfer credits for three courses (8.5 credits).
“We’re pleased to partner with The Community Solution to promote academic cooperation and provide opportunities for further education for Camosun College students,” said Carly Hall, Dean of Health Sciences and Human Service at Camosun College.
The Bachelor of Kinesiology program at Camosun is a four-year applied degree program that prepares students with the knowledge and skills to work in the fields of exercise physiology, kinesiology, exercise therapy, fitness, high-performance sport, adapted physical activity, health and community recreation.
The UWS Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) program is a rigorous, 12-quarter doctoral program designed to be completed in three years. Students learn from experienced faculty with practice experience and clinical training at the UWS campus in Portland, Ore. The UWS DC program qualifies graduates with the coursework required for licensure in the U.S. and Canada.
Explore how occupational therapists are redefining mental health care through practical, person-centered support.
Occupational therapy professionals (OTPs) have long been associated with physical rehabilitation, but their expertise increasingly plays a vital role in psychiatric care. From managing the impact of trauma to helping individuals rebuild disrupted lifestyles, the role of occupational therapists has become essential, offering personalized support that helps people function in their daily lives.
At University of Western States (UWS), this intersection of mental and functional health is core to the institution’s philosophy. Guided by a whole-person approach to health, UWS prepares occupational therapists to understand the full complexity of a person’s life, environment, and goals, training them to restore practical function.
Learn more about the impact OTPs are making within the field of mental health.
A Whole-Person, Function-First Philosophy
When mental health conditions take hold, even simple routines can unravel. Getting out of bed, showering, preparing a meal, or sticking to a sleep schedule can feel like monumental tasks. Through trauma-informed care practices, occupational therapists learn to see people as more than diagnoses. Their focus on function helps them empower patients to rebuild routines and reestablish confidence in their ability to navigate life.
“Think of it as the doing therapy instead of the talking therapy,” says Michele Tilstra, OTD, Ph.D. The founding program director for the Doctor of Occupational Therapy program at UWS, Dr. Tilstra has more than 30 years of OT experience, having practiced in hand therapy, home health, skilled nursing, and mental/ behavioral health. To her, an OTP’s work is grounded in the belief that healing happens through meaningful activity, helping patients reconnect with who they are and what they can do.
By focusing on function, not just symptoms, OTs empower people to rediscover balance and purpose in their everyday lives.
What Does It Mean To Be Function-First in OT?
In occupational therapy, every goal connects back to one thing: the functions needed for a patient’s daily life. “Function-first means everything we do has to apply to a daily activity,” says Dr. Tilstra. “Everything you do in your life counts as a function. Sleeping, getting dressed, showing up on time for work or school, sitting at a desk, grocery shopping: These are all functional tasks or your occupations.”
Being function-first means focusing on what people need to do: helping them adapt, stay engaged, and live with purpose each day. For clients living with depression, anxiety, or major life changes, OT care might involve rethinking routines that suddenly feel impossible. For example, “If someone loses a spouse, counseling helps with grief, while OTs look at how that loss affects daily life,” explains Dr. Tilstra. “Was the spouse responsible for paying bills, buying groceries, or keeping track of appointments? How can the patient maintain functioning while still working through their grief? In OT, we step in to help them build systems that make everything more manageable.”
This lens also aligns with the University of Western States commitment to whole–person health, which recognizes how physical, mental, socio-economic, cultural, and environmental factors intersect to impact well-being.
Collaboration and Care Teams: Why Occupational Therapists Belong in Mental Health
Imagine someone facing depression who can’t get out of bed to take their medication or prepare a meal, or a trauma survivor struggling to focus at work. OTPs step in to help rebuild routines, adapt environments, and create strategies that make daily life more manageable and meaningful.
This practical, person-centered approach reflects the values of University of Western States where collaboration is at the heart of the educational experience. Students in the Doctor of Occupational Therapy program learn to think across disciplines, combining evidence, empathy, and real-world understanding to support whole person health. This prepares students for the collaborative nature of occupational therapy. OTPs often collaborate with other mental health providers to create integrated treatment plans that center both clinical and functional recovery.
How Is an Occupational Therapist Different From a Counselor, Psychologist, Psychiatrist, or Social Worker?
Occupational therapy and counseling often go hand in hand: one helps people understand their struggles, while the other helps them live differently because of that understanding.
“Counseling is where you go deep into the ‘why,’ while OT is about the ‘how,’” explains Dr. Tilstra. “We’re always applying what we talk about to daily life.” She notes that more than half of her clients see both a counselor and an OT.
While counselors help clients explore and process trauma, OTPs focus on how those experiences show up in everyday routines. “OTPs are trauma-informed and aware of factors that contribute to behaviors, but we focus on the day-to-day activities people are struggling to accomplish.”
For example, when a client experienced anxiety after being attacked in a grocery store, counseling helped her process the trauma. Occupational therapy focused on the next step: rebuilding confidence to return to the store. “We looked at what was stopping her and created small, practical goals to help her get back to doing what she needed to do,” Dr. Tilstra says.
What Does OT Care Look Like for Different Age Groups?
Occupational therapy is a valuable resource for patients across ages and backgrounds. In community-based practice, Dr. Tilstra serves a wide range of neurodivergent clients with autism, ADHD, anxiety, or depression, from toddlers to adults in their 60s. “With the little ones, it’s a lot of sensory regulation: teaching families about sensory needs and how to meet them in healthy ways,” she explains. “For adults, it might be about organization, task initiation, or giving them permission to find strategies that actually work for them.”
Dr. Tilstra recalled working with a college student newly diagnosed with ADHD who struggled with organization and self-doubt. “We went through his syllabi, mapped out his schedule, and built in time for work, exercise, and socializing. It was the first time he had seen his whole life in one view,” she says. “He left with strategies that worked for his brain, and permission to do things differently.”
In school settings and nursing homes, OTPs will sometimes create dedicated sensory rooms (depending on state and institutional resources). For pediatric patients, these rooms might feature climbing features, bubble tubes, swings, soft textures, compression vests, and compression tunnels to help with calming. In assisted living facilities, these rooms might have quiet music, calming scents, bubble tubes, soft textures, and baby dolls.
Beyond the sensory room, environmental modifications benefit patients of all ages, creating comfort and preserving dignity. Dr. Tilstra shares an example of an elderly patient who is hesitant to shower: “Sometimes it’s because they’re embarrassed, cold, or just don’t understand what’s happening,” she says. “It’s amazing what lowering the lights and putting a robe around them to keep them warm can do to reduce agitation and improve some behaviors.”
No matter the age or diagnosis, the goal is the same: helping clients understand themselves, build practical coping tools, and move toward greater balance and independence.
What Mental Health Conditions Are Supported by Occupational Therapy?
Occupational therapy professionals in mental health settings support clients across a wide range of diagnoses. While the specifics vary, here are some of the most common conditions and the functional strategies OTs bring to care:
Depression: Reestablishing routines, increasing engagement in activities, and overcoming fatigue and low motivation
Anxiety Disorders: Grounding techniques, calming routines, and trigger management
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): Trauma-informed safety strategies, sensory regulation, and gradual reentry into community
Substance Use Disorders: Healthy-lifestyle routines, relapse-prevention strategies, and reintegration into work, school, or community
Serious Mental Illness (e.g., schizophrenia, bipolar disorder): Independent-living skills, medication management, social participation, and vocational readiness
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD): Organizational strategies, time management tools, and sensory regulation techniques
For example, in patients with schizophrenia, OT interventions have been found to improve social functioning and cognitive performance, reducing the duration and rate of rehospitalization. By focusing on function and context, OTPs help clients carry therapeutic progress into daily life.
Where Do Occupational Therapists Serve?
Occupational therapy professionals make a difference wherever people need help finding their strength and independence. While many work in hospitals or clinics, OTs serve across a variety of settings. UWS graduates will go on to serve in roles within skilled nursing facilities, transitional housing programs, nonprofit agencies, and more.
Inpatient and psychiatric settings
In hospital and psychiatric environments, OTPs lead practical, hands-on sessions that help patients reestablish daily routines like cooking, nutrition, hygiene, and budgeting.
“It’s not always about the physical act itself,” Dr. Tilstra says. “Sometimes it’s about helping someone remember to take care of themselves: bathing, dressing, or preparing meals.”
These activities build life skills patients can carry into everyday life after discharge.
Community and Outpatient Clinics
In community-based care, therapy becomes highly individualized as OTPs help clients navigate real-world challenges.
“If someone has panic attacks, it might take us three weeks to work toward going to the grocery store,” Dr. Tilstra says. “We plan together, build familiarity, and practice coping strategies, breaking big fears into manageable steps.”
These sessions combine emotional awareness with real-world problem-solving to rebuild confidence and independence.
Creative and Group-Based Therapies
OTs use shared, purposeful activities (such as crafts, cooking, or team projects) to build emotional regulation and social skills in safe, engaging ways.
Occupational therapy has deep roots in creative, activity-based interventions, and those methods are making a comeback. Participating in activities (such as crafts, cooking, or team projects) builds emotional regulation and social skills in safe, engaging ways.
“I might have a group of four adolescent boys building birdhouses,” Dr. Tilstra says. “While they’re working, we’re talking about anger: what happens when you start to feel it, and what you can do differently.”
Using the birdhouse example, Dr. Tilstra emphasizes how activity-based interventions help cultivate problem-solving skills. “If there aren’t enough materials for everyone to make their birdhouses, for example, they learn to share and work together,” she says. “Those are real social skills, and it all falls under the OT umbrella,” Dr. Tilstra says.
Forensic and Correctional Settings
In state hospitals, youth detention centers, and forensic units, OTPs often focus on long-term independence and reintegration.
“We work on transitional living skills,” explains Dr. Tilstra. “That is, what it takes to care for yourself, make safe choices, and build friendships that lead to healthier outcomes.”
These sessions often include anger management, stress management, and social skill development, all of which are critical tools for stability and self-sufficiency.
Looking Ahead: Why the Mental Health Field Needs More Occupational Therapists
The demand for mental health professionals is rapidly outpacing supply, especially in community-based and rural settings. At the same time, the field continues to broaden its understanding of what effective care looks like.
Effective mental health care extends beyond talk therapy or crisis stabilization. It also requires structured, everyday support that allows individuals to rebuild their lives.
Occupational therapy professionals address such needs. Their training in function, context, trauma, and daily living makes them essential members of any modern mental health care team.
And the workforce need is only growing: The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects a 14% increase in demand for occupational therapists through 2032, much faster than average job growth. This is driven by aging populations, increased attention to chronic illness, and expanding recognition of OTP’s role in mental and behavioral health. “There’s a big gap in care,” Dr. Tilstra says. “Currently, there aren’t enough OTPs to serve the aging population.”
Why Should Someone Pursue a Degree in Occupational Therapy?
For Dr. Tilstra, the beauty of a career in occupational therapy lies in its remarkable variety. “In more than 30 years, I’ve worked in acute care, inpatient rehab, psychiatry, home health, hand therapy, and even pediatric occupational therapy, something I never thought I’d do,” she shares. “The best part is, I’ve always been an OT.”
Whether working with clients for hours each day in a rehab setting, traveling to patients’ homes, or treating children in a playful, creative environment, Dr. Tilstra found that occupational therapy offered endless opportunities to grow. “If you ever feel stagnant, you can take a continuing education class, attend a conference, or develop a new skill set,” she says. “You can completely change your trajectory and still stay within this field.”
How UWS Prepares Occupational Therapists for the Future of Mental Health Care
University of Western States is preparing students to meet this need with the launch of its new Doctor of Occupational Therapy (OTD) program, a flexible, hybrid occupational therapy degree designed with working professionals and career changers in mind. Students complete most of their coursework online with limited on-campus residencies, making the program accessible without requiring relocation.
“As the first occupational therapy program within our system, this launch represents a significant step in expanding our ability to impact health care delivery,” says Michael Horowitz, Ph.D., chancellor of The Community Solution Education System. “By offering a flexible and forward-thinking pathway into occupational therapy, UWS is preparing a new generation of practitioners to provide care that addresses not just physical needs, but the overall well-being of the individuals and communities they serve.”
Snapshot of the Occupational Therapist Program
From the very first semester, students take a four-credit mental health course designed to establish a foundation in mental health that runs through every subsequent part of the curriculum. “We wanted students to start with mental health because it’s the foundation for the remaining coursework in the program,” Dr. Tilstra says. “Mental health is woven into everything: our adult and geriatric courses, pediatrics, and even anatomy.”
Early fieldwork experiences reinforce this foundation. The first Level I fieldwork focuses entirely on mental health, giving students experience interviewing clients, writing evaluations and treatment plans, and leading group therapy sessions. “They plan and run social skills or anger management groups—seeing firsthand how people work through challenges together,” Dr. Tilstra explains.
Students also train through video simulations of challenging client behaviors to build confidence for real-world situations. Just as importantly, they’re encouraged to develop self-awareness and understand their own emotional triggers. “Part of mental health is knowing yourself,” emphasizes Dr. Tilstra. “If you haven’t dealt with your own trauma, it’s going to be difficult when you’re sitting with someone else’s pain.”
This holistic approach extends to advising, too. Each student is paired with both a faculty and a student affairs advisor who check in on academics and overall wellness. “They’re not just students,” Dr. Tilstra says. “They’re whole people. When they graduate, we want them emotionally intact and ready to care for others.”
By combining evidence-based training with a whole-person health approach, the OTD program at UWS equips future occupational therapists to support recovery.
Join the Next Generation of Occupational Therapy Leaders
University of Western States prepares students to become thoughtful, evidence-informed practitioners who honor the complexity of human health. Through programs grounded in rigorous science and compassionate understanding, UWS equips future occupational therapists to support recovery with excellent care.
By blending function and research with empathy, today’s OTs are making mental health care more practical and effective.
Explore how UWS faculty blend science, experience, and patient care to teach evidence-informed naturopathic medicine.
By Bryanna Somers
In naturopathy, being evidence-informed means leaning on the best available research while also considering a patient’s lived experience and the emerging science that hasn’t yet made its way into formal guidelines. In doing so, naturopathic doctors (NDs) meet patients where they are and create a plan that’s both safe and deeply personal.
To dig deeper into what evidence-informed medicine means in practice, we sat down with Marcia Prenguber, ND, dean of the Naturopathic Medicine program at University of Western States (UWS). A leader in integrative oncology and naturopathic medicine, Dr. Prenguber explains how evidence-informed care can support patients through diagnosis, treatment, and beyond.
What Evidence-Informed Care Means in Naturopathic Medicine
At its core, being evidence-informed means drawing on all the information available to make the best possible decision for a unique patient. In naturopathic medicine, that evidence can include:
Published research from peer-reviewed journals
Smaller-scale studies and observational findings
Traditional knowledge of therapies used safely for generations
Clinical wisdom from providers’ real-world experience
Patient presentation and preferences, which shape how care should be delivered
Dr. Prenguber describes the evidence-informed approach as building a pyramid. Each layer of information—research, case reports, clinical wisdom, patient presentation—narrows the choices until the right approach for that individual patient becomes clear. “This allows us to build a picture of the person and what their conditions are,” she says. “By the time you reach the top of the pyramid, you have a treatment plan that’s grounded in science and also tailored to the whole person in front of you.”
Whole-Person Health in Naturopathy Training
A defining feature of the UWS naturopathic medicine program is its grounding in whole person health. Students are taught to see patients not as a set of symptoms but as complex individuals whose physical, emotional, social, and environmental realities all shape their health.
Dr. Prenguber shares an example: Two patients may arrive with the same respiratory infection. One is a young athlete living in a sunny climate; the other is an older patient living alone in a damp apartment.
“The condition might be the same on paper, but the treatment won’t likely be the same,” she explains. “It’s about who the person is.”
Evidence-Informed vs. Evidence-Based: What’s the Difference?
The terms “evidence-based” and “evidence-informed” are often used interchangeably, but in naturopathic medicine, they mean very different things.
Evidence-based care typically relies on standardized treatment protocols drawn from large clinical trials. It asks, “What intervention has been proven most effective for the majority of patients with this condition?” While this approach offers clarity, it can also leave out the unique circumstances, values, and lived experiences of individual patients.
Evidence-informed care, on the other hand, starts with the research but doesn’t end there. It also considers smaller-scale studies, clinical wisdom from years of practice, traditional knowledge, and (most importantly) the patient’s personal story, all of which contribute to whole person health.
Dr. Prenguber explains, “I can gather all the double-blind placebo studies, but those don’t always tell us what we need to know for this particular patient. Evidence-informed care asks us to listen, observe, and think critically about who they are and what will help them most.”
In practice, this distinction matters. Evidence-based care might recommend the same treatment for every patient with a digestive disorder. Evidence-informed care recognizes that one patient’s lifestyle, emotional health, and environment may call for a different approach than another’s, even if the diagnosis is the same.
“No study can tell us who this person is or what matters most to them,” Dr. Prenguber says. “We have to listen, observe, and think critically. That’s what evidence-informed means.”
The Naturopathic Toolkit: Homeopathy, Botanicals, and Beyond
Naturopathic doctors rely on an expansive toolkit that includes homeopathy, botanical medicine, nutrition, physical medicine, and lifestyle care. Each therapy comes with its own kind of evidence, and UWS faculty help students learn how to weigh it all.
Homeopathy, for example, is one of the most individualized therapies. “Two patients with the same respiratory infection might receive different remedies depending on how their symptoms present,” Dr. Prenguber says. “For example, maybe one wants to stay home in bed to recover, while another seeks activity and company.”
Botanical medicine requires creativity too. Students learn not just about single herbs but how to combine them into tinctures that have a driving force, supporting remedies and even considerations such as taste. Nutrition adds another layer of complexity, one in which countless dietary approaches exist, and the challenge is deciding which one best fits a patient’s needs and circumstances.
“We draw from conventional research,” says Dr. Prenguber, “but we also look at smaller studies, faculty and practitioner experience, and what we know about how a patient will respond. It’s about making smart choices based on all the evidence we have.”
This diversity of approaches ensures that UWS students learn to evaluate options, balance evidence, and adapt care to the person in front of them.
How UWS Prepares Students for Real-World Naturopathic Practice
UWS students begin their education with the sciences, including physiology, anatomy, and diagnostics.
As they progress in the program, they learn more about the symptoms that inform the condition (in courses such as gastroenterology, cardiovascular health, homeopathy, botanical medicine, and nutrition). What does it mean when two people share the same diagnosis but experience it completely differently? How does stress or environment change the way an illness unfolds?
By the time students reach the clinic, they’re ready to apply this learning with real patients. Here, they learn to treat diverse cases under the supervision of naturopathic physicians with different specialties.
“This hands-on training is where students learn to bridge the science they’ve studied with the human stories unfolding in front of them,” Dr. Prenguber says. This also helps students see firsthand that there are many safe and effective ways to approach a condition.
Evidence-Informed Care in Action
Dr. Prenguber recalls supervising a student who was working with a cancer patient. The student pressed ahead with clinical questions, even after the patient mentioned the recent loss of her father. With expertise in oncology, Dr. Prenguber took note, then said, “Tell me more about your experience navigating the death of your father.”
“Her grief around her father’s death was impacting her ability to heal,” Dr. Prenguber says. Grief was at the center of the patient’s healing journey, and addressing this grief became just as important as treating her physical symptoms. “Once we realized this, the student was able to help her navigate her grief with a homeopathic remedy, which then allowed her to focus on the health challenges she had with her cancer.”
Moments like these remind students that patient stories are a form of evidence, too. Evidence-informed education trains students to notice those details, to hold space for them, and to integrate them alongside science.
The Impact of Evidence-Informed Naturopathy on Students and Patients
As students grow more comfortable with the evidence-informed model, they begin to see themselves differently. “I see students light up when it clicks,” Dr. Prenguber says. “They walk into clinic and realize, ‘Oh, I can do this.’”
That confidence translates directly into patient care. When practitioners can explain the reasoning behind a recommendation and show how it fits the patient’s life, it builds trust, and that trust becomes part of the healing process itself.
Mentorship and Faculty Leadership in Naturopathy Training
At UWS, faculty are practicing naturopathic doctors with specialties ranging from homeopathy and botanical medicine to nutrition and lifestyle care. Each brings their own perspective into the classroom, which means students see that there are often many safe and effective ways to approach the same health concern.
“We talk openly about our own approaches,” Dr. Prenguber says. “If I get a sore throat, I might reach for one remedy. Another faculty member might do something completely different, and that’s OK. We model openness and humility in our choices.”
This diversity helps students learn to weigh options, evaluate evidence, and trust their clinical judgment.
“We want students to see that there isn’t always one ‘right’ answer in naturopathic medicine,” Dr. Prenguber adds. “What matters is learning how to evaluate evidence, apply it thoughtfully, and remain open to the patient in front of you.”
Faculty also serve as mentors beyond the clinic. They guide students in understanding the day-to-day realities of practice: how to manage uncertainty, how to communicate effectively with patients, and how to stay grounded in compassion when care becomes complex. Dr. Prenguber reminds students that their presence matters as much as their prescriptions: “Sometimes what heals most is that the patient feels heard, understood, and supported.”
Through these relationships, students begin to find their own voices as clinicians. They learn to balance rigor with creativity, to ask better questions, and to see patient care not as a formula but as an evolving partnership.
Ready To Explore a Career in Naturopathic Medicine?
If you’re ready to practice a model of care that sees the whole person, UWS can help you get there.
Learn how a whole-person, evidence-informed approach to care sets UWS students apart in the field of integrative health.
Joshua Rubinstein, ND, explains how naturopathic medicine programs blend science and natural care to prepare future doctors for whole-person health.
By Kim Smart
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Naturopathic medicine blends scientific training with natural, whole-person care to help patients address the root causes of illness.
Strong naturopathic medicine programs combine rigorous coursework with extensive clinical experience to prepare students for licensure and practice.
Graduates can pursue flexible careers in primary care, research, education, and integrative health settings.
Joshua Rubinstein, ND, associate dean of Clinical Education, Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine program at University of Western States, describes naturopathic medicine as a gentler form of medicine. “We’re excellent primary care providers,” he says. “We have so many tools and methods that, most of the time, are going to be gentler on the body. This can be especially helpful with patients’ long-term health goals.”
Naturopaths train on the foundations of health and in taking time to understand a patient’s diet, exercise habits, sleep patterns, and how they handle stress. When a patient makes changes in these areas, they often resolve many of their issues. Using both holistic practices and evidence-based research, naturopathic doctors connect emerging evidence with clinical practice, focusing on root causes of illness rather than just symptoms.
1. Why do future doctors choose naturopathic medicine over conventional medicine?
Naturopathic medicine attracts students who want to treat the whole person with natural, science-based primary care.
Naturopathic medicine is well suited for both doctors and patients looking for a more natural and individualized health care experience. “I think medicine, in general, aspires to treat the individual,” Dr. Rubinstein says,” but I feel like naturopathic medicine really excels at that, partly because we have so many different ways of working with that individual.”
“Naturopathic doctors have a comprehensive ability to address a problem, especially chronic conditions,” Dr. Rubinstein adds. “We have the training to put that primary care hat on.” An ND sees everyone from infants to the elderly with visits that are typically much longer than those in conventional medicine. This allows doctors and patients to develop a deeper and more trusted relationship.
2. What should prospective students look for in a top naturopathic medicine school or program?
Choose programs with expert faculty, strong clinical training, functional medicine, and accreditation.
Dr. Rubinstein recommends a program with instructors who’ve practiced naturopathy before, one that offers good clinical experience, and one that teaches students how to safely prescribe both botanicals and pharmaceuticals.
Learning functional medicine in naturopathy is also essential. “Functional medicine is woven into our naturopathy doctoral program, which sets our program apart from most.” Rubinstein explained. “Students learn to use evidence-based research to deliver specific protocols for a given condition. This gives our graduates confidence to go right into practice with the ability to address a wide variety of different concerns, knowing a protocol is backed by science. Then, as they gain clinical experience, they can diversify and try varied approaches.”
Courses that focus on entrepreneurial and business practices are important for preparing you to have your own practice. And accreditation is essential for those who want to get licensed and practice as a naturopathic doctor. Dr. Rubinstein says UWS currently has candidacy status and hopes to take the last step in accreditation by the end of 2026.
3. How rigorous is naturopathic medical school, and what should students expect academically?
Expect a rigorous, science-based curriculum focused on anatomy, biology, chemistry, and clinical skills.
You should expect a naturopathic program to be rigorous, so a good science foundation will help prepare you. Admissions for naturopathic medicine tend to be similar across programs, typically requiring a completed bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution with a minimum GPA of 3.0 or higher, and specific prerequisite science courses like biology and chemistry with labs.
“I love to encourage folks to take anatomy before they come here as well, because gross anatomy is part of that first-year push,” Dr. Rubinstein says. “That background helps you start on the right foot, because it’s a lot of memorization and the more familiar you are with a topic like that, the easier it’s going to be.”
Skills and coursework needed for ND programs may vary from school to school, but at University of Western States, you’ll have courses in the following areas:
Philosophy and principles of naturopathic medicine
Basic sciences
Foundations of functional medicine
Clinical, physical and laboratory diagnosis
Environmental medicine
Therapeutic modalities including nutrition, botanical medicine, homeopathy, hydrotherapy, minor surgery, mind-body medicine, stress reduction therapies, injections and intravenous therapy and physical therapeutic procedures and modalities, including articular joint mobilization and manipulation, myofascial and soft tissue therapy.
4. How much clinical and hands-on experience will students get in a naturopathic medicine program?
Students complete more than 1,250 hours of supervised training with diverse patients in real clinics.
Anyone working toward a naturopathic medicine degree needs clinical experience, with an average of 1,100-1,200 hours of hands-on clinical training.
“Students get a lot of clinical experience here at [University of] Western States. We have a no-cost naturopathic medical clinic that allows us to see a wide diversity of income levels and people of different backgrounds who may not otherwise have access to naturopathic medicine,” Dr. Rubinstein says. “We also are in the process of establishing some different off-site clinical shifts that also will expand our ability to work with different communities in the greater Portland area.”
During your clinical rotations, you’ll see patients under the direction of a supervisor who consults on your diagnoses and suggested treatment plans.
5. What skills and qualities help students succeed in naturopathic medicine?
Curiosity, empathy, organization, and communication skills drive success in naturopathic medicine.
Dr. Rubinstein mentions several indicators of success, starting with a strong academic background, especially in the sciences, and good organizational skills. “You have a tremendous amount of information to learn, so how do you effectively study it? How do you effectively organize the material so you can pull it up for reference later?”
You should also demonstrate a strong interest in natural medicine and possess qualities like empathy and curiosity. “A natural curiosity about the world and the body and how things work is essential,” he says. “Rather than just prescribing something, we really do aspire to understand the underlying physiology and the best ways we can help each patient.”
Good communication skills and a strong ability to connect with people are also important in naturopathic medicine. That’s because patient-centered care means you’ll be helping people feel safe and supported, as well as helping them clarify their objectives and goals.
“The best naturopaths are the ones who’ve been doing their own work on themselves, trying to figure out where their growing edge is,” he adds. “That’s because as you become more and more comfortable with yourself, you can be more present for your patient and really separate their issues from your own.”
Lastly, being comfortable promoting yourself and talking about naturopathic medicine goes a long way toward future success and happiness. “Those who succeed in their careers have a vision for how they want to practice,” he says.
6. What career paths and job opportunities can graduates pursue with a naturopathic medicine degree?
Graduates enter private practice, research, teaching, or public health with flexibility and independence.
The naturopathic doctor career path is wide and varied. “You really can chart your own path,” Dr. Rubinstein says. “Many of our graduates go into private practice, which allows you to determine how you practice, the hours you keep, and where you work. Those are all things you have a lot of freedom to decide for yourself.”
But there’s also much more beyond clinical practice. There are also academic roles, research, entrepreneurship, consulting, and public health, with positions in integrative clinics, hospitals, universities and various healthcare organizations.
“Part of what I love about it is that you’re never going to be bored in your career as a naturopathic doctor,” Dr. Rubinstein says. “There are always new modalities and ways to apply older ideas in a new and novel way, so you’ll never you’ll never run out of things to study and learn as a naturopathic doctor throughout your career.”
“I encourage all folks thinking about applying to our program to go talk to some practicing naturopathic doctors to hear what it’s like to be in practice and get some perspectives. And talk to more than one, because again, there’s a lot of diversity within our profression.” Then he added, “Go see a naturopathic doctor as a patient, too.”
Learn more about earning your naturopathic medicine degree
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Natasha Smet, OTD, highlights the shared qualities that set students up for success in occupational therapy careers.
by Isabel Nelson
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
Occupational therapy can be a great fit for those who demonstrate empathy, flexibility, good communication skills, and a curiosity for learning.
An occupational therapy career is ideal for students with a drive to help people emotionally as well as physically.
The new Doctor of Occupational Therapy program at UWS will help students of any background succeed in training for a career in OT.
What kind of people make good occupational therapists? For Natasha Smet, OTD, OTR/L, FAOTA, associate professor and academic fieldwork coordinator of University of Western States’ new Doctor of Occupational Therapy program, the seeds to her career path were sown in an unlikely place. “When I was in high school, a classmate said to me, ‘You should be an occupational therapist.’ I said, ‘I have no idea what that is.’” When the classmate explained it was a nod to Dr. Smet’s creative side as well as her passion for science, she took the compliment and filed the notion of OT away.
Years later, she pursued that notion, leading her to a fulfilling career in therapy and education. Now, she develops tools for inclusive education that welcomes the “beautiful differences” she sees in her students. In fact, there are many traits of a good occupational therapist that Dr. Smet sees in common in students who go on to success in that career.
If you want to learn more about how to become an occupational therapist, Dr. Smet shares inside knowledge about the signs you should become an occupational therapist.
1. Flexibility and Adaptability Make You a Strong Fit for Occupational Therapy
OT students “have to roll with things” because the field demands adaptability across diverse patients and settings.
“One of the things I think any occupational therapy student has to have is flexibility and adaptability,” Dr. Smet says. “I think that is really important. You have to roll with things.” Since the field encompasses so many settings and therapies and a diverse array of patient needs, both an OT education and the career itself call for students and practitioners to adapt to a multitude of situations.
Dr. Smet advises prospective students wondering about how to become an occupational therapist to research the field before jumping in, as those with a limited understanding of its breadth may be surprised to learn what the job entails. “They’re like, ‘What do you mean I’m going to have to wipe a person’s bottom?’” she says, “but it takes a person with an incredible ability, heart, and mind to be an occupational therapist.”
2. Curiosity and Love of Learning Are Signs You’ll Thrive as an OT
Trained as generalists, occupational therapists can “level up” their skills and pursue new settings to expand their knowledge, Dr. Smet says.
The existence of subspecialties within occupational therapy may appeal to those who are passionate about continuing their education after graduation or who like to follow new interests. Occupational therapists are trained as generalists, meaning there are opportunities to work in other areas of practice.
Dr. Smet says that, as a person who likes to keep her brain occupied, those possibilities were very exciting: “I knew that if I didn’t want to stay within one area of practice, I could change, level up my skills and change my practice setting or change my area of practice.” In a field as varied as occupational therapy, in which a student might even work with horses or dogs as therapeutic tools, a student with a curious mind and a passion for learning would likely be a good fit.
3. Enjoying Science but Not Math Doesn’t Rule Out an Occupational Therapy Career
Occupational therapy can be a “perfect fit” for science lovers who don’t necessarily excel at or enjoy math.
The health care industry can be daunting for students who found math challenging in their earlier education. Dr. Smet says occupational therapy is often a good fit for such students, and she speaks from personal experience. Although she enjoyed the biological sciences, she was intimidated by chemistry and math. “I started college a lot later than most people do because of my own fears and my self-limiting beliefs,” Dr. Smet says, “but that’s why occupational therapy was a perfect fit for me. I find it’s a profession that captures everybody for whom math and science wasn’t their strength or their perceived strength.”
Dr. Smet also believes that good educators can make those subjects more accessible to neurodivergent people too. “There’s so many talented neurodivergent people in this profession, and they go on to receive Ph.D.s in occupational therapy and other disciplines, even though they were told they weren’t good at math or science. They just hadn’t met the right educators or found their people yet.”
4. Seeking Community and Mentorship Is a Trait of Good Occupational Therapists
Dr. Smet says occupational therapy graduates often become proud colleagues with lifelong connections.
If your dream job involves networking and mentorship, you have one of the key traits of a good occupational therapist. “In this profession, we welcome you into a professional community,” Dr. Smet says. “We look forward to having you as our future colleague because we want to see you at professional conferences.”
Dr. Smet says that one of the great joys of educating in the field of occupational therapy is taking her students not just to the finish line but beyond it. “We want to be the types of people that say, ‘That was one of our graduates, and we’re so proud that they’re one of our colleagues.’” Dr. Smet says the desire to work with future students is reflected in the work that has been put into building the new OTD program. “We’re excited to welcome this new cohort joining the best profession.”
5. Empathy and Communication Skills Define Successful Occupational Therapists
Empathy is a core trait of a good occupational therapist. “You’ve got to put your heart into what you do,” Dr. Smet says.
One of the qualities Dr. Smet finds crucial in occupational therapists and OT students is empathy. “It’s very rare to find a learner coming into an occupational therapy program who doesn’t already come in wanting to be a helper,” she says. Students who don’t prioritize empathy or whose focus is only financial gain, Dr. Smet says, don’t suit the role well. “The people who think they’re coming in to make the big bucks, they don’t last very long. We can usually see those players pretty quickly and early on.” Dr. Smet says OT is a job that she puts her whole heart into, as a practitioner and an educator, and that successful occupational therapists do the same.
Dr. Smet adds that it’s also important for any health care provider to have good communication skills but that some parts of the role of an occupational therapist, particularly treating patients with specific needs or limitations, require high-level communication skills: “You have to be adaptable with your communication skills and your style, because you have to be able to communicate at varying levels to meet a patient and a client where they’re at.”
6. Creative Problem-Solvers Often Excel in Occupational Therapy Careers
Calling OTs “solution architects,” Dr. Smet highlights the blend of compassion, science, and creativity that defines the profession.
If a student enjoys using creative solutions or out-of-the-box thinking to solve problems, that might indicate they would be a good fit for occupational therapy. Dr. Smet describes herself and other OTs as “solution architects” because of their creative approaches to critical problem solving and providing care that best suits patients’ unique needs.
“Occupational therapy is a blend of compassion, science, creativity, and culture,” Dr. Smet says. “You have to have a lot of different skills to be a well-rounded occupational therapist. You have to have a good critical-thinking brain.”
7. Passion for Mental Health Care Is a Key Trait for Occupational Therapists
Occupational therapy careers go beyond physical healing. “Everything we do has a mental health component,” Dr. Smet says.
According to Dr. Smet, there’s a common misconception that occupational therapy is about treating only the hands or the upper body. OT is much more about working with the whole body, and that includes the mind. Dr. Smet says, “If you talk to a hand therapist, like our program director, Dr. Michele Tilstra, she will tell you: 90% of her job as a hand therapist is mental health, because you do most of your work talking to the person.”
“Body dysmorphia after injuries, emotional regulation in child patients, everything we do has a mental health component,” Dr. Smet says. If a career in health care appeals to you, and you value a whole-person approach to healing, occupational therapy might be an ideal career path for you to pursue.
Start Your Occupational Therapy Career With the UWS Doctor of Occupational Therapy Program
Ready to take the next step? Start your application today by completing the form below to connect with our admissions team. Discover how the UWS OTD program can help you achieve your goals.
If you’ve been wondering how to become an occupational therapist or searching for the best graduate programs for occupational therapy, the new Doctor of Occupational Therapy (OTD) program at University of Western States is built to help you succeed.
In just two years, this hybrid program prepares you with the knowledge, clinical experience, and professional support network to launch your career as an occupational therapist. Pending accreditation, graduates will also be eligible to sit for the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT) Certification Exam.
Ready to take the next step? Start your application today by completing the form below to connect with our admissions team. Discover how the UWS OTD program can help you achieve your goals.
Occupational therapy is one of the fastest-growing health care professions, driven by an aging population, increasing rates of chronic conditions, and the need for rehabilitation after illness or injury. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, employment of occupational therapists is projected to grow 14 percent between 2024 and 2034—much faster than the average for all occupations.
“The launch of the Doctor of Occupational Therapy program reflects our deep commitment to preparing the next generation of health care leaders who are grounded in a whole-person approach,” said Nathan Long, Ed.D., president of UWS. “This program offers students the flexibility to pursue a meaningful career in occupational therapy without having to uproot from their communities.”
Created with working professionals and career changers in mind, the UWS OTD program uses an innovative hybrid model that combines primarily online coursework with a small number of intensive on-campus residency experiences. This structure removes relocation barriers common to many traditional programs while maintaining a rigorous, hands-on education.
Candidacy Status is the first step in the multi-phase accreditation process. It recognizes that the university’s OTD program has demonstrated substantial compliance with ACOTE’s rigorous standards and is progressing on the pathway toward full accreditation. The program will next undergo a pre-accreditation review and on-site evaluation before being considered for Accreditation Status. Once that milestone is achieved, graduates will be eligible to sit for the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT®) examination to become licensed Occupational Therapists, Registered (OTR).The UWS OTD program is now accepting applications.
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