Bottom line for Occupational Therapists
Occupational Therapists are exposed to AI through documentation, triage, scheduling, and decision-support tools, but the role is protected by patient trust, hands-on care, licensing, and accountability. At mid-career, the role typically blends automatable execution with accountability tasks that still require human ownership. In human services, adoption speed and regulatory context shape how quickly these task shifts appear.
Occupational Therapists are more likely to be augmented than replaced, but the role will still reward workers who learn to use AI well.