By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Occupational Therapy Intake Forms: What to Capture Before the First Treatment Session

The referral says "evaluate and treat." It does not say that the patient cannot button a shirt, cannot hold a fork without pain, has not been able to work for three months because of a repetitive strain injury, and is terrified that this is permanent. The physician referral tells the occupational therapist what the diagnosis is. The intake form tells the occupational therapist what the patient's life actually looks like right now — what they can do, what they cannot do, what they used to do, and what they need to get back to doing.

An occupational therapy intake form bridges the gap between the medical diagnosis and the functional reality. It captures the activities of daily living that the patient struggles with, the work tasks they cannot perform, the home environment they need to navigate, and the goals that will define whether treatment is successful. Without this information at the first visit, the therapist is designing a treatment plan based on a diagnosis code rather than a person.

Referral and diagnosis information

Insurance authorization for occupational therapy requires a physician referral in most states and under most payer contracts. Your intake must capture the referral chain:

Functional limitations: what the patient cannot do

This is what makes OT intake different from every other healthcare intake. The question is not "where does it hurt?" The question is "what can't you do?"

Medical history beyond the referral

The referral addresses the primary condition. The intake needs the full picture because co-existing conditions affect treatment planning:

Home environment and living situation

Occupational therapy is about function in context. The context is the patient's home, workplace, and community:

Treatment goals: the patient's words

Insurance requires functional, measurable goals. But the starting point should be the patient's own description of what they want to get back to:

Insurance and authorization: the administrative backbone

An OT practice that does not capture insurance details at intake is an OT practice that discovers authorization problems after treatment has already begun:

Why OT intake is different

Most healthcare intake forms ask about symptoms. An occupational therapy intake form asks about life. The question is not "what hurts?" but "what can you not do that you need to do?" The intake captures function, independence, environment, and goals — the data that transforms a diagnosis code into a treatment plan designed around an actual human being's actual daily life. Speech therapy practices take a similar function-first approach, focusing on communication and swallowing rather than pain, but with the same emphasis on capturing what the patient can and cannot do before the first session begins.

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