Discover what a recreational therapist is and if it is a good career choice based on salary, duties, responsibilities, training, job satisfaction, and more.
Recreational therapy is a unique form of therapy that involves leisure activities. Sometimes, patients with physical or mental illnesses, injuries, or disabilities require extra help to carry out what might be considered everyday hobbies.
As a recreational therapist, you would get to design and deliver recreational forms of treatment to address patients' needs. You would provide treatments as programs to improve or maintain a person's cognitive functions, physical health, and mental well-being.
Read on to learn more about what a recreational therapist is and gain insight into this rewarding career in health care.
Recreational therapists use activities such as arts and crafts, music, dance, drama, sports, swimming, movement, and community trips to support their patients. As a recreational therapist, you would design interventions to help reduce anxiety, depression, stress, and physical symptoms and aid recovery.
You might also help people socialize and be in the world after a physical disability or being isolated through illness, situations that can cause a lack of confidence and increased anxiety. Some recreational therapists conduct therapy in groups to foster socialization, bringing patients with similar needs together. They may also work with individuals' families to ensure appropriate support for their loved ones.
Recreational therapy covers a wide range of activities and serves various individuals. Whoever you are working with, your duties and responsibilities as a recreational therapist will primarily cover the following:
Evaluating the needs of patients by reviewing medical records, speaking with family members and other medical professionals, observing and interviewing the patients, and conducting tests
Creating and delivering treatment plans that include recreational activities to address the needs of patients
Designing and delivering group programs to meet the needs of patients requiring similar treatment or recovering from the same condition or injury or those with similar interests
Planning interventions to keep patients safe and supported
Supporting patients to develop social skills and build confidence
Teaching patients ways to reduce stress, anxiety, and depression through various activities
Recording patients' progress and reporting to relevant parties
Continually evaluating programs and implementing best practices
Collaborating with other members of a patient's treatment plan
Recreational therapists are office-based when they plan programs and interventions and assess patients. However, they also travel to meet patients in the community and deliver programs, which may be held at community venues, outdoors, or at people’s homes.
Most recreational therapists work in hospitals, health care facilities, or care agencies. A growing number are employed by health centers, schools, residential facilities, hospices, and rehabilitation centers funded by a government agency or privately.
Recreational therapy programs in the community might encompass the following services:
Supporting children with cancer, using sports to stay active, and providing a social environment
Aiding people with physical disabilities to integrate back into the community through recreational activities
Supporting people with anxiety and depression with gentle social activities such as arts and crafts
Working with groups of elderly patients to keep them moving through dance and movement classes
Integrating veterans back into the community and helping them to manage symptoms of PTSD
Using dog therapy as a way to alleviate symptoms of depression in patients
The Canadian government expects job prospects for recreational therapists to be moderate in British Columbia, Nova Scotia, and Saskatchewan over the next three years [1]. It expects prospects to be good in Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec. Prospects for all other provinces and territories are undetermined.
The median pay for a recreational therapist is $31 an hour, according to Job Bank Canada, with the lowest 10 per cent earning $20 and the highest 10 per cent earning $45.77 [1].
Glassdoor reports that recreational therapists, on average, rate their work/life balance as 3.5 out of 5, their compensation and benefits as 3.4, and their career opportunities as 3.4 [2].
To work as a recreational therapist, you usually need a bachelor's degree in a health-related subject, which is required if you want to be a certified recreational therapist. You can pursue a bachelor's degree in recreational therapy or a health care field, such as recreation and fitness, rehabilitation science, recreation management, psychology, or health education. Typical courses you'll take include:
Therapeutic recreation
Anatomy
Psychology
Assistive devices and technology
Medical and psychiatric terminology
Characteristics of illness and disability
Assessment
Biology
Event management
In addition to a degree, many employers hire only professionals certified by the Canadian Therapeutic Recreation Association.
To start your career as a recreational therapist, take a look at some short courses introducing you to topics covered, such as Healing With the Arts delivered by the University of Florida or Music for Wellness offered by Berklee College of Music. These courses are also great options for your ongoing professional development if you are already certified as a recreational therapist.
Job Bank Canada. “Recreational therapist in Canada, https://www.jobbank.gc.ca/marketreport/wages-occupation/22768/ca.” Accessed May 6, 2024.
Glassdoor. “Working as a Recreational Therapist, https://www.glassdoor.ca/Career/recreational-therapist-insights_KO0,22.htm.” Accessed May 6, 2024.
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