The Speech Clinic provides leading occupational therapy services across the UAE, serving families in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, and all Emirates. While our primary clinic is located in Dubai Healthcare City, we are recognized as one of the best occupational therapy providers throughout the United Arab Emirates.
Our DHA-licensed therapists provide personalized, evidence-based, and family-centered care to help children and adults achieve their fullest potential. Many families from across the UAE choose to visit our Dubai location for specialized occupational therapy services.
Our top occupational therapy services are accessible to families throughout the UAE. We provide comprehensive occupational therapy for:

All our occupational therapists are licensed by the Dubai Health Authority (DHA), recognized across all Emirates. Our credentials make us a trusted choice for occupational therapy throughout the UAE.
Our Dubai Healthcare City clinic is easily accessible from all Emirates, with convenient parking and modern facilities. Many families find it worth the trip for the best occupational therapy services in the region.
We offer a full range of occupational therapy services, from initial assessment to ongoing therapy and family support. Our comprehensive approach makes us one of the top occupational therapy providers in the UAE.
Our primary location is in Dubai Healthcare City, where we provide the best occupational therapy services in the region. Learn more about our Dubai clinic, services, and facilities.
Visit Our Dubai Occupational Therapy Page →Dubai Healthcare City
Building 47, Unit 301 & 302
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Phone: +971-508857146
Email: info@thespeechclinic.ae
Easily accessible from all Emirates, our Dubai Healthcare City location serves as the hub for the best occupational therapy services across the UAE.

Hear from families about how our Speech Clinic has helped improve their
children's communication and confidence.
I am incredibly grateful to the entire team at the Speech Clinic for their outstanding support in helping my daughter, Nigella, with her speech development, social...
Our journey with Speech Clinic Dubai began in June 2023, and we have remained with them ever since. Having experienced various therapy centers in the past, this is ...
The Speech Clinic Dubai is the best therapy center we dealt with in Dubai, speech therapy team led by Mrs. Sana is exceptional and highly skilled to produce real...
Speech Clinic is truly a fit to my daughter's need, thanks to their specialized approach and highly skilled therapists. We love going to the center, everyone is...
I am incredibly grateful to the entire team at the Speech Clinic for their outstanding support in helping my daughter, Nigella, with her speech development, social...
Our journey with Speech Clinic Dubai began in June 2023, and we have remained with them ever since. Having experienced various therapy centers in the past, this is ...
Contact us today to schedule an assessment and learn how our occupational therapy services can help your child reach their full potential.

Occupational therapy helps children understand, organize, and respond appropriately to sensory input from their environment. Through play-based activities, OT supports children who are easily overwhelmed or under-responsive, helping them achieve a calm, alert, and focused state for learning and play.
Yes. Therapists use structured sensory routines to help regulate a child's arousal level, allowing them to focus better during school, play, and self-care routines.
A sensory diet is a personalized plan of sensory activities designed to meet the child's needs throughout the day. OTs select calming or alerting tasks that help the child stay regulated across different environments.
Therapists collaborate with teachers to provide classroom adaptations such as sensory corners, movement breaks, or fidget tools that help the child maintain attention and comfort.
Each child is different, but many show noticeable improvements in focus and regulation after a few months of consistent therapy and home support.
OT helps identify and integrate primitive reflexes that may still be active beyond infancy. Integration supports better posture, coordination, attention, and academic performance.
Therapists observe specific movement patterns during play and conduct gentle reflex tests to see which reflexes are still present.
Yes. When reflexes integrate, the body moves more efficiently, reducing fidgeting and improving focus and body control.
Yes. Even older children and teens can benefit from reflex work to improve academic skills, body control, and self-regulation.
Yes. When reflexes integrate, the nervous system becomes calmer and more organized, helping children manage stress and frustration better.
OT helps children understand and make sense of what they see, supporting tasks like reading, writing, and puzzle solving. It's about training the brain, not the eyes.
Yes. By improving eye movement control, visual attention, and spatial organization, OT helps children form letters correctly and read more fluently.
Therapists teach directionality through body-based movements, tracing, and multi-sensory writing techniques to reinforce left-right awareness.
Vision refers to clarity of sight; visual perception involves understanding and interpreting what is seen. Both are needed for academic success.
Progress varies, but children typically show improvement in 2–3 months with regular therapy and home activities.
OT helps children build independence in everyday tasks like dressing, feeding, and toileting. The goal is to help them participate confidently in their routines.
Yes. OT addresses oral-motor control, sensory aversions, and coordination issues that affect eating and drinking.
Yes. Gradual sensory exposure and food play help children tolerate different food textures and expand their diet.
Tools such as elastic shoelaces, Velcro fasteners, or adapted utensils can support independence and confidence in self-care.
Yes. OT programs are customized to each age group, promoting functional independence regardless of the child's developmental level.
OT helps the left and right sides of the brain work together for improved motor coordination, attention, and learning efficiency.
When both hemispheres work together, children show better balance, focus, and academic performance.
It helps synchronize both hands and eyes, leading to more fluent, organized, and consistent writing.
Yes. A balanced brain helps children process emotions more effectively and adapt to challenges.
With regular therapy and home follow-up, progress is often seen within a few months.
Occupational therapy helps children build the foundational motor, sensory, and cognitive skills needed for classroom success. Therapists focus on improving attention, handwriting, organization, and seated posture so children can participate more independently in school tasks.
Yes. Therapists use visual-motor and oculomotor activities that strengthen eye movement control, helping children follow lines of text and improve reading fluency.
Fine motor skills—like finger dexterity, grip strength, and precision—are essential for tasks such as writing, coloring, and cutting. OT develops these skills through engaging, hands-on activities.
OTs often work with educators to adapt classroom setups, recommend sensory breaks, or suggest tools that improve a child's participation and comfort in class.
Yes. OT supports self-regulation and emotional coping through sensory-based calming strategies that help children approach schoolwork more confidently.
Play is a child's primary way of learning. Occupational therapy uses play to build motor coordination, sensory processing, social interaction, and problem-solving skills essential for overall development.
Yes. OT focuses on social communication, cooperative play, and emotional regulation, helping children learn to share, follow rules, and engage with peers meaningfully.
Sensory play—using textures, sounds, and movement—helps children learn to process sensory information, stay calm, and engage more comfortably in group play.
Through play, children can express emotions safely and develop coping strategies for frustration, transitions, or new experiences.
Parents can join in simple games, encourage outdoor play, or follow the therapist's activity suggestions to reinforce developmental skills.
OT uses sensory integration activities such as swinging, brushing, deep pressure, or tactile play to balance sensory responses. These activities help children feel more comfortable and secure in different environments.
Therapists observe the child's responses to different sensations and use standardized assessments like the Sensory Profile or Sensory Processing Measure. This helps identify areas of over- or under-responsiveness and guide therapy planning.
Yes. By providing appropriate sensory input in a structured way, children learn to meet their sensory needs safely and with fewer disruptive behaviors.
Activities include swings, obstacle courses, textured materials, heavy work (pushing/pulling), and calming strategies like deep breathing or weighted tools.
No. While sensory challenges are common in autism, children with ADHD, anxiety, or developmental delays can also benefit greatly from sensory-focused OT.
Primitive reflexes are automatic movements that help babies develop basic motor patterns. If these reflexes remain active, they can interfere with sitting still, writing, or focusing in school.
OT uses rhythmic, repetitive movements, crawling patterns, and specific exercises like "starfish stretches" to promote brain-body communication and reflex maturity.
The Moro (startle), ATNR (fencing), STNR, and TLR reflexes are often addressed, as they affect coordination, vision, and balance.
Progress depends on consistency and the number of retained reflexes. With regular practice and home exercises, noticeable improvement often appears in a few months.
Therapists provide daily exercises that parents can do with their child to reinforce progress between sessions and build consistency.
Therapists use standardized assessments such as the TVPS and observe how children perform activities involving copying, sorting, or visual tracking.
Puzzles, mazes, pattern copying, visual scanning games, and eye-hand coordination tasks are used to build perception and tracking.
Yes. Eye tracking and scanning exercises strengthen smooth eye movements and improve reading endurance.
Yes. Collaboration ensures both visual health and processing skills are addressed holistically.
Encourage puzzles, matching games, tracing, or "I Spy" activities that challenge the child's visual observation and memory.
Therapists use visual supports, step-by-step teaching, and adaptive tools to help children learn each part of the task at their own pace.
Therapists work on body awareness, timing, and routine-building to help children become more independent in toileting.
Tasks are turned into playful challenges, using songs, stories, or games to keep children motivated and engaged.
Parents receive coaching and visual guides to reinforce learned skills consistently at home.
Children typically show improvement within weeks to months when therapy and home practice are consistent.
Through cross-body and bilateral activities like crawling, throwing balls, and dancing, OTs enhance brain connectivity and body control.
Yes. Therapists design fun games that encourage reaching across the body, promoting coordination and better eye-hand control.
Drumming, ball games, yoga poses, and drawing figure-eights are common techniques used by OTs.
Through observing how children coordinate both sides of their body during play, writing, or fine-motor activities.
Encourage cross-body play like clapping games, obstacle courses, or dance routines to reinforce therapy goals.
OT addresses fine motor strength, pencil grasp, letter formation, spacing, and endurance. Through fun writing exercises and hand-preparation activities, children gain better control and confidence in written work.
OT uses sensory regulation and movement strategies to help children maintain alertness without becoming overactive. This makes it easier to concentrate during lessons and complete classroom tasks.
Yes. Therapists use visual cues, graph paper, and structured writing formats to teach spacing, alignment, and organization in written work.
Adaptive pencils, slant boards, visual aids, or seating supports can help children write more comfortably and maintain focus.
Most children begin showing better attention, posture, and handwriting within a few months of consistent therapy and home practice, though long-term support may be needed for complex challenges.
Therapists structure play sessions to gradually increase a child's tolerance, attention, and creativity. Through guided play, children learn to explore, take turns, and build confidence in interacting with others.
Play activities like climbing, ball games, or obstacle courses strengthen coordination, balance, and motor planning while keeping sessions fun and engaging.
Yes. Therapists encourage imaginative play scenarios that enhance creativity, language development, and flexible thinking.
Therapists use swings, gym balls, puzzles, games, building toys, and crafts to develop both physical and social-emotional skills.
With consistent therapy and home participation, many children show progress in attention, interaction, and motor play within a few months.