“…In many states, for example, occupational therapy practitioners are no longer recognized as qualified mental health providers (QMHP; LaGrossa, 2008) and many mental health jobs which were previously held by occupational therapy practitioners have been phased out or are now assumed by other practitioners (Gutman, 2011). Additional consequences, which are likely interrelated, include traditional mental health practitioners' limited understanding of occupational therapy's contribution to the team and the challenges occupational therapy practitioners may face when trying to reinsert themselves into traditional mental health settings after a prolonged absence (Cahill & Egan, 2017).…”