In this Therapist Thursday episode, Sue Doyle, PhD, OTR/L talks with Erin DiChiara, OTR/L, an occupational therapist and CHAT-certified home accessibility therapist, about creating a sustainable, values-driven home mods practice that truly fits your life. Erin shares how she supports adult daughters of aging parents, clients with catastrophic injuries, and individuals with lifelong disabilities to safely age in place while running a profitable, meaningful business.
What you’ll learn in this episode:
- How Erin got started in home modifications over 20 years ago, inspired by her 95-year-old grandmother, and how that experience grew into a CHAT-certified practice serving aging adults, people with catastrophic injuries, and clients with lifelong disabilities.
- Practical strategies she uses in home visits, including deeply listening to how people actually live, solving problems as simply as possible, and blending assistive technology, seating and mobility, and thoughtful home modifications instead of over-engineering major construction.
- Business and mindset insights on overcoming fears about cash-based services, making home modifications affordable yet profitable, learning to “think like a business owner,” and staying energized in OT by carving out a home mods niche that aligns with your strengths and passions.
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Resources mentioned:
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Creators and Guests
Host
Sue Doyle PhD OTR/L
Owner of The Home Accessibility Therapist
What is The Home Accessibility Therapist Podcast?
The Home Accessibility Therapist Podcast delivers tips, training, and interviews for therapists who are changing lives at home. Each episode turns real-world home modification challenges—like falls, hoarding, and disaster preparedness—into clear, practical strategies you can use on your next visit. You’ll hear Therapist Thursday interviews, research-based blog-to-audio episodes, and “Office Hours” Q&A focused on evaluations, documentation, and funding. The podcast’s goal is to build your confidence and skills as a home accessibility therapist so your recommendations are safer, more effective, and more likely to be implemented.