How to Use Translation for Improving Fine Motor Skills after a Hand Injury:

I’m always looking for new therapy ideas. I want to keep my patients interested and engaged in therapy. I also want to keep things functional and task oriented. So much of what we do with our hands is about fine motor coordination and dexterity, and that is so hard to duplicate in a clinic setting.  Using translation gives me a task to work on fine motor skills and dexterity that is gradable and functional.

So, How does it work?! What fine motor exercises for hands are there?

The Basics of fine motor skills therapy I lay a pile of small objects on the table and an open container for the client to put them into. What object I use depends on the client’s level. We’ll get to that later. Then, they use a 2-point pincer grasp to pick up one and shift it finger-to-palm.  They do this a 3-4 more times. Each time shifting it fully to the palm. Then the objects are taken, one at a time, from palm to pincer grasp and dropped into the container.  

“Using translation gives me a task to work on fine motor skills and dexterity that is gradable and functional.”

Special Rules –  To keep the client from cheating and to meet the purpose of the task we have a few special rules.

  1. No using momentum to ‘throw’ the object from palm to finger. They need to use finger and thumb motion to advance the object.
  2. No using gravity to let the object fall from palm to fingers. AKA: no cheating
  3. Take it all of the way to the tips of index and thumb. It’s harder but it matters.

Make it fit –  This task is highly scalable to meet the client’s needs and the ‘just right challenge’. Here is the sequence I use as the client improves:

  1. Slow foam squares cut into ¾” squares
  2. Squares mixed with marbles (pick up 2 of each) and sorting them for sensation work.
  3. Mancala pieces or just plain marbles
  4. Coins – Pick them up off a towel if flat on a table is too much

Bonus!! –  Aside from the obvious benefits there are a few other added extras that pop up. Sometimes I even use these as the primary reason for picking this task.

Supination/pronation – The forearm is pretty darn active during this whole process

Tactile work – Stereognosis and discrimination skills can be refined with this task

Thumb work – When done right, the thumb is getting a solid workout (e.g. Joint stiffness work)

fine motor exercises for hands

Whatever you want…

This task can be converted into whatever you want it to be. Use dice to play a game. Use grapes or other food for a self feeding goal. Use small beads and work on ‘storing’ the extras in the ulnar side of the palm while stringing the bead.  The options are ENDLESS! This is one of my favorite tasks and I can’t wait for you to try it and tell us what you think.

5 Comments

  1. Marvin Malabey on September 18, 2019 at 6:08 am

    I could not refrain from commenting. Perfectly written!

    • Josh MacDonald on September 18, 2019 at 6:37 am

      Thanks! Glad you liked it.

  2. Luzia Achatz on October 22, 2020 at 7:06 pm

    It´s such a great exercise! Thank you for the Idea!
    I used buttons of different sizes and let my patients stack them to little towers.

  3. Iffi on October 31, 2022 at 6:17 pm

    I must appreciate the way you have expressed your feelings through your blog!

  4. Samiya on October 31, 2022 at 7:03 pm

    I was searching, I SaW YoUr Blog, I ReAd YouR Blog, You Surprised Me. This is the Day, I HaVe learned a Good Thing by ReaDinG!

Leave a Reply Cancel Reply






More To Read

Do you know the difference between an Electromyography (EMG) and a Nerve Conduction Velocity (NCV) Study?

November 28, 2021

 Do you know the difference between EMG and NCV (an Electromyography and a Nerve Conduction Velocity Study? The term nerve test is usually a broad term that typically indicates both an Electromyography (EMG) and a Nerve Conduction Velocity (NCV) study (EMG vs NCV).  An EMG  looks at the electrical signals your muscle makes when at…

Read More

What are the minimally important changes of four commonly used patient-reported outcome measures for 36 hand and wrist condition-treatment combinations

March 13, 2022

Article Review By: Case Peters Reference  Hoogendam, L., Koopman, J.E., van Kooj, Y.E., Feitz, R., Hundepool, C.A., Zhou, C. … The Hand Wrist Study Group (2021) What are the minimally important changes of four commonly used patient-reported outcome measures for 36 hand and wrist condition-treatment combinations. Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research. epub ahead of print.…

Read More

Occupation Based Interventions in Hand Therapy

September 24, 2022

Keeping Occupation Based Interventions in Hand Therapy By: Tristany Hightower Are your treatments occupation based? Do you tailor your activity choices to fit the needs of each patient? As occupational therapists, we should be specialists in creating goals and interventions that are directed at returning our patients to meaningful occupations.  Too often, hand therapy can…

Read More
Envelope_1

Sign-up to Get Updates Straight to Your Inbox!

Sign up with us and we will send you regular blog posts on everything hand therapy, notices every time we upload new videos and tutorials, along with handout, protocols, and other useful information.