Marissa Shelnut OTR
Occupational Therapist (Pediatric) | Pediatrics
20310 19TH AVE NE SHORELINE WA, 98155About
Dr. Marissa Shelnut practices Occupational Medicine in SHORELINE, WA. Dr. Shelnut evaluates the interaction between work and health. Occupational medicine physicians have general knowledge of worksite operations and are familiar with the toxic properties of materials used by employees and the potential hazards and stressors of work processes; in addition to being qualified to determine an employees physical and emotional fitness for work; diagnosing and treating occupational diseases; handling work related injuries; and having an understanding of rehabilitation methods, health education techniques, sanitation, and workers compensation laws.
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Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Treatment effects of methylphenidate on behavioral adjustment in children with mental retardation and ADHD.
- Accentuated Virchow-Robin spaces in the centrum semiovale in children with autistic disorder.
- A comparison of behavioral and emotional functioning in children and adolescents with Autistic Disorder and PDD-NOS.
- Improving the reliability of autism diagnoses: examining the utility of adaptive behavior.
- Multiresolution 3-D reconstruction from side-scan sonar images.
- Fronto-limbic functioning in children and adolescents with and without autism.
- Designing better graphs by including distributional information and integrating
- An online multimedia resource in behavioral neuroscience.
- Pressure algometry measurement of canine muscular pain near the thoracolumbar junction: evaluation of a modified technique.
- Safety and Feasibility of Repeatable Hepatic Vascular Isolation Chemotherapy: A Pilot Study.
- There Is Time for Calculation in Speed Chess, and Calculation Accuracy Increases With Expertise.
- Effectiveness of combined acupuncture and manual therapy relative to no treatment for canine musculoskeletal pain.
- Chess knowledge predicts chess memory even after controlling for chess experience: Evidence for the role of high-level processes.
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