Band 6 Occupational Therapist Jobs in Birmingham

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Applying for Band 6 Occupational Therapist jobs in Birmingham

Birmingham has the largest NHS employer base outside London. University Hospitals Birmingham runs one of the biggest acute sites in Europe at Queen Elizabeth Hospital, and the city also has specialist children's, orthopaedic, and community trusts. For band 6 occupational therapist candidates, this page narrows the NHS market to roles with the same profession, level, and local hiring area so you can compare adverts before starting a supporting statement or Trac application.

Job Clerk is currently tracking 0 live band 6 occupational therapist vacancies in Birmingham from 0 NHS employers. Review closing dates closely, because competitive NHS jobs can be shortlisted before the advertised closing date when enough strong applications arrive.

Salary varies by employer, contract type, rota pattern, and local supplements. Check each band 6 occupational therapist vacancy in Birmingham for the advertised pay range and closing date.

Band expectations

  • Professional registration and minimum 2 years post-qualification experience
  • Specialist competencies relevant to the advertised post
  • Evidence of supervising junior staff or students
  • Contribution to audit, service improvement, or quality work

Role evidence

  • Functional assessment and goal-setting with patients
  • Home environment assessment and discharge planning
  • Equipment prescription and housing adaptation recommendations
  • Specialist group or individual intervention programmes

Common requirements

  • HCPC registration as an occupational therapist
  • Subspecialty experience relevant to the post (physical, mental health, paediatrics, hand therapy)
  • Postgraduate training for specialist or advanced roles
  • RCOT membership (recommended but not essential)

Local employer context

Relevant NHS employers can include University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham Women's and Children's NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, and Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust. Compare person-spec criteria, rota pattern, site location, and application method before reusing supporting information between adverts.

Local practical context

Birmingham New Street is a major rail hub with fast connections to London (1h20), Manchester, and the wider Midlands. The Midland Metro tram serves several hospital-adjacent areas.

Housing and living costs are significantly lower than London. No high-cost area supplement applies, but fringe supplements are available for some posts in surrounding areas.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Interview Preparation Guide

How to Prepare

Example Interview Questions

Key Topics to Revise

  • Common neurological conditions (stroke, TBI, MS, Parkinson's)
  • Mental health diagnoses (schizophrenia, depression, anxiety, dementia)
  • Paediatric developmental milestones and common childhood conditions
  • Principles of rehabilitation and reablement
  • Assessment tools used in Occupational Therapy (COPM, AMPS, MoCA)
  • Evidence-based interventions for various patient populations
  • The Model of Human Occupation (MOHO)
  • The Mental Health Act and Mental Capacity Act
  • The Care Act and Children's Act
  • National Service Frameworks and NICE guidelines relevant to the role
  • Principles of safeguarding and risk management
  • The NHS Constitution and core values
  • Clinical governance principles (audit, risk management, CPD)
  • Equality, diversity, and inclusion principles

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Failing to research the employer and the role.
  • Providing generic answers without specific examples.
  • Not using the STAR method for competency-based questions.
  • Speaking negatively about previous employers or colleagues.
  • Appearing unprepared or lacking enthusiasm.
  • Not asking questions at the end of the interview.
  • Focusing solely on your own needs rather than the needs of the patients and the organization.
  • Being late for the interview or dressing inappropriately.