I actually don't see a conflict.
I mean, everybody has their own specific skill and ability. Ours happens to focus on occupation. Practitioners have their own individual skills and abilities, too.
If we take the example I used in my introduction around a physiotherapist versus an occupational therapist...if we have the same patient with, say, an upper limb injury, the physiotherapist will work on the upper limb. That's important. We need to get the muscles working in a range of motion. But what the occupational therapist will do is work with the physiotherapist to say the reason we need to get that arm working again is because this person needs to do X, Y,and Z. So the occupational therapist will gear things toward the actual activity or occupation.
That's an example of how we all need to work together with our different skills, but again, toward a common goal.