Currently running — worth a closer look.
Running across 1 GEO.
Running in a single market (Australia) — a focused test, not a broad rollout yet.
- 1 GEO
- Redirect chain checked
- LP host: physioinq.com.au
Reverse-engineered from the live ad — longevity, GEOs, and the affiliate funnel behind it. Verified by following the redirect chain on Jun 17. Free, no login.
Funnel, reverse-engineered
The campaign behind this creative
← the actual path the money takes.
Creative
Physio Inq | Sponsored
Landing page
physioinq.com.au
where it lands
Product / Offer: not detected
Tracker: not detected
Affiliate network: not detected
How we know: the tracker and affiliate network come from the live redirect chain we followed and fingerprinted hop by hop. Greyed nodes weren’t detected.
Active
last seen 1d ago · 1 market
Running with a modest observed footprint so far.
Gravity
49/100
push pressure now · 30d index
Strength
16/100
overall scale · 30d index
Run
—
last seen 1d ago
Markets
1
countries seen
Landing page
physioinq.com.au
final host
Screenshot
—
not captured yet
Operator
—
unidentified
Network
Outbrain
traffic source
Occupational Therapy for Autism: Personalised Support & Everyday Growth
Physio Inq | Sponsored@physio
How OT helps autistic kids gain independence and confidence at home and school.
Days alive is a profitability proxy — advertisers don’t pay to run losers.
Seen in
Geo reach
Single-geo testa single marketPredominantly Tier 1, concentrated in APAC — Australia.
What the data shows
Physio Inq | Sponsored's Outbrain creative has been running for 0 days across 1 country and first seen on June 17, 2026. It has been observed in Australia. The ad lands on physioinq.com.au. On our 30-day observation series the creative has run in intermittent bursts over the last 30 days. Physio Inq | Sponsored is running 8 other creatives we have indexed, linked below for side-by-side comparison.
Creative headline: Occupational Therapy for Autism: Personalised Support & Everyday Growth. Indexed on Outbrain by mediabuyer.
Landing-page intelligence
Landing page intelligence
Where this ad lands
The lander is the product — screenshot, redirect chain, offer, tech stack, and on-page text in one place.
Landing page not captured yet
Our crawler renders each advertiser’s funnel on a rolling schedule. Recently observed ads are queued first — check back to see the full-page screenshot.
Host
physioinq.com.au
Path
/blog/how-can-occupational-therapy-help-a-child-with-autism
Full URL
https://www.physioinq.com.au/blog/how-can-occupational-therapy-help-a-child-with-autism
Redirect chain
Chain not captured yet.
Final host: physioinq.com.au. Hop-by-hop capture runs as a separate pipeline; ads observed in recent ingests get crawled first.
Tracking parameters
- obOrigUrl
- true
+ 1 known tracker hidden (cloaker IDs scrubbed at ingest).
Tracking setup · Outbrain
Outbrain emits ob_click_id (your unique click), ob_source (publisher), ob_section (placement), and ob_position. Forward ob_click_id to your tracker as the postback key. ob_source and ob_section are the two highest-signal sub-IDs for blacklisting.
?ob_click_id={ob_click_id}&ob_source={ob_source}&ob_section={ob_section}&ob_position={ob_position}Default Outbrain setup template: ?ob_click_id={ob_click_id}&ob_source={ob_source}&ob_section={ob_section}&ob_position={ob_position}
Tech stack
No third-party monetization stack detected — this appears to be a direct landing page.
Landing page hubs
Landing page text
Show landing page text
Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-06-17
▶
Landing page text
Show landing page text
Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-06-17
How Can Occupational Therapy Help A Child With Autism? 🔍 1300 731 733 How Can Occupational Therapy Help A Child With Autism? Summary The article explores the role of occupational therapy in aiding children with autism. Occupational therapy focuses on enhancing daily living skills and independence. The article highlights how occupational therapy addresses sensory sensitivities. Techniques like sensory integration therapy help children with sensory challenges. Occupational therapists work on improving fine motor skills and coordination. Social skills training and communication support are integral parts of therapy. The article emphasises the importance of tailoring interventions to each child's needs. Creating structured routines and visual aids aid in reducing anxiety. Occupational therapy promotes engagement in meaningful activities for children with autism. Collaboration with families and schools ensures a holistic approach to therapy. Topics covered in this article: Make an Appointment Autism Spectrum Disorder is characterised by socialisation issues, trouble communicating, and emotional outbursts that seem inconsistent with social norms, among other challenges. There are several therapeutic approaches that can be taken when working to help a child with autism and occupational therapy is one of them. Here, we’re going over how can occupational therapy help a child with autism, what occupational therapy is, how it works for someone with autism, and the benefits occupational therapy can have for someone facing these challenges. What is occupational therapy? Occupational therapy is focused on the improvement of day-to-day activities. Usually working with a person’s parent or spouse, caregiver, teacher, or other members of a person’s direct community, occupational therapy works on functional routines for those with an illness or injury. Instead of working in a clinical environment, occupational therapy often meets the client where they are. In occupational therapy, you’ll be working on things like tying your shoes, walking stairs, or communicating with your teachers. In fact, at Physio Inq, we offer mobile occupational therapy services . There’s no need to even come into the clinic. We’ll meet you at your home, school, or workplace to help with the everyday tasks that need attention in the environment in which they’ll be used. For people with autism, the disorder affects many aspects of their lives. Especially as young children, they’ll need extra support to learn better motor skills to help them in school and playtime situations as well as self-care skills like brushing their teeth. Occupational therapy consists mostly of the physical side of things and should be done in tandem with emotional therapy that can help with more cognitive and behavioral assistance. Overall, the goal of occupational therapy for a child who has autism is to improve their quality of life both at home and school. More Articles Related to Paediatrics Physiotherapy for Kids on the NDIS Discover More Articles Physiotherapy for Kids on the NDIS Discover More Articles How Occupational Therapy Works for People with Autism Occupational therapy for children with autism is structured in two stages and it starts with an evaluation. Therapists will watch how the child moves through life and assesses whether or not they are behaving in ways that are normal for their age range. Activities that might be observed and noted include: Attention span Playtime skills Need for personal space Response to stimuli Motor skills Aggression Interactions and relationships with others Once the occupational therapist has a better understanding of what the child struggles with, they’ll create a personalized program to enhance the skills that are lacking. There’s not a one-size-fits-all approach to occupational therapy and everyone’s autism will present itself differently. However, it has been shown that early, structured, personalized therapy has the best results. Benefits of Occupational Therapy for Autism Occupational therapy for people with autism usually starts in the childhood years. When children with autism receive occupational therapy, they can improve in many of the skills that their disorder makes difficult. The focus of occupational therapy for someone with autism is on independence. By introducing, maintaining, and improving certain skills, some of the benefits of occupational therapy for autism include improvements in: Daily living skills like getting dressed, brushing hair, and using the toilet Fine motor skills to help with using scissors, handwriting, and colouring Gross motor skills like walking, riding a bike, and playing sports Sitting and posture Perceptual skills such as distinguishing between colours, shapes, and sizes Body awareness and spacial awareness Visual skills Social skills like playing, coping with change, problem-solving, and self-care Another huge benefit of occupational therapy for those with autism is the addition of sensory integration therapy. Most children with autism have issues processing sensory input. They’re easily overwhelmed by sometimes the smallest stimuli so occupational therapists have tools to improve how they deal with this stimuli. More Articles Related to Disability & The NDIS Building Real Independence When NDIS Expectations Are Changing Discover More Articles Building Real Independence When NDIS Expectations Are Changing Staying Connected as Community Participation Funding is Cut What Mandatory NDIS Registration Means for Your Therapy Discover More Articles Sensory processing difficulties can present themselves as balance problems, body awareness issues, and oversensitivity to clothing, for example. To help, an occupational therapist might try sensory integration therapy techniques such as: Brushing the skin or deep massages Compression of elbows and knees Swinging or spinning exercises Using a weighted vest Overall, these are just the individual skills that can be improved upon using occupational therapy. The wider benefits of occupational therapy for someone with autism are: The ability to build and maintain meaningful peer and adult relationships Learning how to better focus on a single task Learning how to delay gratification The ability to express emotions in more socially appropriate ways Engaging the playtime with peers and siblings Learning how to self-regulate These achievements only scratch the surface of what can be accomplished with occupational therapy. By working on the various challenges that children and adults with autism face, occupational therapy can greatly improve their quality of life. How to Get Occupational Therapy for Autism There are a few ways to obtain occupational therapy for someone with autism. You can contact your child’s school about acquiring an occupational therapist as many schools are required to provide occupational therapy to those who need it. Otherwise, contact our local Physio Inq Occupational Therapy services to book a consultation with one of our expert occupational therapists. Our mobile services are a great way to utilise the benefits of occupational therapy while allowing the child to remain in an environment where they feel comfortable. Sometimes, bringing someone with autism to a clinical setting can backfire as the unfamiliar stimuli can be too overwhelming. That’s why we’re happy to come to you and maximise the results of occupational therapy. It can’t be said enough how beneficial occupational therapy can be for someone with Autism Spectrum Disorder. People living with autism go through a lot and occupational therapy can help to attain an overall better quality of life. With a bit of effort, a structured approach, and the help of a supportive community of people, occupational therapy and committed caregivers can truly make a difference for children and adults with autism. More Articles Related to Occupational Therapy Top 10 Falls Prevention Strategies for Seniors Living Alone Discover More Articles…
Text scraped from the landing page for research purposes. © respective owners. This text is sourced from the advertiser's public landing page; for removal, contact dmca@luba.media.
Observed daily (last 30 days)
May 19 → Jun 17·peaks Jun 17
30-day run pattern
PulsedIntermittent runs with quiet stretches — likely paused for budget cycles or rotation against fresher creatives.
- Coverage
- 3% of 30d
- Peak surge
- 1× vs median
- Last 7d
- 1
- WoW
- new
Peak day:
Window: May 19 → Jun 17
Sibling creatives from this campaign
Other creatives in Other on Outbrain
The rest of the set they’re running — see what else this angle is paired with.
Don’t Waste Your Package: Smart Ways to Use Home Care Funds Wisely
The Complete Parent’s Guide to Autism Rehabilitation
Unlock the Secrets to Maximizing Your Home Care Package Today
Inside the Role of an Exercise Physiologist
7 Signs Your Toddler May Be Experiencing Speech Delay
The Game-Changer in Childhood Development Therapy
How Therapy Is Helping Aussies With Disability Move Better
Autism Support That Works Why Multidisciplinary Rehab Is Key
Tested headline variants8
Tested headline variants
Physio Inq | Sponsored's own A/B test — which headline they kept
The advertiser’s own A/B result, handed over: ranked by days running, the survivor on top. Variants they stopped running are struck through — they tested and killed those angles.
- #1Don’t Waste Your Package: Smart Ways to Use Home Care Funds WiselyWinning angle45d10 content tokens
- #2The Complete Parent’s Guide to Autism Rehabilitation44d5 content tokens
- #3Inside the Role of an Exercise Physiologist21d4 content tokens
- #4How Therapy Is Helping Aussies With Disability Move Better19d6 content tokens
Winning angle: the headline they kept alive longest — it beat the other variants they tested. Model this one; treat the rest as discarded experiments.
More from Physio Inq | Sponsored8
More from Physio Inq | Sponsored
How to Get the Most Value Out of Your Aged Care Home Care Package: A Health…
physioinq.com.auMultidisciplinary Rehabilitation for Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Comprehensive…
physioinq.com.auMost spy tools stop at the creative. This page connects it to the campaign behind it — the funnel, the longevity, the GEOs. Free.