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Executive Function Companion

Applied Companion

Executive Function Companion

A structured executive function companion focused on initiation, planning, sequencing, organization, time management, working memory, impulse control, emotional regulation, follow-through, caregiver cueing, daily safety, school/work participation, Parkinson’s, cognitive rehabilitation, autism, TBI, stroke, MS, dementia and Alzheimer’s support, therapy modalities, and provider communication.

Format digital
Access $39.00
Item ID acd-024

Educational support only. This resource complements, not replaces, provider instructions, facility policy, or medical advice.

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Executive Function Companion

Executive function is the brain’s “doing system.” It helps a person start tasks, plan steps, organize materials, manage time, control impulses, shift attention, regulate emotions, remember what comes next, and finish what they started.

The Executive Function Companion was designed to help people, families, caregivers, students, workers, and support teams organize the real-life problems that happen when someone knows what to do but cannot consistently do it.

This Companion does not diagnose executive dysfunction, prescribe therapy, determine driving safety, replace neuropsychology, replace occupational therapy, replace speech-language pathology, replace neurology care, replace behavioral health care, replace school supports, replace employer accommodations, replace emergency care, or replace individualized provider instructions. It helps users track patterns, organize safety concerns, prepare better questions, and communicate more clearly with the care team.

What Is Executive Function?

Executive function includes the thinking skills that help a person manage life in the correct order. These skills include starting, planning, sequencing, organizing, remembering, checking work, managing time, shifting between tasks, controlling impulses, solving problems, and noticing when something is not safe or not working.

Care-team language may include executive dysfunction, functional cognition, initiation impairment, sequencing difficulty, working memory, inhibition, cognitive flexibility, task switching, self-monitoring, reduced insight, emotional regulation difficulty, metacognitive strategies, compensatory strategies, caregiver cueing, and environmental modification.

The goal is not to shame someone for being “lazy,” “defiant,” or “unmotivated.” The goal is to identify what part of the doing system is breaking down and what support may help.

Why This Companion Connects to Other CarePlanRx Pathways

Executive function challenges can show up with Parkinson’s disease, traumatic brain injury, stroke, autism, ADHD, multiple sclerosis, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, cognitive rehabilitation needs, sleep problems, mental health concerns, and other neurological or medical conditions.

The diagnosis may be different, but the daily-life problem often looks similar: missed steps, unfinished tasks, unsafe choices, poor follow-through, emotional blowups, caregiver frustration, school strain, work strain, medication mistakes, cooking safety concerns, money problems, and difficulty managing routines.

This Companion supports multiple CarePlanRx pathways, especially Parkinson’s Management, Cognitive Rehabilitation, Autism Support, Traumatic Brain Injury, Stroke Recovery, Multiple Sclerosis Management, and Dementia & Alzheimer’s Support.

The “Knowing But Not Doing” Problem

One of the most frustrating executive function problems is when a person seems to know what to do but does not actually do it. They may agree to a plan, understand instructions, or say the right answer — then miss the appointment, skip the medication, leave the task unfinished, forget the deadline, or make an unsafe choice anyway.

This can be confusing for families, teachers, employers, and caregivers. It can look like refusal, laziness, attitude, or lack of caring. Sometimes it is. But often, the breakdown is in initiation, planning, working memory, sequencing, attention, self-monitoring, time awareness, emotional regulation, or insight.

This Companion helps users track what actually happens: where the task breaks down, what support helps, what creates overload, what repeats, and what needs to be discussed with the care team.

Starting, Sequencing, Finishing, and Switching Tasks

Executive function problems often show up during ordinary routines. A person may not start without prompts. They may start but not finish. They may skip steps, do steps out of order, get stuck when interrupted, or become overwhelmed when switching tasks.

This Companion helps users organize:

  • Trouble starting tasks
  • Trouble following multi-step routines
  • Skipped steps or tasks done out of order
  • Unfinished chores, hygiene, meals, homework, work tasks, or paperwork
  • Difficulty switching from one task to another
  • Shutdown, frustration, or avoidance when overwhelmed
  • Supports such as step-by-step lists, visual schedules, timers, setup stations, simplified choices, and routine anchors
Time, Deadlines, Medications, Bills, and Daily Follow-Through

Poor time awareness can affect the whole day. A person may underestimate how long tasks take, run late, miss deadlines, forget appointments, lose track of medication timing, ignore bills, or wait until a task becomes a crisis.

This Companion helps users track:

  • Missed appointments or late arrivals
  • Medication timing problems
  • Bills, paperwork, or financial deadlines
  • School assignments or work deadlines
  • Chores, hygiene, meals, or daily responsibilities
  • What helps: calendars, alarms, planners, checklists, pill organizers, phone reminders, whiteboards, visual countdowns, and caregiver check-ins

The goal is not to nag harder. The goal is to build systems that reduce missed steps and make follow-through more visible.

Impulse Control, Judgment, Emotional Regulation, and Safety

Executive function also affects safety. A person may act before thinking, spend impulsively, drive unsafely, leave the stove on, ignore medication instructions, respond aggressively when overwhelmed, trust unsafe people, or fail to notice consequences.

Emotional regulation can also be affected. Small problems may feel huge. A simple correction may trigger anger, tears, shutdown, defensiveness, panic, or refusal.

This Companion helps users organize:

  • Impulsive choices
  • Unsafe judgment
  • Reduced awareness of risk
  • Emotional blowups or shutdowns
  • Cooking, driving, money, medication, childcare, tools, internet, or community safety concerns
  • Questions for OT, speech therapy, neuropsychology, behavioral health, neurology, school teams, employer supports, or primary care
Therapy Modalities and Support Tools

Executive function support may include therapy tools and support strategies selected by qualified professionals. These may include occupational therapy for routines, ADLs, IADLs, task setup, home/work modifications, safety, and caregiver training; speech-language pathology for cognitive-communication, planning language, conversation repair, and social cue support; and neuropsychology for testing, insight, strategy planning, work/school recommendations, and behavior support.

Support tools may include calendars, alarms, planners, checklists, visual schedules, labels, timers, phone apps, whiteboards, pill organizers, simplified task steps, reduced clutter, quiet work zones, routine anchors, caregiver cueing, metacognitive strategy training, and school or work accommodations.

This Companion does not prescribe modalities. It helps users understand what tools may be discussed with the care team, what daily problems they may target, what questions to ask, and what changes to track.

Caregiver Cueing Without Arguing

Executive function challenges can create constant conflict. Caregivers may feel like they are repeating the same thing all day. The person may feel criticized, controlled, embarrassed, or treated like a child.

This Companion helps families organize cueing strategies that support function without constant arguing, over-helping, or creating learned helplessness. Helpful supports may include calm prompts, written routines, one-step directions, visual reminders, agreed-upon check-ins, setup before the task, fewer distractions, and clear safety boundaries.

The goal is not to take over everything. The goal is to support the right amount of independence with the right amount of safety.

School, Work, Driving, Cooking, Money, Childcare, and Community Independence

Executive function problems often become most obvious when life gets complex. School, work, driving, cooking, medication timing, childcare, money management, appointments, social situations, and community independence all require planning, judgment, sequencing, timing, and follow-through.

This Companion helps users organize concerns about:

  • School assignments, testing, deadlines, and accommodations
  • Work duties, task completion, communication, time management, and employer supports
  • Driving discussions and transportation safety
  • Cooking, stove safety, meal planning, and kitchen sequencing
  • Medication routines and missed-dose risks
  • Money management, bills, scams, impulsive spending, or missed payments
  • Childcare, household responsibilities, community navigation, appointments, and emergency planning

The goal is honest tracking, not fear. When daily life shows where executive function is breaking down, the care team can recommend safer and more realistic supports.

Common Executive Function Concerns This Companion Helps Organize

Common concerns may include:

  • “They know what to do, but they do not do it”
  • Cannot start tasks without prompts
  • Starts but does not finish
  • Skips steps or does tasks out of order
  • Poor time awareness
  • Missed appointments, medications, deadlines, bills, chores, hygiene, or meals
  • Impulsive choices, unsafe judgment, or poor awareness of consequences
  • Emotional blowups when overwhelmed
  • Work or school strain
  • Caregiver frustration from repeated reminders
  • Daily safety concerns with cooking, driving, money, medication, childcare, or community independence
  • Executive function support needs related to Parkinson’s, cognitive rehabilitation, autism, TBI, stroke, MS, dementia, or Alzheimer’s disease
When to Contact the Care Team

Users should follow provider instructions. Provider communication may be especially important when executive function problems affect medication safety, driving, cooking, money, childcare, school, work, wandering, falls, unsafe behavior, emotional safety, sudden confusion, major sleepiness, hallucinations, severe mood changes, or daily independence.

This Companion is not a substitute for urgent care, emergency care, neurology care, neuropsychology, therapy, behavioral health care, school support, employer accommodation guidance, legal guidance, or individualized provider recommendations.

What This Companion Helps With

This Companion helps users:

  • Translate executive function challenges into plain language and care-team language
  • Track initiation, planning, sequencing, organization, time management, working memory, inhibition, emotional regulation, task switching, follow-through, and self-monitoring
  • Organize caregiver observations and support strategies
  • Prepare for OT, speech therapy, neuropsychology, neurology, behavioral health, school, employer, primary care, and caregiver-support conversations
  • Support safer participation in self-care, medication routines, cooking, money management, school, work, relationships, driving discussions, childcare, and community life
executive function companion executive function support executive dysfunction functional cognition initiation support planning support sequencing support organization support time management support working memory impulse control emotional regulation task switching follow through self monitoring reduced insight caregiver cueing external aids calendars alarms checklists visual schedules metacognitive strategies task breakdown school accommodations work accommodations medication routine support cooking safety money management support driving safety cognition Parkinson’s executive function support cognitive rehabilitation companion autism executive function support TBI executive function support stroke cognitive support MS cognitive support dementia cognitive support Alzheimer’s cognitive support CarePlanRx companion

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Clinical Confidence

Evidence behind this resource

20 sources
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View clinical references 20 sources
  1. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. Executive function deficits. ASHA Practice Portal. 2025. https://www.asha.org/practice-portal/clinical-topics/executive-function-deficits/ Source
  2. American Occupational Therapy Association. Functional cognition. American Occupational Therapy Association. 2025. https://www.aota.org/practice/clinical-topics/functional-cognition Source
  3. Jeffay E, et al. INCOG 2.0 guidelines for cognitive rehabilitation following traumatic brain injury, Part III: executive functions. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2023;38(1):28-47. https://journals.lww.com/headtraumarehab/fulltext/2023/01000/incog_2_0_guidelines_for_cognitive_rehabilitation.5.aspx Source
  4. Ponsford J, et al. INCOG 2.0 guidelines for cognitive rehabilitation following traumatic brain injury, Part II: attention and information processing speed. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2023;38(1):15-27. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36594857/ Source
  5. Kennedy MRT, et al. INCOG 2.0 guidelines for cognitive rehabilitation following traumatic brain injury, Part V: memory. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2023;38(1):66-85. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36594860/ Source
  6. Velikonja D, et al. INCOG 2.0 guidelines for cognitive rehabilitation following traumatic brain injury, Part IV: cognitive-communication and social cognition disorders. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2023;38(1):48-65. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36594859/ Source
  7. Cicerone KD, Goldin Y, Ganci K, et al. Evidence-based cognitive rehabilitation: systematic review of the literature from 2009 through 2014. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 2019;100(8):1515-1533. doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2019.02.011 Source
  8. Toglia J, Foster ER. The multicontext approach to cognitive rehabilitation: a metacognitive strategy intervention to optimize functional cognition. AOTA Press. 2021;2nd edition. https://library.aota.org/AOTA-Press/Product/900520 Source
  9. American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine Cognitive Rehabilitation Task Force. Cognitive rehabilitation manual: translating evidence-based recommendations into practice. American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. 2022;Second edition. https://acrm.org/publications/cognitive-rehabilitation-manual/ Source
  10. Giles GM, Edwards DF, Morrison MT, et al. Screening and assessment of cognitive dysfunction in adults with traumatic brain injury: a systematic review. American Journal of Occupational Therapy. 2020;74(2):7402205010p1-7402205010p14. doi:10.5014/ajot.2020.038182 Source
  11. Giles GM, Edwards DF, Morrison MT, et al. Intervention for cognitive dysfunction in adults with traumatic brain injury: a systematic review. American Journal of Occupational Therapy. 2020;74(2):7402205020p1-7402205020p9. doi:10.5014/ajot.2020.038190 Source
  12. Kofler MJ, et al. Executive function deficits in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and autism spectrum disorder. Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review. 2024. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11485171/ Source
  13. Foster ER, Hershey T. Everyday executive function is associated with activity participation in Parkinson disease. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair. 2011;25(8):733-741. doi:10.1177/1545968311418381 Source
  14. Benedict RHB, Amato MP, DeLuca J, Geurts JJG. Cognitive impairment in multiple sclerosis: clinical management, MRI, and therapeutic avenues. Lancet Neurology. 2020;19(10):860-871. doi:10.1016/S1474-4422(20)30277-5 Source
  15. Bakas T, et al. Systematic review of the evidence for stroke family caregiver and dyad interventions. Stroke. 2022. doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.121.034090 Source
  16. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. Traumatic brain injury in adults. ASHA Practice Portal. 2025. https://www.asha.org/practice-portal/clinical-topics/traumatic-brain-injury-in-adults/ Source
  17. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. Dementia. ASHA Practice Portal. 2025. https://www.asha.org/practice-portal/clinical-topics/dementia/ Source
  18. American Occupational Therapy Association. Occupational Therapy Practice Framework: Domain and Process—Fourth Edition. American Journal of Occupational Therapy. 2020;74(Suppl 2):7412410010p1-7412410010p87. doi:10.5014/ajot.2020.74S2001 Source
  19. Smallfield S, Fang L, Kyler D. Self-management interventions to improve activities of daily living and rest and sleep for adults with chronic conditions: a systematic review. American Journal of Occupational Therapy. 2021;75(4):7504190010. doi:10.5014/ajot.2021.046946 Source
  20. National Center on Accessible Educational Materials. Executive function and accessible learning supports. CAST / National Center on Accessible Educational Materials. 2025. https://aem.cast.org/ Source

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