I've officially completed the APU Movement & Performance Fellowship! What a crazy journey this past year has been to elevate the level of care for my patients
https://t.co/mUUVFZ6Iho ProPublica has done it again. These terrifying glimpses inside health insurance corporations are so important. People need to understand what we're up against. These corporations don't care about you. @Cigna
@LenMacPT A number of factors: wanted to get a head start on what schools of thought i resonated with, to set myself apart from other students, was doing well in school, and the loan money didn't seem to run out 😂
@ShepDPT I think it depends on the patient in front of you. Usually with evals or situations where I'm unsure of the diagnosis, I'll limit the number of exercises or at least keep it in the same category when treating an impairment. With a TKA pt, sometimes more is more
My other half just dished out a great analogy.
''When you have a cut on your skin, your body heals it without you doing anything - why wouldn't your body do the same thing for a disc injury?''
Physio in disguise!!
@jayceroni_ @jwehrerDPT Really depends on what you do and who you see regularly. OCS (focuses more on spine) is more relevant for me in the more traditional outpatient setting. SCS is a lot more about acute injury management and sports related injuries
🚨 NEW @JOSPT Blog Post 🚨
➡️ What is peak strength and HOW do we measure it?
🧵👇 See below for an appendix on HHD setups (push and pull HHD) for shoulder, hip, and knee, AND a data spreadsheet from @MuyVienDPT
Part 2 coming soon from @madisonfranek
https://t.co/IXJNV1DaD9
@Lentini_PT I did residency and fellowship training but tbh I just reached out to the chair and asked if I could get my feet wet. I'll be guest lecturing this fall in gen pathology and we'll see where it goes!