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Showing page 1 of 9 (88 total posts)
  • The Popular Press Should Keep us Well Employed

    A few months back I blogged about how Gretchen Reynolds, the New York Times fitness writer, was doing a job that might be better done by a physical therapist. I've been reading her column fairly regularly and the responses from other readers are often more enlightening than the original articles themselves. One arose today that made me confident ...
    Posted to PT and the Greater Good (Weblog) on June 11, 2013
  • Group Think Evidence

    When I was at the horse show last weekend, I learned one of the show kid mothers is a PT. I learned this because she was treating another of the mothers using cranio-sacral therapy. I'm not sure what pushed more of my buttons, her treating someone on the fly or using cranio-sacral to do so. This isn't the first time I've said I don't think PTs ...
    Posted to Toni Talks about PT Today (Weblog) on May 29, 2013
  • Congratulations?

    A friend of mine posted on Facebook today, ''I've maxed out my health insurance deductible, in-network bills are on them now.'' What an interesting state of affairs when we're tempted to congratulate someone for being unwell enough to warrant full payment for health care costs. My only fear is that we're in May. What if they hit their maximum ...
    Posted to PT and the Greater Good (Weblog) on May 21, 2013
  • Light at the End of the Tunnel

    Registration for the final two courses has taken place. Mental, physical and emotional preparation is next on my agenda. Although I have a pretty good idea about what my case report will be, I often question myself and my ability to develop a doctoral-level document capable of being published. The exhaustive literature search has been literally ...
    Posted to Physical Therapist in Transition (Weblog) on April 25, 2013
  • Care Amid Chaos

    The American Physical Therapy Association, Alexandria, VA, put out a press release yesterday detailing the role that therapy professionals and students played in helping victims of the tragic bombing at the Boston Marathon. The release stated: ''A team of 70 members of APTA's Massachusetts Chapter, stationed at the Boston Marathon finish line on ...
  • ‘I Can't Help, My Back Hurts'

    This morning there was a patient on the floor so the request went out for lifting help. Four people responded, including me, a PTA, a male CNA and the patient's nurse. The patient was a big man, weak and in a narrow space so it wasn't going to be easy. As we were positioning ourselves to lift him the nurse stepped away. She said she didn't lift ...
    Posted to Toni Talks about PT Today (Weblog) on March 19, 2013
  • The Obesity Fight

    By now, many people have heard about New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's attempt to combat obesity by limiting the size of soft drinks containing sugar. There has been both an aggressive ad campaign and a new ban on beverages over 16 ounces. He has quite a few professional voices backing these decisions. Today, though, a state Supreme ...
    Posted to PT and the Greater Good (Weblog) on March 12, 2013
  • What Do I Include in CEUs?

    Recently I took on another challenge, writing a CEU module. When I agreed to do it, I thought no problem. This is what I teach. I already have an outline and references. I can just fill in the words. After I started writing, I realized something. When I teach, I have lots of material to cover so spend little time on any one thing. The CEU module ...
    Posted to Toni Talks about PT Today (Weblog) on March 5, 2013
  • A New Beginning

    Day in and day out, more than a few patients have taken a life-threatening event and turned it into a life-changing experience. Many have admitted there is some reason that they're still alive and have taken the opportunity to experience what they were meant to accomplish, whether permanently wounded physically or not. As physical therapists, we ...
    Posted to Physical Therapist in Transition (Weblog) on January 3, 2013
  • Who Directs Patient Care?

    A while ago, a patient came into the facility and we were given two weeks to make the patient stronger and safer to go home. The two weeks was what the patient's insurance company authorized. Research shows that a person will need to increase caloric intake and lift heavier weights with shorter repetitions to increase strength. The person should ...
    Posted to PTA Blog Talk (Weblog) on November 29, 2012
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