Posts Tagged ‘sensing in rehab’

What Therapeutic Exercise Ought to Create

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Transform Your Body, Change Your Mind

 

What if therapeutic exercise actually changed your patient's reality right now, right there in the clinic, AND they knew instinctively what to do next?

It can, it will…once we step up to claim the full power of our scope of practice to go beyond mere stength/flexibility mindsets to literally trans-form lives.

 

Don't believe what I am saying?

 

… give yourself the gift of the experience instead.

Take 65 minutes to nourish your mindbody connection this week by following along with this simple class I taught last month.

Have fun with this one!

Push the Play Button to Listen
 

MP3 File

The DSR MethodTM : What we pay attention to & How we pay attention….changes every-thing!

 

Let me know what your experience was….

 

 

It Shouldn’t Hurt to be a PT/OT: Treating with Pain

Sunday, June 13th, 2010

 

In my research at the Courage Center in MN we discovered how many of our colleagues were "playing in pain." Pain from:

  • Exhaustion
  • Burnout
  • Lost Spirit
  • Musculoskeletal Strain
  • Numbness and flat affect

Now this month in the Physical Therapy Journal there is an important study (see below for link and summary) that examines what turns out to be a far too common phenomena:

PTs and OTs in higher than normal levels experience pain

and continue to work with it!

What's most shocking is why. For the PTs at least, branded as heroes/heroines and sages by their national association, the reasons are neither brave nor smart.

What is needed is what I blogged about last month:  Rehab BurnoutMatthew J Taylor Matthew Sanford Matt Squared

As professionals that are trained and practice in a disassociated mindbody manner, we ignore, work through and press on, ignoring our own important mindbody relationship….and in the end both we and our patients suffer as a result. My colleague Matt Sanford delivers a powerful 50 min keynote here to young healthcare students…make time to listen. When the peers we worked with in MN began to tend to their own mindbody relationship, not only did they soar, but it spilled over to their patients as well.

When is this insanity going to stop?

Hard to tell. I was scheduled to be in Boston tomorrow to teach a 2-day pre-conference on Mindfulness in PT….but no one signed up and we were scratched from the docket.

Hmmmmm, and we talk about our patients being clueless???

So this summer I'm going to roll out a new way of being in rehab…it's going to blow past all the deadwood CEU material and address US….the rehab pros and our urgent need for creativity and change within a culture of fear and self neglect.

In the meantime, what are your thoughts/experiences around this topic of rehab pros "playing in pain"?

 


Impact of Work-Related Pain on Physical Therapists and Occupational Therapists

Marc Campo and Amy R. Darragh

PHYS THER
Vol. 90, No. 6, June 2010, pp. 905-920

Abstract

 

 

 

"The participants noted substantial effects of work-related pain at work, at home, and in their career plans. All of the therapists were concerned about their potential clinical longevity. The professional culture complicated these effects by forcing therapists into a professional ideal."

 


Please send this along to your network…it has to stop.

Thanks!

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What is “altered” sensation? Can it be “trusted”?

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Here is a fascinating piece on sensory experience, learning and function.

18 min TED talk but has the potential to shift how you think about working with client's, their sensations and the utility of those "abhorrent" perceptions.

 

It is only when we "know" for sure that we become dangerous to ourselves and others. What if we celebrate and share the experience of our clients and investigate together what is "real" vs what is wrong?

Amazing things happen "right before our eyes"!

 

What have you seen?