POPULARITY
In dieser bewegenden Folge spreche ich mit Danny Brose – einem jungen Mann, der gelernt hat, dass Ablehnung manchmal das größte Geschenk sein kann.Danny war lange Zeit schüchtern, still und hat sich häufig zurückgezogen. Doch genau diese Phasen der Stille führten ihn zu einem kraftvollen Wendepunkt in seinem Leben. Durch die Begegnung mit einfühlsamen Physios und Therapeuten fand er Hoffnung, neue Wege – und sich selbst.Heute sprüht er vor Leidenschaft – besonders, wenn es um Basketball geht. Dieser Sport wurde zu seiner Ausdrucksform, zu seinem Raum für Wachstum und inneres Feuer.Wir sprechen darüber:✨ Warum ein "Nein" im Außen oft der Wegweiser zu einem inneren "Ja" ist✨ Wie Danny seine Schüchternheit überwand und seine innere Stärke fand✨ Warum Heilung manchmal leise beginnt – aber laut endet✨ Und wie du durch kleine Impulse große Veränderungen anstoßen kannstDiese Folge ist ein liebevoller Reminder: Du darfst deinen Weg gehen – auch wenn andere ihn nicht verstehen. Lass dich von Dannys Geschichte inspirieren, wenn du selbst an einem Punkt stehst, an dem du dich neu finden willst.
Physios believe a law change is needed to take pressure of GPs and certify patients fit-for-work faster. They say the current law, which requires a GP to sign off their fit-for-work plans, is causing unnecessary delays. ACC patients are the only clients physios can't sign off on. Physiotherapy New Zealand President Kirsten Davie told Mike Hosking New Zealand can't afford to have bottlenecks in the health system. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Wednesday 16th of April, the Government is hitting its crime targets – Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith discusses their progress. Physios want to be able to authorise someone to come off ACC and head back to work, clearing backlogs. Should they be allowed to? Ginny Andersen and Mark Mitchell discuss the crime stats, golden visas, and whether they trust the media on Politics Wednesday. Get the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast every weekday morning on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"Dear Newly Graduated Physical Therapist": A Direct Message Containing Advice We Wish We Had Received Powell JK, Cook C, Lewis J, et al. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2024;54(10):621-624. doi:10.2519/jospt.2024.12676 Due to copyright laws, unless the article is open source we cannot legally post the PDF on the website for the world to download at will. Brought to you by our sponsors at: CSMi – https://www.humacnorm.com/ptinquest Learn more about/Buy Erik/Jason/Chris's courses – The Science PT Support us on the Patreons! Music for PT Inquest: “The Science of Selling Yourself Short” by Less Than Jake Used by Permission Other Music by Kevin MacLeod – incompetech.com: MidRoll Promo – Mining by Moonlight Koal Challenge – Sam Roux
In Folge 66 von 4zu3 bespricht die Runde ausführlich die Lage beim VfL Osnabrück. Kapitän Dave Gnaase erklärt, was Trainer Marco Antwerpen mit seinem Team alles verändert hat. Außerdem gehts in der aktuellen Episode um den Aufstiegskampf und wer dort aktuell ein Momentum hat. Der Tabellenkeller wird dagegen ausgeweitet und fast die halbe Liga in den Abstiegskampf reingezogen. Zusätzlich analysiert die 4zu3-Crew die Situation von Arminia Bielefeld um Trainer Mitch Kniat und lobhudelt die Physios der 3. Liga! Und falls ihr uns Sprachnachrichten zukommen lassen wollt, könnt ihr das gerne unter folgender Nummer tun: 0151 566 58 335
This episode contains discussions about self-harm, suicide and sexual abuse, which may be distressing for some listeners. If you or someone you know is struggling, help is available. In Australia, you can contact Lifeline at 13 11 14 for 24/7 confidential support. If you are outside Australia, please seek support from a crisis service in your country. Dr Liam West is a Sports and Exercise Physician based in Melbourne, Australia and a fellow of the Australasian College of Sport & Exercise Physicians. In this episode, Liam, Zuzana and I discussed some practical aspects of how physiotherapists can work with sports doctors, what sports doctors want to know in your referral letter and updates, and common conditions where a sports doctor should be involved in patient care. We finish our discussion by focusing on the person rather than the patient and talk about Liam's approach to integrating biopsychosocial elements in patient care. In this episode: 0:00 About this episode and welcome Liam – background and interests 13:00 What do physios do that Liam is jealous of? 16:00 How do you build a career in sports medicine or sports physio? 17:30 Describe a typical week for a sports doctor – consulting, surgical assisting, sports game coverage 29:06 Referring people to a sports doctor, what does a sports doctor want to know in a referral or update? 38:53 Should you arrange an MRI or other investigations before you send someone to the sports doctor? Practicalities of rebates and referrals. When should a doctor be involved in managing fractures? 52:30 When should you refer to a GP and when should you refer to a specialist? 54:00 Mental health in sports injury rehab, difficult questions, mental health support for patients and health professionals/students 71:30 Influence of hormones on musculoskeletal health, screening for rheumatological conditions 79:00 The most important skills for a physiotherapist - problem solving and active listening. Learn from other health professionals, be curious and vulnerable enough to admit when you are wrong 87:00 Final tips for career development Thanks, Liam for a great conversation. Read more about Liam here: https://alphingtonsportsmed.com.au/profile/dr-liam-west/ Follow Liam on X: https://x.com/liam_west?lang=en Read Liam's chapters in the Brukner and Khan textbook (students I'm looking at you, read books!): https://csm.mhmedical.com/book.aspx?bookid=1970 Liam talked about the Tame the Beast website: https://www.tamethebeast.org/about We also discussed the SCREENDEM checklist for screening for rheumatological problems: https://rheumatology.physio/mini-blog-screendem/ Physio Foundations Podcast Summaries: You can find articles based on Physio Foundations podcast episodes at www.Perraton.Physio or on the Perraton Physio LinkedIn page. Follow @PerratonPhysio on YouTube, Facebook, X (Twitter), Instagram and Linked In. This is a discussion aimed at health professionals and health professional students. Always seek the guidance of a qualified health professional with any questions you may have regarding your health or a medical condition.
In dieser Folge von Performance Skills – Der Podcast dreht sich alles um Gelenkschutz in der Ergotherapie. Unsere Gästin, Florentina Van Ginneken, Ergotherapeutin, Gesundheitswissenschaftlerin und zertifizierte Handtherapeutin, teilt ihre Expertise und erzählt, warum sie dieses Thema so sehr fasziniert, dass sie sogar ein Buch darüber geschrieben hat. Florentina hat für die ergopraxis im Thieme-Verlag einen Artikel geschrieben, welcher in der Ausgabe 03/25 erscheinen wird. Wir klären, was Gelenkschutz bedeutet, bei welchen Krankheitsbildern er relevant ist und welche Maßnahmen Ergotherapeutinnen zur Verfügung stehen. Dabei wird deutlich: Gelenkschutz ist nicht nur eine Methode, sondern ein langfristiger Veränderungsprozess, der nachhaltig in den Alltag integriert werden muss. Florentina gibt praktische Beispiele, spricht über interdisziplinäre Zusammenarbeit mit Physios und Ärztinnen und verrät, wer oder was sie auf ihrem Weg inspiriert hat. Eine spannende Folge mit wertvollen Einblicken für alle, die sich mit Ergotherapie und Prävention beschäftigen! Ihr wollt mehr über dieses Thema erfahren? Dann schaut euch doch gerne das Buch von Florentina an: https://shop.thieme.de/Gelenkschutz/9783132456396 Wenn ihr Fragen habt, dann schreibt uns gerne unter info@performance-skills.de oder auf Instagram. Viel Spaß Sabrina und Robert
Schlafen ist wichtig, das weiß jeder. Aber wie wichtig ist es bei chronischen Schmerzen?Solltest du als Betroffener darauf achten besser oder mehr zu schlafen?Und wie viel Schlaf ist denn überhaupt sinnvoll? Gibt es auch zu viel Schlaf? Und was sind überhaupt die Auswirkungen davon auf Schmerzen?All diese Fragen bespricht Nils mit Autor & Physiotherapeut Robin Nürnberg.Mehr über Robin findest du auf: https://robin-nuernberg.de/Wenn du selbst von Patella- oder Achillessehnen Schmerzen betroffen bist und diese endlich los werden möchtest, dann sichere dir jetzt einen Termin für unsere kostenlose Schmerzanalyse, in der wir darüber sprechen, ob wir dir weiterhelfen können.Hier kostenlosen Termin buchen:https://nilsheim.de/terminWenn du Physiotherapeut oder Trainer bist und ein alle wichtigen Prinzipien der Patella- & Achillessehnen Reha zusammen mit den besten Übungen haben möchtest, dann ist unser Sehnen Schmerz Guide genau das richtige.Den Guide kannst du hier kaufen:https://painphysio.com/de/produkte/sehnen-schmerz-guide/Wenn du selbst Patella- oder Achillessehnen Schmerzen hattest, Spielsportler bist und nie wieder diese Schmerzen haben willst, dann ist unser Offseason Guide für die trainingsfreie Zeit genau das richtige für dich. Kompletter Trainingsplan mit Kraft, Athletik, Beweglichkeit und Regeneration mit allem was du brauchst. (Auch für Physios und Trainer geeignet)Den Offseason Guide kannst du hier kaufen:https://guide.nilsheim.de/Und wenn du Feedback zum Podcast hast, dann schreib uns eine Nachricht auf Instagram oder eine E-Mail an Coaching@nilsheim.de.Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nils.heim.schmerzcoach/
Send us a textOne of the ongoing discussions people in the health space (I'll include everyone in that; Doctors, Physios, Dieticians, Nutritionists, Personal trainers etc) keep having is about "scope of practice".For instance; Someone who is not a registered dietician can not give out personalised meal plans, telling you exactly what to eat. It doesn't matter whether they're a personal trainer or a GP, they don't have the qualifications to do so.You will often hear physio therapists say the same thing; "If your client has an injury then you should refer out to a physio" and technically they are correct.However, there are some grey areas in this. What about a minor niggle? Can/should a personal trainer refer out? I mean, you don't go to A&E with a small cut on your finger, do you?And what happens when a qualified professional is seemingly incapable of helping you but someone in an adjacent profession does have the solution?I give the example of my knee pain which physiotherapists kept messing around with and nothing was resolved, then I saw my sports massage therapist and he diagnosed the cause in 2 minutes and fixed it within 3 sessions. Should I not have listened? Should he have sent me away, back to the physios that didn't have the solution the first time?All that, and more, in today's episode;As always; HPNB still only has 5 billing cycles. So this means that you not only get 3 months FREE access, no obligation! BUT, if you decide you want to do the rest of the program, after only 5 months of paying $10/£8 a month you now get FREE LIFE TIME ACCESS! That's $50 max spend, in case you were wondering. Though I'm not terribly active on Instagram and Facebook you can follow us there. I am however active on Threads so find me there! And, of course, you can always find us on our YouTube channel if you like your podcast in video form :) Visit healthypostnatalbody.com and get 3 months completely FREE access. No sales, no commitment, no BS. Email peter@healthypostnatalbody.com if you have any questions, comments or want to suggest a guest/topic If you could rate the podcast on your favourite platform that would be a big help. Playing us out this week; "Keys to the castle" by Salon Dijon
Dr. Dani Antonellos is an osteopath, personal trainer, and competitive bodybuilder from Australia, blending clinical expertise with functional fitness.Her journey and purpose reflects a commitment to breaking stereotypes and helping others achieve their health, fitness and rehab goals with confidence.- Foundational Fitness**: Before chasing advanced techniques, Dani stresses the need to master the basics. This foundational approach ensures long-term success and injury prevention.- **Injury Prevention for Athletes**: Learn about Dani's assessment process for clients, focusing on movement patterns to create balanced training programs that minimize injury risks.**Empathy in Training**: Dani's personal injury experiences have shaped her empathetic approach to client care, emphasizing the mental and emotional aspects of rehabilitation.Bodybuilding Challenges: Insights into the physical, mental, and social pressures of competitive bodybuilding.Women's Health: Dani discusses her experience with hormonal contraceptives and the importance of informed choices.Working With The Best: What it's like to work alongside Andrew Lock- one of the best physiotherapists in the world, right here in AustraliaDani's fresh perspective and relatable experiences make this episode a must watch for anyone passionate about fitness and holistic health. Whether you're an athlete, injured or a beginner, her insights will inspire and guide you on your journey.Stay strong and keep moving!P.S. Follow Dani on Instagram for more tips, and let us know what topics you'd love to hear in future episodes!You can find Dani at- https://www.paddoperformance.com.au/dani-coachingHer app at https://apps.apple.com/au/app/mytrainingspace/id1634342476 On Insta at https://www.instagram.com/daniantonellos/And at https://www.unitedhealthed.com/I am Damian Porter , Former NZ Special Forces Operator, Subject Matter Expert from www.hownottodieguy.com and www.eatwellmovewell.netAnd you are listening to my STRAIGHT TALK MIND AND MUSCLE PODCAST sponsored by www.mystait.com - the ultimate daily formula for optimum hormone health, stress management, energy and performance. 100% natural and clinically proven ingredients, it provides everything you need to raise your game, in a convenient gut-friendly capsule. And the Mason Survival Protocol - https://www.carnivoreretreat.com/post/masonsurvival-protocol-carnivore-retreat Links for my former shows are here- WATCH on YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpt-Zy1jciVn7cWB0B-y5WATyzrzfwucZLISTEN on: spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1rlAGRXCwLIJfQCQ5B3PYB?si=UmgsMBFkRfelCAm1E4Pd3QItunes - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/straight-talk-mind-and-muscle-podcast/id1315986446?mt=2 Amazon https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/5bce2d31-a171-4e83-bada-d1384c877e76Subscribe for more amazing tips, interviews and wisdom from phenomenal guests ------- And get your ** FREE Video Workshop here- https://www.hownottodieguy.com/
In this episode we explore all things to do with managing patients with Osteoporosis. We cover:Factors to consider in treating patients with OsteoporosisImportance of fall risk in fracture riskRisk assessment calculators and how to use theseExercise prescription with this patient population, including those with vertebral fracturesRecommendations regarding more structured exercise/involvement in sportsRisks clinicians need to be aware of in this patient populationWant to learn more about managing patients with Osteoporosis? Lora recently did a brilliant Masterclass with us, called “Strategies for Osteoporosis Management and Fracture Prevention” where she goes into further depth on managing patients with low bone density.
Thomas und Wolfgang sprechen über Antinährstoffe wie Lektine und Oxalate in Gemüse und darüber, warum etwas, das gesund ist, grundsätzlich ungesund sein kann – und umgekehrt. Außerdem reden sie über Palindrome, die große Frage nach Formaten, die keinen Sinn ergeben, und über die eine Sache, die Thomas jungen Physios mit auf den Weg geben würde
Fehlinformation sind auf Social Media keine Seltenheit. Gerade als Physio erkennt man auf Anhieb falsche Übungsausführungen, schlechte Erklärungen zu komplexen Themen wie Physiologie oder Anatomie und simple Verarsche für Klicks und Reichweite. Leonie ist in ihren Reels nicht schüchtern solche Missstände aufzudecken und zu korrigieren. Mit "CoachStef20" bei Snocks ► https://go.snocks.com/coachstef-2024 Leonie auf Insta ► https://bit.ly/3NdDUYL
Welcome to the Aphasia Access, Aphasia Conversations Podcast. I'm Ellen Bernstein Ellis, Director Emeritus of the Aphasia Treatment Program at Cal State East Bay in the Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, and a member of the Aphasia Access Podcast Working Group. Aphasia Access strives to provide members with information, inspiration and ideas that support their aphasia care through a variety of educational materials and resources. Brief topic intro I'm today's host for an episode that will feature Dr Felicity Bright. We'll discuss her research looking at factors impacting wellbeing, engagement and hope. Guest bio Felicity Bright is a registered speech language therapist and associate professor in rehabilitation at Auckland University of Technology in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Her research examines cultures of care, and in particular, how the cultures and practices in rehabilitation respond to the needs and priorities of patients and those who support them. She has a particular interest in stroke and in the needs and experiences of those with communication impairment through her work, Felicity seeks to support practitioners services and rehabilitation organizations and to provide better person centered care. Listener Take-aways In today's episode you will: Explore how qualitative research promotes the nuanced study of meaningful clinical practice Consider cultural differences in well-being and what this might mean for how we work with people with aphasia and their support networks Reflect on the importance of having discussions with patients about hope and well-being Discuss how culture and organizations impact healthcare practice for individuals with aphasia Show notes edited for conciseness Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Felicity, welcome to our show. Thank you for agreeing to be our guest today. Felicity Bright Thank you for having me. It's great to be here. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Welcome Felicity. We're going to start today with an icebreaker question. The one you selected for today is, “Do you have a favorite book or movie about aphasia? Felicity Bright It was hard to choose one. Actually, I was just looking at my bookshelf and I went back to myself as a fairly new speech and language therapist quite a few years ago now. One that was really transformative for my practice was Talking about Aphasia by Suzie Parr and Sally Bing. It's a classic, but it was a beautifully written book that really opened my eyes to the experiences of people with aphasia beyond all the technical work that we'd learned in university and so on, but it brought to life the humanity of the people who have aphasia, and really helped me rethink why I do what I do, and what the real impacts of aphasia can be for people. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Yes, that's a beautiful book that brings that all to the forefront. And I want you to say the title and author again, in case I spoke over you a moment ago, Felicity Bright The book is Talking about Aphasia and the authors are Susie Parr, Sally Bing and Sue Gilpin with Chris Ireland, Ellen Bernstein-Ellis We'll put that (i.e. citation) into the reference list on our speaker notes. So thank you. And as we start today's interview, I was wondering if you'd like to share your path from clinician to researcher, because we've had several guests who have started in clinical work and then came to their doctoral work and research a little bit later. So, I'd love it if you could share that with our listeners. Felicity Bright Sure. So I worked as a speech and language therapist in New Zealand. We are speech language therapists. I worked in a range of neurological settings, from acute stroke neurosurgery, did a little bit of ICU, did some rehab in inpatient services and in community, and really enjoyed that work, but I'd always had a long standing interest in research. I was a bit of a geek, you know, When I was in training, that was, that was me, I was the geek. And so I'd always kind of expected at some point I would go down the research track. It was prompted after I had my first baby, and my work required me to either go back full time or to not work. And so at that point, I chose to not go back to work full time, and a research job came up at Auckland University of Technology, and I'd followed their work for a while. We don't do speech therapy here, it was rehabilitation research, and I was offered an opportunity to be a research officer doing interventions as part of a randomized control trial with people with traumatic brain injury. And so that kind of gave me the space to bring together some clinical work, but also some research work. It gave me the opportunity to do my Masters alongside this with my fees paid. So that was fantastic. And it really solidified for me that I was quite happy and enjoyed being in that kind of clinical research space. And so I've been in the university now for 15, nearly 16 years Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Wow, that's a great story. So now you have a 15 year old, right? Felicity Bright I have a 16 year old who is now taller than I am. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Well, thank you for sharing that. I'm just really looking forward to a discussion around some, what I consider critical but hard to define and challenging to research topics. like engagement, wellbeing and hope. I want to start by asking, how did you end up researching a topic like engagement or hope? You did say during our planning meeting that you research things that you're bad at, which made me laugh. So that sounds like some courageous and reflective exploration. So maybe talk a little more about that. Felicity Bright Yeah, I am a bit of a selfish researcher. I research the things that I find tricky and a little bit hard, because for me, I want to learn how can I do better at this? How can I help my students learn how to be better in these areas? How can I help clinicians not make the mistakes that I've made. I guess trying to be a better clinician has been at the heart of a lot of the work that I do. And you know, when I was working full time in clinical practice, I had patients who would stick with me where I just felt I let them down. They had such a short window of rehabilitation access. They were living with stroke for the rest of their lives. They maybe had eight or 12 weeks of speech therapy. There were just times when I really felt I missed the mark for them, when they didn't get the best rehab they could have had. And it was when I was working in the university in this randomized control trial of goal setting interventions after traumatic brain injury that it started to help me reflect on some of the why I was maybe having some of the challenges I was having. So in this trial, which was quite prescribed because it's a randomized control trial, I was noticing that patients seem to be engaging with these interventions a lot more than the people who I worked with in clinical practice, and that kind of surprised me a little bit. I also noticed that-- we were using Mark Ylvisaker's approach to goal setting around what is meaningful identity based goal setting--and people were identifying hopes and goals and dreams that would have left me panicking as a speech and language therapist. What do I do about this? But it made me realize, actually, I didn't need to panic about that, and there were ways to engage with people about their hopes and dreams that honored those hopes and dreams, that kept them alive. But also, I could see ways that I could work with this. I could bring my speech therapy hat and help people. And so it highlighted to me that maybe the things that I had perceived to be difficult or issues, didn't need to be and there were ways to think about these things differently and ways to work differently to better support people. So working on this trial, and I did some quite structured reflection around that with some of my colleagues, writing in auto ethnography around this, gave me the opportunity to reflect on these areas, but also highlighted that there was the real opportunity to do more nuanced and more detailed research that would bring to life different ways that we could support people to hold hope, to engage in rehabilitation that is meaningful and that might be able to produce some quite tangible suggestions to support clinicians and to support the people with stroke who we work with. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis I just want to say that these intangible, some what we call intangible topics that you've tackled, you always seem to end with tangible suggestions, and that's what I have found so inspiring. And we're going to circle back to hope in a few more questions. But, I just want to say, not only has my clinical thinking been informed and inspired by your research topics, but I've also just learned so much from the variety of qualitative methodologies that you've used in your work. I was wondering if you could share how you developed your expertise in qualitative research, maybe even offer some tips to people wanting to develop their own skill set. And okay, maybe I'm being a little selfish interviewer. You just said selfish researcher, but I found this challenging, and I've been trying to dip my toe, or I've fallen in head first, trying to develop my skill set around qualitative research. What's your advice? Felicity Bright I was really fortunate. I came into research, into a team that had qualitative expertise and that used a variety, but not a wide variety, of different qualitative approaches. And it was a team, and still is a team, that has really high standards for methodological rigor. So to us, it's really important to do research that is robust and rigorous and that anchors back to the underpinning theory and philosophy that underlies each of the approaches that we use. But I was also really lucky in my research that I had supervisors and bosses who really supported innovation, who didn't tell me, no, this is how we do things, who didn't expect me to come into a study and do it just as they had told me to do. But they created the space for me to explore when I was working as a clinical researcher, but also as a master's and as a PhD student. Really had no issues when I said I'm going to go to the library, and I would just sit in the library and read qualitative textbooks and come back with a completely hair brained idea, but that actually turned into something that was really interesting and meaningful. So the Voice Centered Relational Approach that I've used a number of times came from sitting in the library one afternoon and just reading Feminist Research Methodology books. And I think one of my tips would be read outside speech and language therapy. There's amazing work that is happening, not just in the health disciplines or education spaces, but I love reading health sociology journals. I get notifications of a number of different journal types that alert me to different work. One of my recent projects I used Applied Tensions Analysis, which I'd never heard of, but I had a notification come across for a paper about domestic violence settings and kind of how services work. That's not in my area of research or clinical expertise, but there was something within that abstract that made me go, oh, there's an idea there that is similar to the ideas that I'm trying to get at in my stroke research. And so reading widely, I use Twitter a lot as a way of, kind of coming up to date with different research. I use trial and error. I've tried things and got them terribly wrong. I tried Grounded Theory for about a year for my Masters, and it was atrocious. But also I found that doing research with people with aphasia pushes you to be innovative. A lot of the methodologies as they are published don't necessarily quite fit with the types of interviews or the types of data that we have, and so for me, that's provided an opportunity to test and do things differently. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis I mean, that's an inspiring response and encouraging support. So thank you. During our planning discussion, you also referred me to the Life Thread model and the 2008 article by Ellis Hill, Payne and Ward. What a wonderful article. So thank you for that. I was particularly taken with its implications for clinical practice and how it might guide us in asking questions in a better way to help us understand the social realities of our clients, to prioritize that. To understand how important the social reality is for our clients. Could you please share with our listeners some of the core concepts of the Life Thread model and how it's informed your work? Because I do see the connection there. Felicity Bright Yeah, I came across this, Carolyn Alice Hill, who developed it, I think, as part of her PhD, was a collaborator of one of my PhD supervisors, and so Cath put me onto it. But the Life Threads model is about identity. And Carolyn's work was in stroke, and she was kind of talking to how identity changes and develops over time. And the Life Threads model talks to how our lives and our identities are made up of many threads, and those threads, they can change over time. But when there's a traumatic event like a stroke, it can cause some threads to break or be frayed, and that can be really challenging. We know there's a lot of work around aphasia and identity construction and identity loss, that's come around. But also what we know is that stroke can also prompt people to think about what are the threads that they want to continue post stroke. Maybe there are some threads, I found in my hope research, where people are saying,”I don't want to be that person anymore. That's not something that I value”, and for them, sometimes the stroke could be an opportunity to rethink what are the threads that I now want to bring into my life as I weave this new identity of somebody post stroke, but still continues threads that have come through from before the stroke. We know from the hope research that I was doing that it was often really hard for people to see these threads. It kind of felt like there was a pre-stroke life and a post-stroke life, and that there was quite a disruption. Those threads were cut. And so for me, it prompted questions about how do our conversations as clinicians help people identify the threads that are important for them to thread through their life. What are the new threads that they want to pick up on? You know, some of the work I've done, and we will talk about this a bit later on, around life after stroke, has highlighted how actually a lot of the conversations that happen between clinicians focus around things like tasks and activities and doing things, but there isn't necessarily a lot of conversation about identity or about what is meaningful and what do people want to carry through, and how can clinicians support that? And I would say that if we can kind of tune into the threads that matter to people or that people want to matter in their lives, it gives us a chance to tailor therapy to be much more personalized, more meaningful and more engaging, and I would suggest, probably leads to better outcomes for people. What we know from quite a bit of the research, not just my research, but other work, is that people are often doing this identity work on their own, without support. And we know that it's really hard, because our identities are social and they're relational, and they occur through connection and through communication, all of these things that are disrupted by aphasia, often. And so I think the Life Threads model really prompts us to think how can we as clinicians, support people to engage in conversations about identity, and how can we overtly, really attend to supporting identity within the work that we do. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Wow, that's beautiful. And yes, I think there's been, fortunately, a growing understanding of the importance of looking at the lack of support for this identity work with us with our clients, and I can really see how the Life Threads model has played an important role in your thinking and research. I recommend our readers to the article because it has some great examples of how to maybe flex the way you ask questions to help understand the narrative better. So I think it's, a marvelous article, I just want to take a moment and let our listeners know about the fabulous interview that you did with Michael Biel on the ANCDS podcast where you discussed engagement and ways you might incorporate Goal Attainment Scaling to help our clients establish meaningful goals. I'll put the link to that, along with the citations to all of the work we're discussing today in our show notes. That also gives me a chance to say I don't have to cover everything today, because he did a really good job on those topics. But at the end of that podcast with Michael, you highlighted what was coming next, and that was your work on wellbeing. You've been exploring, and this is a quote by you, “what does it look like to explicitly attend to holistic, long term wellbeing?” Can you discuss some of the takeaways from your 2024 article, Psychosocial Well being After Stroke in Aotearoa, New Zealand, a Qualitative Meta-synthesis with your co authors, Ibell-Roberts and Wilson. Maybe we can just start by talking about the term psychosocial wellbeing. That's an important one to understand, but it can vary depending on one's cultural context. Just to start with that, so yeah, good luck with all of that! Felicity Bright It's a massive question, and it's funny, I started with the term psychosocial wellbeing, and I really intentionally used the language of psychosocial to kind of move away from thinking about just psychological wellbeing, which tended to be framed more from a mood perspective. And so I really wanted to be attending to some of the emotional, and the social, and the relational elements of wellbeing. But actually, I've now dropped the psychosocial because what we found is, when we talk to our people with stroke in the community, as part of our research, that term is completely meaningless to them, but the term wellbeing is something that resonates. Wellbeing is a really, firstly, a really nebulous term, but it's also really multifaceted. And I guess the place we've come to is, we view wellbeing as kind of quite unique to an individual, but it's deeply relational, and it's influenced through connection with people, with their cultures and with their communities, and all of those areas need attention. Now, in this piece of work that you referred to, Qualitative Metasynthesis, we were looking across the literature in Aotearoa, New Zealand, when we look at all the work that's been done, looking at life after stroke, and living life after stroke, what do people say about wellbeing and that highlighted that there were a number of features. Now, one thing I want to flag is that within New Zealand, we have an indigenous population, the Māori population of New Zealand, who have been here for centuries before Pakeha came and colonized New Zealand. And one of the things that's been really important in our work is to really make sure that we are upholding the voices of Māori, who are often either not included in research, or are involved in research that is not particularly culturally safe, or where their perspectives are kind of subsumed within the wider perspectives of the dominant Pakeha, or European culture. And so one of the things we've been really lucky to do with this is to have my colleague BJ Wilson, who was leading the Māori stream, so she engaged with our Māori data and literature uniquely. So we upheld that in its own right. That's context, because I'm going to talk to two different ways of thinking about wellbeing, one that was general from all of the literature and one that was specific to Māori . So when we look across all of the New Zealand literature, including the Māori literature, we kind of saw there were probably four key areas that seemed to matter for wellbeing. Having strong connections with family, with old, pre stroke friends, but also with new friends, people who had also been through stroke and had some similar experiences. The sense of self that was connected, where people had a sense of being connected to who they were before the stroke, who they are now, and have an idea of who do I want to be in the future? And there was a sense of coherence, sense of thread that went between those identities. There was, when they experienced wellbeing, a general sense of stability in the present. So things were okay now. It didn't mean that things were perfect. Some of the literature has suggested that people have to have positive emotions if they're going to have a sense of wellbeing. But actually, this qualitative meta synthesis, and the following qualitative work we've done has suggested, no, life is never 100% positive for any of us, but it's about having a balance of, yes, maybe there are some hard times, but also there are some good times as well. That overall, there's an equilibrium of emotions, Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Right the duality, like be able to hold the duality Felicity Bright Absolutely and kind of be okay with it, recognize that each of them has a time and a place. People also, when there was a sense of wellbeing, had a vision for the future, kind of a sense of moving towards that. So, yes, they were okay in the present, but they also had a sense that the present is not my future for the rest of my life. I can see a life that is meaningful and enjoyable, and I'm taking steps towards it. But when we looked at the literature from Māori, and this was the analysis led by my colleague, Bobby-Jo, it also came through ideas like whanaungatanga and ngā hono. So whanaungatanga talks to the notion of connections, and ngā hono talks to connections and kind of belonging as well. And that was a sense of connection to whānau. So that is to people's wider kinship networks, not just blood relations like a family would be, but to kinship networks who are meaningful to the person. Having a sense of connection and belonging in their community, but also to places of meaning. So not just people, but to places. We also notice an idea around ko ahau, so being connected to their identity as Māori, to their cultural identity, in a sense that their cultural identity was recognized and was valued and supported by those around them, including healthcare professionals. Ideas of mana and wairua. So mana talks to the inherent standing and value that an individual has. And we all know that in a healthcare context, actually, that can be diminished because you become a patient in the healthcare context. But actually, for wellbeing, having that mana recognized and valued and upheld was really critical. And when one's personhood is understood and respected, that also helped with the sense of wairua, I guess, the spiritual essence of the person. And finally, was the notion of rangatiratanga, which is about autonomy and control and the ability to make decisions for oneself. We can see that while there were similarities between our Māori and our non-Māori groups, there were also cultural differences. So for wellbeing, for Māori, had wider integrations with their sense of whānau, their family and kinship networks, and for their culture and wellbeing was unique for each whānau within the research. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis I'd like to take a moment and have you elaborate a little bit more on that concept of the relationship of whānau to wellbeing, and how the whānau may be impacted by the stroke and subsequent aphasia. So often our family and support network does not receive direct attention. And here, you're elevating it quite a bit, so maybe you could speak to that a bit more. This is really top of mind for me, because I just went to a think tank meeting and hearing the stories of the care providers saying, I'm not sure I mattered in this equation of my spouse's health care rehabilitation.It just really struck me to hear that. So please, let's talk a little bit more about those values. Felicity Bright Yeah, absolutely, for all of the people in our wellbeing research and in the previous hope research and so on that I've done, kind of people's whānau, their family and their social connections were absolutely critical to their recovery. And what came through, when we were looking at Māori experiences, was particularly also the intergenerational aspect, like sometimes within stroke services, we might think about the partner a little bit, not always particularly well. And I'll talk to that in a minute. But actually, we could also hear within our Māori whānau, kind of the impacts for generations above and generations below, like the disruption to relationships between grandparents and grandchildren, and how the grandparent who may have aphasia, would usually have a really critical role in passing on family knowledge, or passing on Matauranga, kind of Māori cultural knowledge. But actually, because of the way the stroke affected them, they couldn't do that and take that role on, and so that impacted not just on the relationship, but also kind of on the identity and how Māori culture could be passed on through a whānau unit. But we've also heard exactly what you talk about. Our services are focused around the person with stroke rather than their whānau, but our services are also really short term. And so what we can see from the research is that the family and the whānau become the connectors and the supporters. They are the consistent people. They hold, usually, deep knowledge of the person that often the healthcare professional doesn't hold. And we're doing some work at the moment around communication access in stroke units. And even in the context of really significant aphasia, we're hearing about how whānau, even though they don't know about aphasia, they don't know about communication strategies. But because they know how to read the person, they know their non verbal communication, they are actually really powerful translators, and hold the expertise that, actually, we don't hold as Speech and Language Therapists. But we also know that the whānau are key in helping people access supports outside the healthcare system, and they do a lot of that navigation work that they are left to do because the healthcare system doesn't do it very well. And like you say, that's really challenging when the whānau's well-being is impacted themselves, you know, but that isn't seen consistently, and it isn't acknowledged. They very quickly become the carer, rather than, this is this person's wife and they've been married for 45 years. Or this is this person's husband, and they've got three young children at home. What is this going to mean for their relationship as a couple, for their relationship as parents? And so the families are talking to us about the exhaustion and the grief and the shock and the loss. The relief that the person is alive, but again, the duality, there is relief, but there is also distress from the way that the stroke is impacting. And so we would really be calling for much more focus on everybody's wellbeing in this context, because if the wellbeing of whānau is not there, that impacts also on the wellbeing of the person. And I think we need to be shifting how we think about who is our client, whose needs do we serve, and what is our role in supporting the social and relational context around the person Ellen Bernstein-Ellis That's beautiful. You really highlighted that role, the role of the whānau. And you also identify, Felicity, some other key contributors to wellbeing, and then how those might really impact our clinical goal setting, and I know that's always such an important aspect of how we think as clinicians. You have to document because we're in a system, which we'll talk about. Maybe you can share some other factors that you identified. Felicity Bright Yeah, so I would be encouraging people to think about what are all the things that seem to support people's long term wellbeing? And those are things, like the relationships they hold within their family, but also within their social networks and within their work networks and so on, Thinking about the different emotions that people might be experiencing. Thinking about hope and what supports people to hold hope, and what do people hope for. Think about the connections that matter to people, the connections to people. The cultural things that matter for people's wellbeing. The connections to community activities and roles and so on. And think about the things that matter and are meaningful for individuals that usually fall outside our traditional SMART goals that we use in New Zealand, you know? Is it smart, specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, time bound? What is it? I would be saying our goal should be focusing on what makes a good life for this person. And I would be encouraging you, if you're a clinician, looking at the goals that you're setting for the person. Where is the good life in those goals? Is that up front and center and documented on the page that everyone can see it? That's something I learned through my goal setting research. That was my first research job, the importance of taking people's words, putting their words on a page, and keeping the words where everybody could see it. So where are the things that support wellbeing and that constitute a good life in our goal setting? Where are they in the interventions that we're doing? And I would be really encouraging people to reflect on how they are making the links explicit between the therapeutic tasks and the things that really matter to people. Because we know from the engagement work that when people can see the link between what they're doing in therapy and what matters to them in life, it is much more likely to be engaging and is much more likely to support them to persist, even when it's difficult, because they can understand this is why I'm doing this thing. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Right? Oh, that's beautiful. That really leads nicely into another 2024 article that you've put out focused on wellbeing. And that's The physical wellbeing is our top priority: Healthcare professionals' challenges in supporting psychosocial wellbeing and stroke services. That article examines what seems to be a mismatch between knowing as clinicians that wellbeing is important, right, and being able to specifically address it within our clinical context. So, we say that we want to, and we know it's important, but the ability to get there, it's quite challenging. I was wondering if you could highlight some of your findings and key recommendations. And I think one of those actually addresses the graduate curriculum. I think that is really going back to the beginning, right? So, please share some of the wonderful work from that article. Felicity Bright So the context for this work is, this is part of a bigger program of research I'm doing around wellbeing after stroke. And this isn't specific to people with aphasia, but we do have people with aphasia in the research. This research came from this issue-- we've got decades of literature that says that wellbeing is important. We've got a body of literature that says clinicians know wellbeing is important, but we are persistently not addressing wellbeing, and we've got decades of patient experience data that says this is an unmet need. So I was really interested in understanding, why have we got this persistent mismatch between what is known what matters and what is done, and so using an approach called institutional ethnography to try and get into the cultures and the structures that contribute to this, the rationale behind that is I didn't want to be creating solutions that were going to be completely unattainable in the healthcare context. And so I wanted to understand what's going on in the structure of the healthcare system, and how might we be able to work with that or push against that, to create different ways of thinking about how we work to deal with this persistent issue. So this project, this part of the research, we were looking at, why are clinicians not seeming to address wellbeing? And so we interviewed over 30 clinicians, I think, within this research for a whole range of healthcare disciplines. What came through really consistently was everybody wanted to support wellbeing. Everybody thought it was important, but there were a number of factors that made it difficult, and we traced as to why that was so. Firstly, we can look back to when the person first comes into the service. They come into the emergency department. There's often a code stroke that's called. It's a time of really busy early biomedical focus around investigating the stroke, doing assessments. The first couple of days are about intervening to prevent another stroke or to prevent complications. And dysphagia assessment is a classic in New Zealand. Dysphagia assessment is usually prioritized over communication assessment because it is seen to have particular risks and contribute to particular complications. And so we've got this really early biomedical focus as people come through the first few days. Then the focus shifts a little bit to assessments and treating impairment in function. And when we were interviewing clinicians, they were talking about wanting to give people the best chance of recovery, and that linked to ideas around neuroplasticity and the importance of early intervention for maximizing neuroplasticity and brain remodeling. There was a real focus on addressing the practicalities like toileting and dressing and what was needed to get people home. And there was a view often that emotions could wait. We need to do the practicalities first. We can do the other stuff later. This was a time of focusing on helping people survive, get through and get home, and it was in the context of really busy wards. You know, sitting and watching nurses work, they are flat out. They are understaffed, and they have very limited time to be doing these aspects of work. But all of this contributes in this wider healthcare system that in New Zealand, and I suspect internationally, is short staffed, underfunded. We've got more demand than we've got beds. There is a really strong focus on getting people home. Now that's not inherently bad. A lot of our people that we speak to want to be home. Home is a more healing environment for many people than being in hospital. But when the focus is on getting people home, and that is usually about, is the person physically safe to be home, what can happen is other forms of work and other impacts of stroke can be devalued or be forgotten. And what we could see is people were doing work to support wellbeing within this, but it was kind of a particular form of wellbeing work. They would acknowledge a person's emotions, if they came up through interactions. They would be responding to the emotional cues that people gave off that they were maybe feeling a bit uncertain or a bit upset. They talked about the importance of listening to the person, but that was often couched in a ‘I can listen for so long, but then I need to get on with my session', because the assessment, the treatment, the moving people forward wasn't important, and they would look to others to help. But the problem is, I would say this, this did a really good job of dealing with the tip of the iceberg, the emotions that were on the surface. But if we think back to what I've just said about what matters for wellbeing, relationships, connection, sense of self, hope, those things are not addressed. What we saw was that wellbeing was other to the core work of any individual discipline. That didn't work for anybody. Didn't work for our patients that we spoke to. It didn't work for our clinicians as well, because we could also see the moral injury and the burnout that comes when you can't offer the services that you know people are wanting and needing. And when we think about what do we do about that? Well, yeah, it's tricky, and I don't have any great answers, but training and education is one thing. So when we think about wellbeing as seen as other to the core business of the disciplines, we need to look at, what is it that we're teaching our students? What are we saying is core work of speech therapy or of physiotherapy or of nursing. I've got the privilege of chairing the accreditation body for speech therapy in New Zealand, and we are rewriting our accreditation framework at the moment that essentially dictates what programs need to teach. We now have a requirement that programs are teaching about psychosocial wellbeing, and that programs are assessing students on how they're addressing psychosocial wellbeing. We need to look at how pathways for care develop, and where is wellbeing within policies, processes, structures, documentation, Basically, it's nowhere. But we also need to look structurally, and we can talk a little bit more about structures and organizations and cultures, because I think what this work reflects is a wider issue around the cultures and the organization of care that can make it really challenging for clinicians to work in the ways that they do. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Oh my gosh, it's a beautiful, beautiful response. I think my favorite quote, and there were many in that article, but the one that said “people with stroke live with the impacts of a stroke system that is designed around biomedical short term care for a lifelong condition and deserve services that support them to thrive, not just survive.” I think it's what we need to bring back into the curriculum for our students to understand. And all of this ties into the importance of understanding how cultures and organizations, like you just said, of care, might impact the therapy we provide to our clients. Why do cultures and organizations of care matter? You're alluding to that. I think we've just started to reflect on that. Felicity Bright Yeah, I've often felt there's a real risk with the research that I do that we could end up pointing the finger at clinicians of not doing things as well as they could or as well as they should. But actually, we need to understand why is this? Why does it make sense for clinicians to prioritize dysphagia over communication? Why does it make sense to prioritize getting people home, over spending the time on addressing their wider wellbeing? And I've been really lucky to work with Deb Hersh and Stacey Attrill, we did a piece of work that looked at this in the context of how speech therapists enacted therapeutic relationships. And we started by delving into why do people work in the way that they do? We started to see the cultural elements. So the needs, for instance, your allegiances to colleagues, to be a good team player, to maintain your legitimacy. And particularly for speech therapists, who often have a slightly tenuous role in stroke teams. Physios and OTs are important, but speech therapists often have to kind of fight to kind of have their voices heard, and so that can lead to speechies behaving in particular ways. We can also see how cultures of safety impact on what people prioritize. So Abby Foster has done some beautiful work around the cultures of aphasia care and acute care, and highlighting that actually the priority for physical safety and managing dysphagia risk is privileged over the culture of or a need to think about what is the risk associated with communication and poor communication and people not having communication access. If we understand why people work as they do, and if we understand how the cultures and the structures work, then we can start to unpack them and think about what are the ways that we might be able to do things differently. You know, these cultural factors are very real, and none of them are inherently wrong, like it's not a bad thing that we're trying to prevent people getting aspiration pneumonia. That's really, really important, but we need to understand how these things shape practice and the unintended consequences that they might have for what is not valued and for what work isn't prioritized, and what outcomes don't actually seem to really matter in these contexts. And when we start to make these visible, then that opens up space to think about, how might we be able to do things differently, where we can maybe hold all of these things. And you know, in my work that I'm doing around wellbeing, that's the next phase of our work, is working with clinicians to think about, how might we be able to do things differently, so that it's not one or the other, it's not a dichotomy. But how do we create space for all of these things to be viewed as important and to be prioritized? Ellen Bernstein-Ellis You've started to dig into that already, because you have yet another 2024 article that you co-authored with Kayes, Soundy and Drown, Limited conversations about constrained futures: exploring clinician conversations about life after stroke in inpatient settings. And that examines how clinicians talk about the future with their clients. It analyzes 300 hours of observation of clinical interactions, along with 76 interviews with people with aphasia and 37 clinicians. I just want to say that's an astounding undertaking. So, as I read it, it felt like almost an extension of your 2013 and 2020 articles looking at hope, because you connected how what we say can impact how our clients see their future possibilities. Can you share some of the themes you constructed from all of that amazing data collection? I mean, I'm sorry, I thought 15 interviews were a lot, so then I saw this, and I'm like, oh my goodness, amazing. Felicity Bright It was a pretty massive piece of work, but it was a real privilege to be able to sit and just observe interactions. And I'm so grateful to our people with stroke, many of whom were like two or three days post stroke, and they had the stranger come along and sit there and observe them for 12 hours, but also to our clinicians, who were quite vulnerable in that process of having somebody observe and analyze what they were doing. But at the same time, I think that work is really valuable for looking at what is going on. What we could see is that the conversations that were being had tended to focus on quite a short term future, and we termed this theme constrained temporal horizons. When clinicians were talking about the future, the vast majority of those conversations were about the immediate future. For doctors and nurses--for nurses, it was often what needs to happen in this shift. For allied health and for doctors, it was what needs to happen before you discharge from our service into the next service. And for some allied health, it might be the first few days at home, but there was a view that talking about the longer term future beyond that should be done by other clinicians who might have more knowledge of what life could look like at that stage. We also found that the talk about quite a constrained future was in the context of actually very limited talk, in the first place. So when we think about communication access, for instance, we think, oh, people with aphasia aren't getting very good communication. Actually, lots of people with stroke are not getting very good communication. Again, thinking about cultural factors, but actually communication is not happening well in stroke units, or, I think within the wider healthcare system. You know, we've got a very task focused, medically focused situation. And so the conversations that were happening were on topics that were led by healthcare professionals, on the topics that they felt mattered-- the tasks they needed to do, the body structures and impairments. The goals that were set were about what needs to happen before somebody gets home. There was little talk about emotions. There was little talk about how you're feeling about what's going on, or what it might be like for you or for your family when you go home. And so this talk about the emotions and so on and future possibilities was left to patients and to families to raise. And instead, the conversations tended to focus on what the healthcare professionals saw as essential topics for the episode of care. We certainly did see some conversations about the future. So I don't want to be disparaging, and I also want to acknowledge the very partial nature of research. I did not see every single interaction. I know that a lot of these quite personal conversations often happen in things like the shower, when the nurses or the OTS are helping the person shower. That's one of the few private spaces on the ward. And so I want to acknowledge that my analysis is based on a limited data set, and it isn't based on all the conversations that happened, but certainly there was a trend towards limited conversations. We did see that clinicians would open some doors about the future. So they would talk about possible prognosis in the context of things like upper limb prognostic testing that is offered in some hospitals in New Zealand. We would see clinicians talk about what was meaningful to people, particularly in a context where the patient was struggling to engage, but often when the clinicians were talking about this wider future in this context, it was done to try and plant seeds about what the healthcare professional thought was realistic, and it was done to try and help the person engage in rehabilitation in the context of maybe struggling to engage at the best of times. So I think what we could see was that conversations were limited. They were limited conversations about short term, constrained futures that didn't necessarily set people up with hope for the future, with a sense of possibility, with a sense of even starting that process about what matters, to thinking about what matters to me, what do I want life to look like? Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Wow, and that really just circles us back to that concept of hope. Your work in hope has just been so meaningful to me. I've been really honored to be the guest lecturer speaking about aphasia to our counseling course that's taught by Dr Shubha Kashinath at Cal State, East Bay. And I've included, from the beginning, your work on hope. I just feel it's critical to give our students ways to understand and think about this construct and the role they can have in offering some hope building clinical interactions. I'd like to close this interview by having you discuss some of your first work that I had the honor to read, and some of the hope affirming strategies that you suggest in your 2020 article. Because I just think that's really a gift. Felicity Bright One of the things that really fascinated me in this work was how our people with aphasia in the research talked about how they look at their clinician and they are reading them to see, are you somebody who's going to give me hope or not? And if they didn't feel their clinician was going to support their hope or was going to help give them hope, or was going to disparage their hopes, they would shut down and they wouldn't share. And so I think, one of the things is to be reflecting on yourself. What are the messages that you are giving about how you are a safe person to talk to, about whether you are somebody that they can engage in these risky conversations about? I think there's a couple of things as well. We need to recognize that just because somebody says they hope for something doesn't mean that they expect it to happen. We all have unrealistic hopes and expectations. You know, psychologist colleagues talk to me about how actually having unrealistic hope is part of being psychologically adjusted, and why should that be different for people with stroke? Who are we to say that we hold the expertise. Now, that's not to say that there aren't challenges. So sometimes you might need to do a bit of a balance of, oh, is this something I need to engage in a conversation about? You know, an example is, if somebody is going to invest quite a bit of money in something that actually, there's no evidence to support and could potentially be problematic. There's a really good guideline I found from Christy Simpson, who's an ethicist, who talked about what are the positive effects that this hope has for people? What would be the impacts of taking it away, both positive, but also, what are the negative things that it would do? And so actually engaging in a bit of a risk analysis to think critically about what is holding this hope doing for somebody. Linked to that in the latest paper we did around recalibrating hope, it really highlighted to me the importance of trusting people to often recalibrate their own hopes. So I went back to my original participants from my 2013 research a couple of years later, and I looked at their experiences of hope over that time. And what we found was most of them recalibrated their hopes. They hoped for different things over that time, and they had done that as they engaged in different activities, as they tried things, as they considered their progress, as they rethought what mattered to them. And so that really highlighted, to me, the need to trust people, but it also highlighted the need to think about, how do we support a context that supports people to do that recalibration. Those who were more likely to recalibrate and hold both hope and realism together were people who had social networks, who were engaging in meaningful activities, and who had a sense of purpose and possibility. One of my participants didn't have that. They had lost their social connections. They had no activities in which they were engaging in what was meaningful, and their hope had shrunk. And so it talks to me again, those earlier conversations we've had about well being, thinking about what's meaningful, what supports wellbeing, that's exactly the same thing that supports hope. How are we supporting people's social wellbeing? How are we supporting their relational wellbeing? How are we helping them connect to what is meaningful and what is possible, not just to their impairments, and maybe what is not working so well. I think it's really important to be explicitly thinking about, what is it that helps people bring joy, have joy? What brings them peace in the present? And how can we help them have that sense that things are okay, even if they're not perfect, but also help them have that sense of looking to a future that's possible. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Okay, we only have a minute or two left, but I'm going to throw this last question out to you. Felicity, if you had to pick only one thing that we need to achieve urgently as a community of providers, of professionals, what would that one thing be? This is almost like your elevator pitch. You got 60 seconds here. So, so Felicity Bright So my one thing, in a long, complex sentence, is that speech and language therapists need to reprioritize communication and supporting people to live well after stroke and aphasia, and they need to consider how we model to our colleagues and to our patients and families, and how we support cultures of care that value relationships and relational work, that value and support communication, and that value and support wellbeing. Ellen Bernstein-Ellis Oh my goodness, well said, Felicity. Thank you so much for the honor of having this interview today. I know it's going to be impactful to our listeners, and I want to thank our listeners as well. For references and resources mentioned in today's show, please see our show notes. They're available on our website@www.aphasiaaccess.org and there you can also become a member of our organization, browse our growing library of materials and find out about the Aphasia Access Academy, and if you have an idea for a future podcast episode, email us at info@aphasia access.org. For Aphasia Access Conversations, I'm Ellen Bernstein-Ellis, and thanks again for your ongoing support of Aphasia Access. Thank you, Felicity. Felicity Bright My pleasure. Thank you for having me. References and Resources AUT Centre for Person Centred Research: https://cpcr.aut.ac.nz/our-research Biel, M. (Host). (2016). An interview with Felicity Bright: The patient's engagement and experience with you, the speech pathologist (No. 2) [audio podcast episode). ANCDS. SoundCloud.https://soundcloud.com/ancds/ep-2-an-interview-with-felicity-bright-the-patients-engagement-and-experience?utm_source=www.ancds.org&utm_campaign=wtshare&utm_medium=widget&utm_content=https%253A%252F%252Fsoundcloud.com%252Fancds%252Fep-2-an-interview-with-felicity-bright-the-patients-engagement-and-experience Bright, F. A., Ibell‐Roberts, C., Featherstone, K., Signal, N., Wilson, B. J., Collier, A., & Fu, V. (2024). ‘Physical well‐being is our top priority': Healthcare professionals' challenges in supporting psychosocial well‐being in stroke services. Health Expectations, 27(2), e14016. Bright, F. A., Ibell-Roberts, C., & Wilson, B. J. (2024). Psychosocial well-being after stroke in Aotearoa New Zealand: a qualitative metasynthesis. Disability and Rehabilitation, 46(10), 2000-2013. Bright, F. A., Kayes, N. M., McCann, C. M., & McPherson, K. M. (2013). Hope in people with aphasia. Aphasiology, 27(1), 41-58. Bright, F. A., McCann, C. M., & Kayes, N. M. (2020). Recalibrating hope: A longitudinal study of the experiences of people with aphasia after stroke. Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, 34(2), 428-435. Bright, F. A., Kayes, N. M., Soundy, A., & Drown, J. (2024). Limited conversations about constrained futures: exploring clinicians' conversations about life after stroke in inpatient settings. Brain Impairment, 25(1). Ellis-Hill, C., Payne, S., & Ward, C. (2008). Using stroke to explore the life thread model: an alternative approach to understanding rehabilitation following an acquired disability. Disability and rehabilitation, 30(2), 150-159. Foster, A., O'Halloran, R., Rose, M., & Worrall, L. (2016). “Communication is taking a back seat”: speech pathologists' perceptions of aphasia management in acute hospital settings. Aphasiology, 30(5), 585-608. Parr, S., Byng, S., & Gilpin, S. (1997). Talking about aphasia: Living with loss of language after stroke. McGraw-Hill Education (UK). Simpson, C. (2004). When hope makes us vulnerable: A discussion of patient-healthcare provider interactions in the context of hope. Bioethics, 18(5), 428-447
Whether it be a crick in your neck, or serious rehabilitation post-surgery, the world of physiotherapy provides an excellent service that is sure to get you back into shape.Joining Bobby to discuss how to the Physio industry in Ireland is getting on and how they get started and grew their careers were Physios • David Dalton x Consultant Chartered Physiotherapist and CEO PhysioCare Ltd in Dublin· Alison Quinn- Chartered Physiotherapist and owner of the rehab rooms in Deansgrange· Dr Grace O'Malley - Senior Lecturer at the School of Physio – RSCI University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Clinical Lead of the CHI Complex Obesity Service
Connect with David Grey Rehab:
Wir dachten, es wäre eigentlich ganz nice, mal einen kleinen Blick hinter die Kulissen von deiner Festivalorganisation zu machen und Christl & Peter haben sich zu diesem Zweck mit David, dem Head of Festivals/Lido Sounds von Arcadia Live getroffen. David hat erzählt, wie das so abläuft wenn mal wieder ein fettes Sommergewitter last minute einen Verstärker zerstört oder wie es sich anfühlt, sich die Musik von einem der umliegenden Wohnhausbalkone anzusehen. Ein bisschen um Backstage-Frisöre und Physios für Artists geht es auch. War wirklich ein sehr spannender Talk und weil alle sich Musik aussuchen durften, hat auch David die Chance bekommen und sich für "POP POP POP" von IDLES entschieden. Viel Spaß mit dem Interview, das es auch in voller Länge als Video auf dem YouTube Channel vom LIDO SOUNDS gibt!
Dr F Scott Feil interviews Grace Chinwe Amamilo on International Physios, Techs, and Aides.Grace can be found at:https://www.udemy.com/user/grace-3138/You can purchase Dr F Scott Feil's Book: PT Educator's Student Debt Eliminator at: https://amzn.to/3LwQm3i Thank you to our Sponsor ICE SHAKER! If you would like to purchase one (maybe with your logo or personal inscription it click our affiliate link here): https://www.iceshaker.com/?sca_ref=1740396.84wZ4s14No If you want to BECOME AN AFFILIATE and sell Ice Shaker for your business or clinic and MAKE A COMMISSION, click here: https://af.uppromote.com/iceshaker/register?ref=84wZ4s14No&p=63280 If you'd like to work with Dr F Scott Feil in his Coaching Masterclass on Multiple Revenue Streams, click here: https://PTEducator.com
In this episode with Dr Claire Minshull we discuss important factors for using a hand held dynamometer and errors that clinicians commonly do. We go through how to ensure the readings you are getting are correct and how to generally get the most out of using hand held dynamometry in your clinical practice. Want to learn more about hand held dynamometry? Claire recently did a brilliant Masterclass with us called, “The Practice changing principles of strength and conditioning for Physios” where she goes into further depth on various principles of strength and conditioning.
Paul Houghoughi (The Climbing Physio) returns for our promised part 2! This was every bit as good as our first episode. In part 2 we focused on how to build bulletproof knees and hamstrings for heel hooks, how to prevent shoulder injuries, how to strengthen and mobilize your neck and back, some of the most common changes to climber's bodies as we age, and more. Paul also shared helpful advice for folks who feel overwhelmed by the endless possibilities of injury prevention. We covered fingers, wrists, and elbows in EP 207.Watch the Video Interview of this episode:EP 222: Paul Houghoughi Return — Uncut Video!Become a Patron - 7 Day Free Trial!patreon.com/thenuggetclimbing Check out Fenix!fenixlighting.comMy Go-To Headlamp: HL32R-TThe Cadillac of Headlamps: HM65R-TCheck out Tindeq!tindeq.comUse code “nugget” for $10 off your order!Check out KAYA!kayaclimb.comUse code "NUGGET" at checkout for 20% off your first year of KAYA PRO!Check out Crimpd!crimpd.comOr download the Crimpd app for free! We are supported by these amazing BIG GIVERS:Michael Roy, Craig Lee, Mark and Julie Calhoun, Yinan Liu, Zach Emery, Alex Pluta, and Matt WalterShow Notes: thenuggetclimbing.com/episodes/paul-houghoughi-returnsNuggets:(00:00:00) – Intro(00:03:10) – Life update from Steven(00:11:07) – OQS banter(00:13:34) – Recap of my first episode with Paul (EP 207)(00:18:48) – Wrist widgets(00:23:33) – TFCC pain & injury prevention(00:27:41) – Knee exercises for heel hooks(00:32:44) – Lifting straps for hamstring training(00:35:33) – Copenhagen planks with flexed hip(00:39:20) – Clarifying questions(00:43:50) – Protocols for hamstring work(00:48:52) – Nordic curls(00:51:52) – One-the-wall rehab for knee injuries(00:54:51) – Sumo deadlift(00:55:51) – How to train for tweaky heel hooks(00:58:11) – Recap of hamstring rehab(00:59:01) – How to strengthen your neck and back for carrying crash pads(01:08:11) – Stop firefighting(01:10:14) – How to release tight neck muscles(01:12:38) – Daily joint mobilization(01:15:15) – Multifidus injury & more neck rehab ideas(01:22:05) – Shoulder injuries(01:27:11) – How to build bulletproof shoulders(01:31:01) – Turkish Get-Ups and kettlebells(01:36:03) – Doing things for a specific reason(01:41:17) – Having a meaningful goal(01:43:01) – Good pain vs. bad pain(01:48:46) – Patterns in aging climbers(01:53:20) – Good climbers vs. Olympians(01:55:59) – Coach & clinician symbiosis(01:58:45) – The booty thrust(02:02:11) – Tips for aspiring Physios(02:06:52) – How Paul maintains an 8A level(02:11:01) – What's next for Paul(02:13:02) – EXTRA teaser for Patrons
Champion Mentoring - Learn More and Enroll Now!FREE Guide - SLAP Tear - Evidence Based "Cheat Sheet" for Clinicians: https://fitnesspainfree.com/programs/slap-tear-cheat-sheet-lead-magnet/In today's episode we go over 6 Keys to SLAP Tear Physical Therapy [Guide for Physios] - FPF Show Episode 133Show Notes: https://fitnesspainfree.com/2024/05/6-keys-to-slap-tear-physical-therapy-guide-for-physios-fpf-show-episode-133/*****Welcome to the Fitness Pain Free Show! This is where we help coaches and physical therapists like YOU get your patients out of pain back to trainingWant to support me? Head over to Fitnesspainfree.com, click on Programs and sign up for the FPF "Insiders" Online Library where you can ask questions I'll answer for future episodes!*****
Welcome back to an internal episode with Lewis, Connor and Frank where we have a more relaxed conversation to catch up and discuss recent events and changes within the team! Stay tuned for more content coming soon… Physios in Sport link: physiosinsport.org
Are Chiropractors better than Physios...? Daniel Moore chews it over with Jack and they come to some interesting conclusions!
Stephen Lunt has 15 years experience in the fitness industry and has worked in numerous roles during that time. His background in sports therapy/rehab, coupled with his experience as a Personal Trainer, makes him uniquely placed to discuss how the different skillsets interact with one another.In this episode we talk about what Personal Trainers should and shouldn't do when it comes to injury, rehab and pre-hab work, as well as seeing how PT's and Physios might work alongside each other to create a better client expeirence.----------To catch all episodes, make sure you're subscribed to the show...Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-pro-fit-podcast/id1458318553Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/315111taFKBgrk2E7o6Wt8?si=c0901b6a3e14409c----------And for easy-to-review short form content (plus full guest interviews) please subscribe to our YouTube Channel...Matt Robinson on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_GIS4vVMb0sneZR6qKKMXQ----------To stay up to date with Matt follow him on Instagram...Matt - https://www.instagram.com/mattrobinsonpt/
This week we have none other one of Scotland's leading Physios to talk all things running and physio - and everything in between! This one is not to be missed! Meanwhile, Tommy is back and we catch up on all the usual running updates! Project Physio details are here: https://www.projectphysio.net/ Enjoy the show!
00:00 - 01:30 - Introduction, recent tales, Christian Ozbek 01:30 - 01:51 - False reap details 01:51 - 02:35 - Mark Macqueen 02:25 - 03:40 - Seated guard details 03:40 - 05:04 - Dealing with fatigue during the week - reel05:04 - 06:15 - Stop being fat 06:15 - 09:50 - Physios and injuries 09:50 - 10:15 - Handfoot sweeps 10:15 - 11:10 - Kipping details 11:10 - 12:20 - Crab ride/matrix 12:20 - 12:30 - Supplements12:30 - 13:06 - Heelhooks 13:06 - 13:45 - Early morning BJJ 13:45 - 14:40 - Outside Heel hooks 14:40 - 15:25 - Nutrition for gains 15:25 - 16:25 - Sprawl passing 16:25 - 17:05 - Overback details 17:05 - 18:20 - Test boosting supplements 18:20 - 19:15 - Reverse Choibar 19:15 - 19:30 - Nutrition for BJJ 19:30 - 22:30 - Worst injuries caused 22:30 - 23:40 - Wrestling and lower back pain 23:40 - 25:35 - Dima BJJ strategist 25:35 - 26:10 - Tunnels 26:10 - 28:12 - Symmetrical BJJ game 28:12 - 28:47 - Closing notes How to support the podcast:Instagram: Eoghan - https://instagram.com/eoghanoflanagan?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=Charles - https://instagram.com/charlesallanprice?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=How to work with us:Charles Strength Training Programs Join The Team: https://app.fitr.training/p/matstrongonline 1:1 Coaching Inquiries: https://7kdbbkmkmsl.typeform.com/to/nSZHpCOL Eoghan's InstructionalsLeg Lock Instructional: https://bjjfanatics.com/products/leglocks-the-uk-variant-by-eoghan-oflanagan Half Butterfly Instructional: https://bjjfanatics.com/products/down-right-sloppy-half-butterfly-by-eoghan-oflanagan Countering the outside passer: https://bjjfanatics.com/products/sloppy-seconds-countering-the-outside-passer-by-eoghan-o-flanagan Eoghans Gym: https://submissiongrapplingclub.co.uk/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Physios have been lambasted awhile for not understanding the basics of strength and conditioning principles. I reject this idea. There two areas we explore in this podcast. 1. The idea that strength and conditioning basics are relevant for rehabilitation 2. Whether physios actually know these basics. I make an attempt at trying to understand the arguments againsts physios and try to provide a competing view. Here is how the AI summarized it (not really accurate but I don't want to piss off the robots): Recovery Mechanisms in Rehabilitation Programs Greg discussed the importance of understanding what facilitates recovery in rehabilitation programs, emphasizing that it's not always about building strength. He argued against the judgment of programs based on arbitrary ideas of what needs to change, as the actual mechanism of recovery can vary. He also addressed the concept of tolerance, suggesting that improving a person's ability to tolerate loads can lead to recovery, even without necessarily building strength. Greg rejected the idea that physiotherapists don't understand the basics of strength and conditioning, stating that they do and that the judgement often comes from bias. He also highlighted the need for more research to better understand what mediates recovery. Strength Training Program Design Debate Greg discussed the flexibility and options in designing a strength and conditioning program. He highlighted that the basics are simple and the key is to progressively overload the muscles. Greg also addressed the debate around whether to push to failure during exercises and suggested checking in to see how close one is to their failure zone. He further stated that there's no need to obsess over specific exercises, as the principle of progressive overload applies to them all. Greg concluded by stating that he'd like the debate to shift towards understanding when specific attributes are important and how to achieve them, with a focus on patient-centered care.
Welcome to our latest podcast episode where we delve into an intriguing topic in the world of sports medicine. Joining me are my brother Yani and Phil White, one of the leading sports physiotherapists in the industry. Together, we explore the nuances of how and why physiotherapy for athletes differs from treatments given to non-athletes.Our discussion is centered on the specialized approaches and techniques used in sports physiotherapy. We'll uncover the unique demands of treating athletes, focusing on high performance, injury prevention, and rapid recovery. Whether you're a professional athlete, a sports enthusiast, or simply curious about physiotherapy, this episode provides valuable insights into the tailored care athletes receive.Don't miss this opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of sports physiotherapy from industry experts. Subscribe to our channel for more content like this, and join the conversation by sharing your thoughts in the comments below. Tune in for an enlightening discussion on the distinctive world of sports physiotherapy.#sportsphysio #injuryrehab #injury - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Tired of sifting through countless YouTube flexibility videos? I get it, it's like a maze out there. End range strength, loaded stretching, 20-minute routines—where do you even start? Stop guessing and start progressing. Click the link to download the Flexibility Blueprint. It's your roadmap to pinpointing exactly where you are in your flexibility journey—stage 1, 2, or 3—and how to level up in just 28 days. Discover your perfect path to flexibility:
Physios, just like climbing coaches, chefs, bankers, and hell, even adventurepreneurs, aren't all made of equal quality. Some are stuck in techniques of the 1980s. Others are on the bleeding edge of the most advanced research. Some are uncaring and impersonal. Others are highly personal and connect with you. So how do you tell the difference? And what should you look out for? Particularly as a mountain athlete. Today, on The Freedom Project, I interview the mountain athlete physio, Don Lesar. Don is a Co-Founder of The Movement, a multidisciplinary performance rehab clinic in Ontario, Canada. Don also works very closely with Arc-teryx athletes in a unique capacity. In other words, he knows his shit. In this episode, we will cover: How to tell a great physio from a waste of money The greatest BS you've been told about physio for mountain athletes Don's 5 essential exercises for mountain athletes And a whole lot more
In this podcast, renowned physiotherapist Phil White and my brother Yani share their expert advice on managing SLAP tear injuries. They explain what a SLAP tear is, how it affects your body, and the best ways to recover. The video includes a series of exercises specifically designed for SLAP tear rehabilitation, as well as crucial do's and don'ts when exercising with this injury. Subscribe to our channel for more informative content like this, and don't forget to hit the bell icon to stay updated! Engage with us in the comments below and share your own experiences with SLAP tear recovery. Like, share, and keep the conversation going in our community posts! #howtokeepexercisingwithaninjury #physiontherapy #sportsphysiontherapy Tired of sifting through countless YouTube flexibility videos? I get it, it's like a maze out there. End range strength, loaded stretching, 20-minute routines—where do you even start? Stop guessing and start progressing. Click the link to download the Flexibility Blueprint. It's your roadmap to pinpointing exactly where you are in your flexibility journey—stage 1, 2, or 3—and how to level up in just 28 days. Discover your perfect path to flexibility:
In episode 184 Matthew Ibrahim, Strength & Conditioning Coach, Clinical Coordinator and Instructor of Exercise Science at Endicott College, joins us. Specifically Matthew will be looking at: What physios, physical therapists, athletic trainers and strength coaches can learn from eachother How they can go about skill sharing How to accelerate your career as a practitioner About Matthew: "Matthew Ibrahim, a Strength & Conditioning Coach since 2007, has recently shifted over into higher education in an effort to pay it forward to future coaches as they transition from academia to their professional career. Currently, he serves in multiple roles at Endicott College: Clinical Coordinator of Exercise Science and Instructor of Exercise Science, and Volunteer Strength & Conditioning Coach with their NCAA Division III men's and women's basketball student-athletes. He is also the Founder of Athletic Performance University (APU), which is an 8-Week Online Mentorship Course specifically designed to help Strength & Conditioning Coaches and Exercise Science students improve in career cornerstone skills: coaching, creating and communicating. Academically, he is a Ph.D. Candidate in Human & Sport Performance and M.S. student in Sport Leadership. As a public speaker, Matthew has presented nationally 25+ U.S. states, highlighted by his presentations at the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA), Perform Better, EXOS inside Google Headquarters, Sports Academy (formerly Mamba Sports Academy) and the UFC Performance Institute. His work has been featured in Exxentric, Future, HoopStudy, Men's Journal, NSCA Personal Training Quarterly (PTQ), Science for Sport, Mike Boyle's StrengthCoach.com, T-Nation, TrainHeroic and TrueCoach. Lastly, Matthew is also in the midst of authoring his first book through Human Kinetics on the topic of training for athletic performance, which is set for publication in late 2023." Nominate future podcast guests here! If you want to hear from a particular person on a particular topic, let us know! Hit the link below and we'll see what we can whip up for you. https://www.scienceforsport.com/nominate/ FREE 7d COACH ACADEMY TRIAL SIGN UP NOW: https://bit.ly/sfsepisode184 JOIN THE SCIENCE FOR SPORT TEAM: https://www.scienceforsport.com/join-our-team/ Learn Quicker & More Effectively, Freeing Up Time To Spend With Friends And Family Optimise Your Athletes' Recovery Position Yourself As An Expert To Your Athletes And Naturally Improve Buy-In Reduce Your Athletes' Injury Ratese Save 100's Of Dollars A Year That Would Otherwise Be Spent On Books, Courses And More Improve Your Athletes' Performance Advance Forward In Your Career, Allowing You To Earn More Money And Work With Elite-Level Athletes Save Yourself The Stress & Worry Of Constantly Trying To Stay Up-To-Date With Sports Science Research
CEO of Irish Society of Chartered Physiotherapists [ISCP] Dr Marie Ó Mír
Hello There! Would you like to hear twice as many podcasts and longer editions of these ones, and support our print magazine? Then join the WSC Supporters' Club! Sign up here: www.patreon.com/whensaturdaycomesStill awaiting an invite to the Crystal Palace Dinner Party, magazine editor Andy Lyons, writer Harry Pearson and host Daniel Gray discuss Injuries, Physios and Medical Staff from men in white coats to the Gordon Banks beer bottle mystery. Record Breakers brings us a Mozambique melody, and we continue our sprightly feature, The Final Third, in which a guest contributes a match, a player and an object to the WSC Museum of Football. Joining Dan as our visiting curator this time is journalist Nooruddean Choudry, Bearded Genius on Twitter and author of the excellent Inshallah United: A story of faith and football.Support the show
I for one am not even sure what WBV is so luckily Claire Minshull joined Fran to explain all and dispel the misconceptions Therapy Live Ticket: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/523668816527
Want to connect with more physiotherapy patients and reach the first page on Google? Srika Solutions (+44-7760-535555) can help you reach Google's coveted "3-pack"! Learn more at https://srikasolutions.clientcabin.com/ RRS Bushey Hall Road, Bushey, Hertfordshire WD23 2EW, United Kingdom Website https://www.brandboostify.com/ Email prc.pressagency@gmail.com
We are adding some new information to The Pelvic Health Podcast. Our expert interviews will continue but in between them, we will now have some shorter episodes on useful clinical ideas for assessment and treatment. Today it's the ever-growing interest in transperineal ultrasound and I (Lori) share some tips. PB Endo conference!!!! For extra knowledge in this area, you can learn from us here... Online: 2D Transperineal Ultrasound in Females: A tool for pelvic floor physios Face-to-face: 2D Transperineal Ultrasound Skills Workshop 2D Transperineal Ultrasound in Females: A tool for pelvic floor physios
Dr. Zach Long // #FitnessAthleteFriday // www.ptonice.com
In this episode with Dr Jane Thornton we discuss what the latest evidence says about adapting training advice for the menstrual cycle of women and oral contraceptives and whether the menstrual cycle affects injury risk. We also cover the role of sleep and injury risk, and how this can be affected across the lifespan for women specifically due to hormones. Finally we cover the gaps in the research around specific populations of women e.g. during pregnancy and why this is a difficult topic to study. Dr. Thornton is a Canadian Research Chair and Clinician Scientist specialising in long-term athlete health, female athlete health, and physical activity in the prevention and treatment of chronic disease. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine, with cross appointments in the Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics and School of Kinesiology. If you like the podcast, it would mean the world if you're happy to leave us a rating or a review. It really helps!Our host is @James_Armstrong_Physio from Physio Network
Helmut Erhard und Gerry Hoffmann sind ein elementarer Bestandteil des FC Bayern - und das seit vielen Jahren im komplexen Bereich der Physiotherapie. Sie sind nicht nur echte Urgesteine, sondern auch mit herausragenden Fähigkeiten ausgestattete Ratgeber, Kommunikatoren und Seelsorger. Die Profis schwärmen von ihnen, weil sie mit Passion und unbändigem Engagement alles für sie geben. Normalerweise hören sie nur zu, jetzt sprechen sie selbst. In Folge 34 des FC Bayern Podcast.
In the upcoming Bonus Episodes of RunPod we are joined by one of the best Physios in the game - Paul Hobrough! He's a sport's scientist, best selling author, former team GB athlete, writer for Runner's World Magazine and is recognised as a leading authority in injury prevention. Paul is full of knowledge about Running injuries, so we want to share his insights! Today he's discussing achilles issues, and what you can do to recover. Paul is the author of 'Running Free of Injuries: From Pain to Personal Best' and 'The Runner's Expert Guide to Stretching: Prevent Injury, Build Strength and Enhance Performance' Do you want to buy a RunPod t-shirt? Go to: Linktr.ee/runpod
In the latest episode of the Simply Fit Podcast, I have the pleasure of speaking with Tom De Jersey Tom is a physiotherapist, coach and exercise enthusiast. I was introduced to Tom's Instagram page and after seeing his valuable content and his controversial opinions, I knew he was someone I had to speak to. This conversation didn't disappoint at all and was personally a really enjoyable one for me too, so I'm looking forward to seeing what you all takeaway. In this episode you can expect to learn: What are some of the best ways to avoid getting injured whether you're a regular gym goer or elite athlete. How to spot a bad therapist and the traits you should look for in a good one. Along with why we shouldn't be following the workout routine of our favourite influencer. Connect with Tommy: @tommys.tips Connect with me on Instagram: @elliothasoon Let's work together: www.ehcoaching.co.uk Please rate us 5* on Apple Podcasts and leave us a review if you're enjoying the podcast. Don't forget to subscribe too so that you don't miss any future episodes.
Chris and Adam join us on the Life In Football podcast this week to explain what life is like working as physios at Championship football clubs. Chris Phillips has been with Luton's first team for 5 years and been there through Luton's rise up through the leagues and narrowly missing out on promotion to the Premier League. Whilst Adam Wright works with the first team at QPR. We learn how football clubs manage players fitness and injuries. How clubs perform medicals before signing players. The ridiculous hours that come with working at a top football club but also how much they enjoy being in the dressing room with the lads. Watch clips of of all of the episodes on https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWUZ1MZ5GLSQydCXyqpypAQ Follow us on Twitter and Instagram @lifeinfootie
On today's episode, we speak to Physiotherapist Eoin Everard who specialises in lower back, knee, and hip pain. Eoin is also a talented athlete himself. He has broken the 4 minute barrier in the mile, dipped under 15 minutes for 5K, and he is the current European Over 35 3K Champion. #AskJake: Each week, we'll take one of your questions and Jake will answer it. Today it's all about half marathon training. See the full show notes & resources here: http://runningwithjake.com/plodcast
You get a penalty, you get a penalty everyone gets a penalty! Yes 43 of the finest penalties you have ever seen as the Austrian GP dazzled us with its orange haze and racing to boot. Max's house put on a show but the regining champion was not up to his usual blistering pace as the crowd turned sour and Leclerc brought it home. Has the championship swung again? Flexi floors were all the rage as we see a new technical directive dropped by the FIA. But what implications will this have on the championship, a full reshape or will.it be business as usual. And the stewards had a field day as they threw the book at drivers for track limits, Vettel for leaving the drivers meeting and even suspended fines for Physios in Parc Ferme, has this muscle flex got fan questioning the stewards or is the the hard stance we have been asking for? All that plus Race Ranking, Race Review, Driver Votes, Dud of the Day, F1.5, Fantasy, Beyond the Bet, News, Gossip and Fan Frenzy mini pod on this week's episode of BTRL.
Today Laura Hemmings and Kate Brown are here so we're Chewing Over all things related to Physios in mental healthcare. Together we explore what is typical for specialists and what should be expected of competent generalists. Your lunchtime show 12:30-13:00 on Mondays and Fridays with Jack Chew chatting about whatever is topical. Usually healthcare and education, occasionally current affairs, always honest.
Rob and Dave talk with Martin Christensen, a physiotherapist who joins them from Norway Martin has gained a huge following for his Friday Physio Confessions and in this episode talks about the importance of building relationships and discusses why it's vital that patients understand that physios are human and like all humans will make mistakes. If you want to know what a good clinician and patient relationship can be like, listen in and find out more KEY TAKEAWAYS A good healthcare professional makes the experience of the time matter more A patient should feel listened to and that their concerns are taken seriously There needs to be a rapport between the patient and the healthcare professional The healthcare professional and patient need to communicate effectively and honestly about what the goals are Asking the right questions is a crucial element in building rapport A great practitioner can bridge the gap and build rapport with any patient, making the patient feel comfortable by adapting to them and meeting them on their individual level We need to acknowledge that professionals are not machines but human Because practitioners are human, like all humans they will make mistakes Being authentic and being honest is about sometimes saying we need to wait and see Building a relationship with a patient means it's possible to say when you make a mistake BEST MOMENTS ‘It's the dynamics of the relationship between two people, getting along and finding out what works' ‘A good healthcare professional is someone who treats you like a person' THE BACK PAIN PODCAST PROVIDER MAP - FINDING SOMEONE TO HELP YOU WITH YOUR BACK PAIN https://thebackpainpodcast.com/index.php/members-map/ VALUABLE RESOURCES The Back Pain Podcast The Back Pain Podcast website The Back Pain Podcast recommended products affiliate link Our Rode Mixer https://amzn.to/3waU8bx Our Microphones https://amzn.to/3rzSZ9Z Second Microphone https://amzn.to/2ObKMeA XLR Cable https://amzn.to/3rBL8ZB Studio Headphones https://amzn.to/3u082LE Laptophttps://amzn.to/3dhfafT Our webcam https://amzn.to/31uUefQ RESOURCES FOR THIS EPISODE Friday Physio Confessions - @Martin_nekkolai ABOUT THE HOSTS Dave Elliott Dave is the owner of Advanced Chiropractic, a chain of Chiropractic and massage therapy clinics in Essex, UK. Dave still sees patients during the week but has been working hard to talk to as many experts in the field of back pain as possible to help distil all the information and bring it to you in this awesome podcast. You can find Dave on any of the Advanced Chiropractic social media platforms, or you can contact him at hello@thebackpainpodcast.com if you have any questions for him. -Instagram Rob Beaven Rob owns and runs a multidisciplinary clinic, The Dyer St Clinic in Cirencester Gloucestershire. His team of Chiropractors, Physiotherapists, Osteopaths, Doctors, and podiatrists all collaborate on thousands of back pain patients every year. Alongside Dave, he has worked hard to bring to the table experts across all industries to give you the low down on back pain, with steps you can implement today to start feeling better. -Instagram -Twitter SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS Instagram Twitter Facebook CONTACT US hello@thebackpainpodcast.com Support the show: https://thebackpainpodcast.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr. Ross Benz is advanced proficient in Torque Release Technique (TRT) and is a Board-Certified Neuropathy Specialist. He studied at Flagler College where he majored in Sport Management earning his bachelor's degree. After graduation, Dr. Ross worked at the University of Florida training top athletes. Soon after, he decided to pursue his doctoral studies at Palmer College of Chiropractic, Florida. It was in chiropractic school where he met his wife, Dr. Stephanie! Dr. Ross graduated as a salutatorian. Website: http://culturechiropractic.com IG: @culturechiropractic FB: @culturechiropractic
Coach Taylor from TF Soccer Training welcomes Dr. Andy Seraphin from the futbol physios. He breaks the need to talk to the key stakeholders involved in keeping athletes healthy( Parents you play a larger role than you think,), talks about returning from injury and how to make sure you find providers that give your player what they need( and want!). You can connect with Dr. Seraphin here: IG: https://www.instagram.com/thefutbolphysios/ Twitter: DrAndyDPT For more information:thefutbolphysios.com This is the fourth episode of the performance series where Coach Taylor will interview fitness, performance, and nutrition experts about how to give your players the best foundation for their performance! Ep. 68: Eric Grimsley from Grimstrong Fitness Ep. 69: Jaimee Cooper The Soccer Nutritionist Ep. 73: Dr. Wesley Wang, Healthy Baller ⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️ Resources below! ⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️