Physical Therapists Can Add Value to their Clinic by Offering Work Injury Management and Prevention Services

Physical Therapists often have a solid understanding of the sport an athlete plays and when an injured athlete is ready to return to the sport. Treating injured employees should be no different. Physical Therapists can help injured employees quickly return to work by investigating how injuries occurred, evaluating work capacity and watching how employees use their body to complete tasks at work. 

In the second part of a two-part podcast, Susan Isernhagen, PT and COO of DSI Work Solutions offers insight on how physical therapists can provide work injury management and prevention solutions to employers and their employees.  Physical therapists who want to offer work injury management services should have the ability to perform job analysis, complete functional capacity assessments and understand ergonomics.  Listen now to learn more about ways physical therapists can get involved in providing work injury management and prevention services.

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Work Injury Management Offers New Opportunities to Physical Therapists

Susan IsernhagenPhysical therapy often plays a key role in helping injured employees get back to work. In one of a two-part podcast, Susan Isernhagen, PT and COO of DSI Work Solutions shares her work injury management and prevention expertise with PT Talker.

Isernhagen designed the first functional capacity assessment to objectively test a worker’s work capabilities over 25 years ago.  Today, she is sounding an alarm that physical therapists may be missing an opportunity to enhance their practice. Offering work injury management and prevention services to employers may be one of the ways physical therapists can combat the continuous reimbursement challenges faced by their practice. Listen now to learn more about the role physical therapy can play in work injury management and prevention.

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Physical Therapy Students Learn While Giving Back to the Community

When students in the Doctorate of Physical Therapy program approached the faculty at Widener University to open a community physical therapy clinic, the idea was welcomed with open arms. The Chester Community Physical Therapy Clinic opened on the campus of Widener University in September 2009. Kerstin Palombaro, PT, PhD, Community Engagement Coordinator at the Institute for Physical Therapy Education at the Widener University shares her experiences with PT Talker on the ways a community clinic can benefit physical therapy students and the surrounding community.

 

Located near Philadelphia in Chester, Pennsylvania, the clinic serves underinsured and uninsured clients who have been prescribed physical therapy treatment by a physician. The clinic is staffed by volunteers. Undergraduate volunteers work the receptionist desk. Physical therapy graduate students and a supervising licensed physical therapist see and evaluate the patients.   

 

Widener University provides funding for the clinic utilities and space. The rest of the clinic is funded by donations and a $5 co-pay collected from patients. Much of the equipment used in the clinic was donated by local hospitals and clinics or purchased at a deep discount from a local physical therapy equipment supplier, M.A. Rallis.  Find out more about this unique pro bono physical therapy clinic by listening now.

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Physical Therapist Uses Ultrasound Imaging to Monitor Muscle Activation

Ever wonder if your patients are working the right muscles when completing lower back exercises?  Ultrasound imaging can provide the information you’re looking for.  Ultrasound imaging works as a form of biofeedback to show both physical therapists and their patients how an exercise is working.

In today’s podcast, physical therapist and owner of Cedar Hill Physical Therapy , Paul Weiss, PT, MDT, shares the ways ultrasound imaging is utilized in his practice.  After teaching an exercise designed to reeducate the muscles around the spine, Weiss uses ultrasound imaging to observe the muscles as the exercise is performed and confirm the exercise is working the targeted muscles.  Find out more about the ways ultrasound imaging can help you and your patients monitor muscle activation by listening now.   

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