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29 Dec 2015
I Love My Physio campaign in Australia
After surviving a horror cycling accident that left her
unable to walk, Kirsten Koh refused to settle for just being alive.
The one-time triathlon fanatic was determined to compete
again, even though that meant completely re-learning how to run, swim and
cycle.
A truck driver left Ms Koh critically injured after
accidentally ploughing into her in the midst of a cycling session in her native
Singapore in 2011.
“I have no memory of the accident itself,” she said.
“My friend tells me that one second I was riding alongside
her and the next I had been replaced by a lorry with sparks flying from its
undercarriage.”
Ms Koh was mangled from the waist down - breaks in both
ankles, both femurs, her left tibia and fibula, a pelvis shattered in three
places and a broken shoulder for good measure.
It was nine months before she was cleared to walk again, but
her recovery did not end there.
After moving to Australia, the Ardross-based Ms Koh teamed
up with Physiotherapist
Neil Drouet in mid-2013 with one goal in mind: completing the 3.8km
swim, 180km cycle and 42km run of the Challenge Roth ironman in Germany.
“Physically, I had doubts whether it was possible,” Mr
Drouet admitted. But you meet Kirsten and you very quickly see that mentally,
no matter how many barriers get put up, she is going to keep trying to push
past them.”
Ms Koh had already rehabilitated enough to resume moderate
cycling and swimming but a 2cm difference between her left and right legs made
running more difficult.
“Our focus was on improving Kirsten’s musculoskeletal
balance so that she could move more normally,” Mr Drouet said.
Ms Koh’s assessment is more blunt.
“I was running like a poorly-stringed puppet,” she said.
With the aid of Mr Drouet – and a special anti-gravity
treadmill – Ms Koh completely overhauled her running stride. “We started her
off at a low weight to get her running pattern as normal as possible, increasing
how much running she could manage and then slowly putting the weight back on
building up towards race day,” he said.
Race day came on July 20, 2014, with Ms Koh successfully
completing the gruelling event in 15 hours, 31 minutes and 40 seconds.
Ms Koh credits Mr Drouet for much of her remarkable recovery
and is highlighting the physiotherapist as part of the Australian Physiotherapy
Association’s I Love My Physio campaign.
“Some of my previous physios were very conservative and I
felt like I was being treated like a grandma,” she said.
“Neil throws little carrots in front of you all the time and
that is how I as an athlete function best. I feel one thousand times better now
than in 2013.”
The I Love My Physio campaign aims to raise awareness of the
role physiotherapists play in improving the lives of Australians, and find the
most inspiring rehabilitation story.
19 Dec 2015
Work-related musculoskeletal disorders among Physical Therapists: A Systematic review:
Research Update: Work-related musculoskeletal disorders
among Physical Therapists: A Systematic review:
Abstract: Physical therapists (PTs) perform demanding
tasks that can lead to work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSD), but the
rates and characteristics of WMSD among PTs are not well known. The objective
of this systematic review of the literature was to integrate the information
published on the prevalence, types, and risks for WMSD among PTs. Four
databases were searched using combinations and synonyms for WMSD, discomfort,
symptoms, and PTs. Two reviewers independently searched and screened
peer-reviewed articles published in English evaluating WMSD in PTs; agreement
between reviewers was evaluated. From 867 unduplicated articles, 32 were
eligible and included. Up to 90% of PTs have WMSD during their careers; 50%
experience WMSD within 5 years of practice. Low back was the body part most
commonly affected. Female PTs and PTs working in hospitals have higher
prevalence of WMSD. WMSD are associated with PTs' age, gender, specialty and
job tasks. Performing manual therapy, lifting and transferring patients are
tasks commonly associated with PTs' developing WMSD. The body parts affected
differed by specialty and tasks. The findings presented in this review are
useful to inform future research, quality improvement, and educational programs
to reduce the rates of WMSD among PTs.-Complied by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal: www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
Journal: Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation, vol. Preprint, no. Preprint, pp. 1-12, Nov 2015
Authors: Vieira, Edgar R. | Schneider, Paul | Guidera, Casey | Gadotti, Inae C. | Brunt, Denis
Article Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26577282
14 Dec 2015
Chhattisgarh Physiotherapy Council Update
Chhattisgarh government is all set to regularize the working of Physio and Occupational therapists in the state with the introduction of the Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy Council Bill 2015, which make registrations of such therapists, besides setting parameters and quality of working standards for them.
The draft for the proposed bill was cleared at a cabinet meeting, headed by chief Minister, Dr Raman Singh, on Sunday. The Bill is likely to be introduced in the ensuing winter session of the state assembly, which will commence on Dec 16. The bill proposes that only registered physiotherapists will be allowed to practice in the state and it provides for Rs.One lakh fine for practicing without registration, besides one-year sentence for repeated offenders. The Director Medical Education (DME) will be the Ex Officio President of the Council. Congrats to all the Physiotherapists and Physiotherapy Students who had worked hard to achieve this .-Professional date by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal
“iHunch” , “Text Neck”, “iPosture”
There are plenty of reasons to put our cellphones down now
and then, not least the fact that incessantly checking them takes us out of the
present moment and disrupts family dinners around the globe. But here’s one you
might not have considered: Smartphones are ruining our posture. And bad posture
doesn’t just mean a stiff neck. It can hurt us in insidious psychological ways.
If you’re in a public place, look around: How many people
are hunching over a phone? Technology is transforming how we hold ourselves,
contorting our bodies into what the New Zealand physiotherapist Steve August
calls the “iHunch”. I’ve also heard people call it “Text neck”, and in my work
I sometimes refer to it as “iPosture”.
The average head weighs about 10 to 12 pounds. When we bend
our necks forward 60 degrees, as we do to use our phones, the effective stress
on our neck increases to 60 pounds — the weight of about five gallons of paint.
When Mr. August started treating patients more than 30 years ago, he says he
saw plenty of “dowagers’ humps, where the upper back had frozen into a forward
curve, in grandmothers and great-grandmothers.” Now he says he’s seeing the
same stoop in teenagers.
When we’re sad, we slouch. We also slouch when we feel
scared or powerless. Studies have shown that people with clinical depression
adopt a posture that eerily resembles the iHunch. One, published in 2010 in
the official journal of the Brazilian Psychiatric Association, found that
depressed patients were more likely to stand with their necks bent forward,
shoulders collapsed and arms drawn in toward the body.
Posture doesn’t just reflect our emotional states; it can
also cause them. In a study published
in Health Psychology earlier this year, Shwetha Nair and her colleagues
assigned non-depressed participants to sit in an upright or slouched posture
and then had them answer a mock job-interview question, a well-established
experimental stress inducer, followed by a series of questionnaires. Compared
with upright sitters, the slouchers reported significantly lower self-esteem
and mood, and much greater fear. Posture affected even the contents of their
interview answers: Linguistic analyses revealed that slouchers were much more
negative in what they had to say. The researchers concluded, “Sitting upright
may be a simple behavioral strategy to help build resilience to stress.”
Slouching can also affect our memory: In a study published
last year in Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy of people with clinical
depression, participants were randomly assigned to sit in either a slouched or
an upright position and then presented with a list of positive and negative
words. When they were later asked to recall those words, the slouchers showed a
negative recall bias (remembering the bad stuff more than the good stuff),
while those who sat upright showed no such bias. And in a 2009 study of
Japanese schoolchildren, those who were trained to sit with upright posture
were more productive than their classmates in writing assignments.
How else might iHunching influence our feelings
and behaviors? My colleague Maarten W. Bos and I have done preliminary research on
this. We randomly assigned participants to interact for five minutes with one
of four electronic devices that varied in size: a smartphone, a tablet, a
laptop and a desktop computer. We then looked at how long subjects would wait
to ask the experimenter whether they could leave, after the study had clearly
concluded. We found that the size of the device significantly affected whether
subjects felt comfortable seeking out the experimenter, suggesting that the
slouchy, collapsed position we take when using our phones actually makes us
less assertive — less likely to stand up for ourselves when the situation calls
for it.
In fact, there appears to be a linear relationship between
the size of your device and the extent to which it affects you: the smaller the
device, the more you must contract your body to use it, and the more shrunken
and inward your posture, the more submissive you are likely to become.
A thought: why not actually design a device around the human
body and to be ergonomic in the first place, instead of changing the designs...
Ironically, while many of us spend hours every day using
small mobile devices to increase our productivity and efficiency, interacting
with these objects, even for short periods of time, might do just the opposite,
reducing our assertiveness and undermining our productivity.
Despite all this, we rely on our mobile devices far too much
to give them up, and that’s not going to change anytime soon. Fortunately,
there are ways to fight the iHunch.
Keep your head up and shoulders back when looking at your
phone, even if that means holding it at eye level. You can also try stretching
and massaging the two muscle groups that are involved in the iHunch —
those between the shoulder blades and the ones along the sides of the neck.
This helps reduce scarring and restores elasticity.
Finally, the next time you reach for your phone, remember
that it induces slouching, and slouching changes your mood, your memory and
even your behavior. Your physical posture sculpts your psychological posture,
and could be the key to a happier mood and greater self-confidence.
13 Dec 2015
Physiotherapy for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS) Often As Effective as Surgery
Physical Therapy for CTS Often As Effective as Surgery:
Results of a randomized clinical trial, published in The
Journal of Pain, showed that surgery and Manual physical therapies were
similarly effective in improving pain and function for patients with carpal
tunnel syndrome (CTS).
The Journal of Pain is the peer-review publication of the American Pain Society.
A multicenter team of Spanish researchers conducted a randomized clinical trial to compare the one-year effectiveness of manual physical therapies, including desensitization maneuvers of the central nervous system, and surgery in patients with CTS. CTS surgery has the highest utilization rate among upper extremity procedures performed.
CTS is a pain disorder in the upper extremity caused by compression of the median nerve at the carpal tunnel. Prevalence in the United States is estimated at 6 to 11 percent, and six-year cumulative lost income per patient ranges from $45,000 to $89,000, according to the study. Treatment can be conservative or surgical, but scientific evidence for each therapeutic option is conflicting.
For the study, 120 women with CTS were randomized in two groups: treatment with physical therapy and treatment with surgery. At 12 months, 92 percent of the study participants completed the follow-up.
The researchers found that patients who had surgery and those treated with physical therapy showed similar outcomes for pain relief and function at six months and 12 months. However, patients assigned to physical therapy experienced significantly greater relief of symptoms and improvements in hand function at one and three months.
Based in Chicago, the American Pain Society (APS) is a multidisciplinary community that brings together scientists, clinicians and other professionals to increase the knowledge of pain and transform public policy and clinical practice to reduce pain-related suffering.
The Journal of Pain is the peer-review publication of the American Pain Society.
A multicenter team of Spanish researchers conducted a randomized clinical trial to compare the one-year effectiveness of manual physical therapies, including desensitization maneuvers of the central nervous system, and surgery in patients with CTS. CTS surgery has the highest utilization rate among upper extremity procedures performed.
CTS is a pain disorder in the upper extremity caused by compression of the median nerve at the carpal tunnel. Prevalence in the United States is estimated at 6 to 11 percent, and six-year cumulative lost income per patient ranges from $45,000 to $89,000, according to the study. Treatment can be conservative or surgical, but scientific evidence for each therapeutic option is conflicting.
For the study, 120 women with CTS were randomized in two groups: treatment with physical therapy and treatment with surgery. At 12 months, 92 percent of the study participants completed the follow-up.
The researchers found that patients who had surgery and those treated with physical therapy showed similar outcomes for pain relief and function at six months and 12 months. However, patients assigned to physical therapy experienced significantly greater relief of symptoms and improvements in hand function at one and three months.
Based in Chicago, the American Pain Society (APS) is a multidisciplinary community that brings together scientists, clinicians and other professionals to increase the knowledge of pain and transform public policy and clinical practice to reduce pain-related suffering.
Manual Physical Therapy Versus Surgery for Carpal Tunnel
Syndrome: A Randomized Parallel-Group Trial.
J
Pain. 2015 Nov;16(11):1087-94. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2015.07.012. Epub
2015 Aug 15.
Fernández-de-Las Peñas C, Ortega-Santiago R, de la
Llave-Rincón AI, Martínez-Perez A, Fahandezh-Saddi Díaz H, Martínez-Martín J,
Pareja JA,Cuadrado-Pérez ML
Abstract
This randomized clinical trial investigated the
effectiveness of surgery compared with physical therapy consisting of manual
therapies including desensitization maneuvers in carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS).
The setting was a public hospital and 2 physical therapy practices in Madrid,
Spain. One hundred twenty women with CTS were enrolled between February 2013
and January 2014, with 1-year follow-up completed in January 2015.
Interventions consisted of 3 sessions of manual therapies including
desensitization maneuvers of the central nervous system (physical therapy
group, n = 60) or decompression/release of the carpal tunnel
(surgical group, n = 60). The primary outcome was pain intensity
(mean pain and the worst pain), and secondary outcomes included functional
status and symptoms severity subscales of the Boston Carpal Tunnel
Questionnaire and the self-perceived improvement. They were assessed at
baseline and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months by a blinded assessor. Analysis was by
intention to treat. At 12 months, 111 (92%) women completed the follow-up
(55/60 physical therapy, 56/60 surgery). Adjusted analyses showed an advantage
(all, P < .01) for physical therapy at 1 and 3 months in mean
pain (Δ -2.0 [95% confidence interval (CI) -2.8 to -1.2]/-1.3 [95% CI -2.1 to
-.6]), the worst pain (Δ -2.9 [-4.0 to -2.0]/-2.0 [-3.0 to -.9]), and function
(Δ -.8 [-1.0 to -.6]/-.3 [-.5 to -.1]), respectively. Changes in pain and
function were similar between the groups at 6 and 12 months. The 2 groups
had similar improvements in the symptoms severity subscale of the Boston Carpal
Tunnel Questionnaire at all follow-ups. In women with CTS, physical therapy may
result in similar outcomes on pain and function to surgery.
Perspective:
This study found that surgery and physical manual therapies
including desensitization maneuvers of the central nervous system were
similarly effective at medium-term and long-term follow-ups for improving pain
and function but that physical therapy led to better outcomes in the short
term.
News & Article Sources:
11 Dec 2015
A Physiotherapy Graduate wins the Miss India Wheelchair Beauty Pageant for Differently Abled
"You just flow with the winds," says a sprightly
Priya Bhargava, a Physiotherapy Graduate who won Miss India Wheelchair beauty
pageant for differently abled over the weekend in Bangalore.
In its third year, the contest which was held in Bengaluru, provides a platform for differently abled women. It is around this time that Priya, in search of new avenues and to generate hope by keeping herself busy in something new and different, chanced upon the beauty pageant contest on Facebook. With the support and encouragement of her parents and elder sister (married in USA), Priya now wants to clear the UPSC exams.
In its third year, the contest which was held in Bengaluru, provides a platform for differently abled women. It is around this time that Priya, in search of new avenues and to generate hope by keeping herself busy in something new and different, chanced upon the beauty pageant contest on Facebook. With the support and encouragement of her parents and elder sister (married in USA), Priya now wants to clear the UPSC exams.
From a Bachelors of Physiotherapy then Diploma in Nutrition
and Health Education twice, Priya finally pursued BCA and MCA through IGNOU in
which she topped in Noida regional centre.
Diagnosed with Lupus Erythematosus at the age of 19, a
condition in which the immune system attacks healthy tissues, Priya recounted
how she had endured several long hospitalisations to treat a damaged spine. It
disrupted her studies and future prospects. "I'd enjoyed the luxury of
being able for over 19 years. Then suddenly, I was disabled. Skin infections
followed. I was depressed but fought back," said Priya, adding how
painting, crafts, blogging and poetry helped her overcome depression.
Miss Wheelchair India - a category a pageant is for
unmarried wheelchair bound ladies. In its third year, the contest which was
held in Bengaluru, provides a platform for differently abled women. "It's
a huge platform for people like me to come out and tell the world that we are
as normal as the abled and we have learnt how to deal with the problems that we
face," Priya told TOI.
The pageant which is supported by an NGO called S J
Foundation under Dr Rajlakshmi S J, also holds contests in category B - for all
kinds of differently abled people, category C for married differently abled and
Mr wheelchair India (to be held in Mumbai on Dec 20). With the support and
encouragement of her parents and elder sister (married in USA), Priya now wants
to clear the UPSC exams. One who's coping with her condition constructively,
Priya claims to have accepted her situation.
News Sources:
7 Dec 2015
Physiotherapist Jobs in India and Saudi Arabia- December 2015
December 06- Physiotherapist Vacancies in
Bangalore, New Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Coimbatore,
Saudi Arabia and UAE.
For details register in Physiotherapy Jobs Portal www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
– Updated on December 06, 2015
Website: www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
-A Registered Job Portal for Indian Physiotherapists for Job Search, Assistance and Career building
(Service Tax Code & Registration Number: DSFPS4451BSD001)
For details register in Physiotherapy Jobs Portal www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
– Updated on December 06, 2015
Website: www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
-A Registered Job Portal for Indian Physiotherapists for Job Search, Assistance and Career building
(Service Tax Code & Registration Number: DSFPS4451BSD001)
5 Dec 2015
Physiotherapist Job in Kerala , Dec 2015
Calicut- Physiotherapist vacancies for an
Established Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Centre at Kozhikode (Calicut),
Kerala.
Qualification: BPT with 0-4 yrs experience.
Should be well versed in Malayalam Language.
Salary is negotiable as per skills and performance in interview.
Should join duty in January 2016.Physiotherapists residing in Calicut or in nearby districts of Kerala can apply.
Should be well versed in Malayalam Language.
Salary is negotiable as per skills and performance in interview.
Should join duty in January 2016.Physiotherapists residing in Calicut or in nearby districts of Kerala can apply.
(Mention the Job Code “PTJ-BPT Calicut” the subject line of
the mail)
Direct Recruitment by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal
www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
3 Dec 2015
International Day of Persons with Disabilities: December 03
3rd December is the International Day of Persons with
Disabilities: The annual observance of the International Day of Persons
with Disabilities, aims to promote an understanding of disability issues and
mobilise support for the dignity, rights and well-being of persons with
disabilities.
It also seeks to increase awareness of gains to be derived from the integration of persons with disabilities in every aspect of political, social, economic and cultural life. Physiotherapists are instrumental in working with people and populations to optimise functioning and minimise disability.
The World Health Organization (WHO) is celebrating the day with an event around the WHO Global Disability Action Plan 2014-2021: Better health for all people with disability, which will have a special focus on Community-based rehabilitation (CBR). The occasion will be used to launch the CBR Indicators Manual and the CBR Online Training Tool.
It also seeks to increase awareness of gains to be derived from the integration of persons with disabilities in every aspect of political, social, economic and cultural life. Physiotherapists are instrumental in working with people and populations to optimise functioning and minimise disability.
The World Health Organization (WHO) is celebrating the day with an event around the WHO Global Disability Action Plan 2014-2021: Better health for all people with disability, which will have a special focus on Community-based rehabilitation (CBR). The occasion will be used to launch the CBR Indicators Manual and the CBR Online Training Tool.
WHO has also produced an infographic "Better health for
people with disabilities", available for download at: www.who.int/disabilities/infographic/en/
The Government of India is launching the Accessible India campaign, the government envisions to have an inclusive society in which equal opportunities and access is provided for the growth and development of persons with disabilities to lead productive, safe and dignified lives, said secretary Lov Verma. The campaign will focus on three verticals: built environment; public transportation and information and communication technologies.-News update by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal
The Government of India is launching the Accessible India campaign, the government envisions to have an inclusive society in which equal opportunities and access is provided for the growth and development of persons with disabilities to lead productive, safe and dignified lives, said secretary Lov Verma. The campaign will focus on three verticals: built environment; public transportation and information and communication technologies.-News update by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal
2 Dec 2015
Chennai Floods Helpline Numbers of Army, Navy and Corporation
Pray for Chennai, Pray for Sunshine
Army helpline +91 9840295100
Navy helpline 044-25394240 / 27237107
#ChennaiRainsHelp
Army helpline +91 9840295100
Navy helpline 044-25394240 / 27237107
#ChennaiRainsHelp
1 Dec 2015
Advanced Robotic Device for Physiotherapy in Dubai Health Authority (DHA)
Advanced Robotic Device for Physiotherapy: An advanced Robot introduced by the Dubai
Health Authority (DHA) will encourage physical and neurological therapy
patients regain their independence.
Dubai: An advanced robotic device equipped with
augmented reality will now teach patients with physical and neurological
injuries to walk in much less time as compared to conventional physiotherapy
approaches.
The device, to be made available to all patients at the
Dubai Health Authority (DHA)- run Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Centre
(DPRC), will help patients recover mobility and independence by adopting new
techniques.
His Excellency, Humaid Al Qatami, Chairman of the Dubai
Health Authority, highlighted the importance of procuring the latest technology
in healthcare to improve patient outcomes.
Dr Amal Al Shamlan, Director of DPRC, said: “The device is
an excellent addition to our facility. It will enhance the progress of gait
training for our patients of all ages with physical and neurological
limitations. More than 75 patients at the centre will immediately benefit from
the introduction of this device. Of these several are children.”
Al Shamlan said the robotic-assisted device allows patients
to regain their ability to walk in less time when compared to conventional
therapy approaches and is the only device that offers the unique feature of
realistically simulating climbing stairs and can be operated by one therapist
only.
The device stimulates the action of walking and climbing
stairs and patients can decide the amount of assistance they need with one
touch. They can increase or decrease the amount of assistance needed as per
their condition and progress.
The device has an augmented reality feature so that patients
can select forest or beach trails while performing their physiotherapy
sessions. It also has interactive games so that children enjoy their
physiotherapy.
Al Shamlan said the introduction of this device is aimed at
helping patients recover mobility and their independency in daily living - News
update by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal (www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in)
for Information purpose.
Attached picture is for Illustration purpose only.
Attached picture is for Illustration purpose only.
News Sources:
1. http://gulfnews.com/news/uae/health/advanced-robotic-device-for-physiotherapy-1.1629200
1. http://gulfnews.com/news/uae/health/advanced-robotic-device-for-physiotherapy-1.1629200
UAE Process for Physiotherapists can be read in the Link:
http://physiotherapy-jobs.blogspot.in/2015/11/united-arab-emirates-uae-dha-and-haad.html
Physiotherapy Jobs Portal www.physiotherapyjobs.
27 Nov 2015
Adhesive Capsulitis: Use the evidence to integrate your interventions
Frozen shoulder syndrome,
clinically known as adhesive capsulitis, is a painful and debilitating
condition affecting up to 5% of the population. Adhesive capsulitis is
considered fibrosis of the glenohumeral joint capsule with a chronic
inflammatory response. Patients experience pain, limited range of motion, and
disability generally lasting anywhere from 1 to 24 months. The purpose of this
clinical suggestion is to review the pathophysiology of adhesive capsulitis and
discuss physical therapy interventions which are supported by evidence, thereby
enhancing evidence-based practice.-Update for Information purpose by
Physiotherapy Jobs Portal.
(Published in North American Journal of Sports Physical Therapy)
Link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3096148/
(Published in North American Journal of Sports Physical Therapy)
Link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3096148/
26 Nov 2015
The Constitution day of India
November 26 is The Constitution day of India: Justice, Liberty, Equality and Fraternity. May our dream of a new tomorrow come true for us!
Constitution Day in India is celebrated on 26 November. It marks the anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of India constitution by the Constituent Assembly of India on 26 November 1949 which later came into effect on 26 January 1950.
The Government of India declared November 26 as Constitution Day on 19 November 2015 by way of a gazette notification.The day of November 26 is chosen to spread the importance of the Constitution. My India, My Pride !!
22 Nov 2015
Cadre Restructuring for Physiotherapists in 7th Pay Commission
Cadre (Designation) up-gradation is the way forward for the growth of Physiotherapist both in Government and Private sectors.
The Cadre restructuring proposal to be submitted through Central Government Employees Union as the 7th Pay commission has recommended a Holistic Cadre Restructuring for Physiotherapists.
Cadres:
1. Physiotherapist
2. Senior Physiotherapist
3. Superintendent Physiotherapist
4. Chief Physiotherapist
(Reference: Co-ordination Committee Report Nov 2014, from Reference No.F.9-49/2012-Estt. (RCT) (P) with slight modifications)
The Cadre restructuring proposal to be submitted through Central Government Employees Union as the 7th Pay commission has recommended a Holistic Cadre Restructuring for Physiotherapists.
Cadres:
1. Physiotherapist
2. Senior Physiotherapist
3. Superintendent Physiotherapist
4. Chief Physiotherapist
(Reference: Co-ordination Committee Report Nov 2014, from Reference No.F.9-49/2012-Estt. (RCT) (P) with slight modifications)
21 Nov 2015
Osteoarthritis: Physiotherapy plays a key role in restoring the full range of movement of the knee after a knee joint surgery.
Osteoarthritis: Stress on post-surgery rehabilitation: Physiotherapy
plays a key role in restoring the full range of movement of the knee after a
knee joint surgery.
Knee joint or total knee replacement surgeries done on
patients with osteoarthritis are quality of life enhancement procedures. These
are done to relieve this 55-plus age group of pain and improve mobility. But,
is surgery alone enough to bring the spring back in their feet? Not quite.
Post-surgery rehabilitation, primarily Physiotherapy, plays
a key role in restoring the full range of movement of the knee or hip joint. If
the restoration is poor, blame it on the lack of physiotherapy. The bulk of
such cases relate to the total knee replacement surgeries.
Orthopaedic Surgeon Dr.Sameer Ali of Malabar Institute of
Medical Sciences says Physiotherapy is largely ignored and this restricts
movement and denies the full benefit of the surgery.
Invariably, persons opt for surgery after suffering osteoarthritis
for nearly four years. The cartilage that serves as a cushion between the tibia
(shin bone) and the femur (thigh bone) at the knee wears out, leading to these
bones coming into direct contact with each other. This leads to inflammation of
muscles around the joint. The resultant pain prevents patients from walking. In
turn, this leaves the muscles weak.
“Surgery provides only a prosthetic (artificial) knee joint.
It does not help the muscles regain vigour. That can come only through
physiotherapy,” says Dr. Sameer Ali.
If patients do not follow the full protocol of
physiotherapy, the muscles will remain weak. This will leave the artificial
joint bearing the full body weight of the patients when they walk, and it will
wear out soon.
“Only 75 per cent of the knee joint surgery patients come
for regular follow-up that is done at the following frequency: two weeks, six
weeks, three months, six months and one year. Of these cases, only a paltry 25
per cent go through the full protocol of physiotherapy,” the surgeon says.
Generally, the problem lies with the belief among the
patients that household work is a substitute to physiotherapy. They argue that
it is strenuous enough to pass for exercise. But, the fact is that the knee
joint is not specifically exercised to the required level, he says.
Compiled by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal (www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in) for information purpose.
Compiled by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal (www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in) for information purpose.
News Link: The Hindu Newspaper dated Nov 16, 2015: http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-kerala/osteoarthritis-stress-on-postsurgery-rehabilitation/article7882563.ece
20 Nov 2015
18 Nov 2015
United Arab Emirates (UAE) : DHA and HAAD Process for Physiotherapists
United
Arab Emirates (UAE) Process :
Compiled for Information Purpose by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal
Compiled for Information Purpose by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal
License Exams:
1. Dubai Health Authority(DHA) Exam to be eligible to work in Dubai
1. Dubai Health Authority(DHA) Exam to be eligible to work in Dubai
2. Health Authority of Abudhabi (HAAD) exam to be eligible to work in Abudhabi and Al Ain.
Experience
Required: 2 Years post registration experience after BPT or 1 Year experience after
MPT
What is a DHA Eligibility
Letter?
It is a confirmation that you have passed your DHA Licensing exam and you are eligible to apply for a job within Dubai. So this letter is the confirmation and authorization that you can work in Dubai only. Clearing DHA exam is an eligibility Criteria and other factors such as Experience, Skills, Job availability, Strong Resume,Nationality, Visa norms etc play a major factor .
It is a confirmation that you have passed your DHA Licensing exam and you are eligible to apply for a job within Dubai. So this letter is the confirmation and authorization that you can work in Dubai only. Clearing DHA exam is an eligibility Criteria and other factors such as Experience, Skills, Job availability, Strong Resume,Nationality, Visa norms etc play a major factor .
After
clearing DHA, one needs to activate the DHA License with the eligibility
letter. For this you have to upload following documents and pay the prescribed
fee (Can be done only with a Job Offer):
-Labor Card or Job Offer Letter
-Malpractice Insurance Letter
-Fees informed by DHA
-Labor Card or Job Offer Letter
-Malpractice Insurance Letter
-Fees informed by DHA
The DHA
and HAAD License exams consists of two steps: Primary Source Verification (Data
Flow Process) and the Online exam.
Step 1: Completing the Primary Source Verification (Data Flow Process): Uploading of Certificates which will be verified by Data Flow
Step 2: With the Data Flow Reference number the License exams can be booked online.
Data Flow (Primary Source Verification) Process Link: http://www.dataflowgroup.com/index.php/contact-us
Step 1: Completing the Primary Source Verification (Data Flow Process): Uploading of Certificates which will be verified by Data Flow
Step 2: With the Data Flow Reference number the License exams can be booked online.
Data Flow (Primary Source Verification) Process Link: http://www.dataflowgroup.com/index.php/contact-us
Dubai Health Authority (DHA) Process
Link:
http://www.dha.gov.ae/EN/SectorsDirectorates/Directorates/HealthRegulation/HealthProfessionals/Alliedhealth/Pages/AlliedHealth.aspx
http://www.dha.gov.ae/EN/SectorsDirectorates/Directorates/HealthRegulation/HealthProfessionals/Alliedhealth/Pages/AlliedHealth.aspx
The exam centres and available dates will be
notified by the exam conducting authority after completion of the Data Flow
Process.
Converting DHA License
to HAAD License:
This step is
quite important before you start the procedure to convert DHA License to HAAD.
As you can't start your procedure just after passing your DHA Exam. First you
have to obtain DHA License.
As per the new regulations, A Physiotherapist has to activate
the current license with the eligibility letter. For this a Physiotherapist has
to upload following documents and pay a fees of 1010 AED.
-Labor Card or Job Offer Letter
-Malpractice Insurance Letter
-Fees 1010 AED
These documents are given by your company when you are
selected for a job. Some companies in UAE have a different way to do it to make
it easy for new employee. They ask for your login ID and password and they do
the rest of the stuff for you.
When you get your DHA License which is posted by Zajeel mail
on a address provided by you. Now you are ready to get your license convert to
HAAD / MOH.
Note: DHA Eligibility Letter cannot be converted to HAAD License. Only after obtaining the DHA License , it can be converted to HAAD License
Note: DHA Eligibility Letter cannot be converted to HAAD License. Only after obtaining the DHA License , it can be converted to HAAD License
For
Physiotherapy License Exam Preparatory Material CD and for Job Assistance and Updates register as
a Member of Physiotherapy Jobs Portal : www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
PHYSIOTHERAPY JOBS PORTAL is a registered recruitment
service for Indian Physiotherapists -Registered under Central Excise Department
of India
(Service Tax Code & Registration number: DSFPS4451BSD001), since 2010
(Service Tax Code & Registration number: DSFPS4451BSD001), since 2010
Physiotherapy Jobs delivers valuable member benefits that
help Physiotherapists in Job searching and career building.
Website: www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
E-Mail: info@physiotherapyjobs.co.in
WhatsApp: +91 9916347890
Membership and Study Material Enquiries: +91 9482585828 (9am-7pm Monday-Saturday)
(Compiled
for information purpose by Physiotherapy Jobs Portal.
Please note, the above procedure is a suggested approach, and subject to change from either government authority)
Please note, the above procedure is a suggested approach, and subject to change from either government authority)
17 Nov 2015
Customized Physical therapy may provide more relief for lower back pain than general advice on the best ways to remain active, an Australian study published in British Journal of Sports Medicine suggests.
Customized Physical therapy may provide more relief for
lower back pain than general advice on the best ways to remain active, an
Australian study published in British Journal of Sports Medicine suggests.
Researchers offered 300 patients with lower back pain two
advice sessions explaining the source of their discomfort and providing
instruction on proper lifting techniques. Roughly half of them also got 10
treatment sessions of personalized physical therapy over 10 weeks.
The physical therapy group had significantly greater
reductions in activity limitations at 10, 26 and 52 weeks than the advice group
and they also had less back pain at 5, 10 and 26 weeks.
“Our findings suggest that advice works for many people but
that individualized physical therapy achieves more rapid reduction in pain and
in the long term superior improvements in function/disability,” lead study
author Jon Ford of La Trobe University in Bundoora, Australia said by email.
Low-back disorders are one of the most common afflictions
that bring people to the doctor, and many of these patients with acute problems
have persistent symptoms for at least a year, Ford and colleagues note in the
British Journal of Sports Medicine.
To be included in the study, patients needed to have
experienced pain for six weeks to six months and have one of five specific
types of back pain: disc herniation, reducible disc pain, non-reducible disc
pain, joint pain or multifactorial persistent pain.
Patients assigned to customized physical therapy in the
study using specific exercise techniques tailored to the type of injury and
individual barriers to recovery. Some, for example, focused on posture and
lifting to ease disc pain, while others with disc herniation worked on motor
control targeting specific muscle groups.
Participants in both the advice and the physical therapy
groups improved over time, but the people who received the customized exercise
sessions generally did better.
One shortcoming of the study is that the advice group had
far fewer encounters with health providers than the physical therapy group, the
authors acknowledge.
“There was an 8-session difference in treatment groups, so
there was a notable difference in provider attention that could account for some
of these group differences,” Steven George, a physical therapy researcher at
the University of Florida who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email.
In addition, the differences in outcomes between the two
groups aren’t that large, as is often the case in studies of back pain, noted
Julie Fritz, associate dean for research at the College of Health at the
University of Utah in Salt Lake City.
“Back pain is very common and many patients are advised to
attend physical therapy at some point,” Fritz said by email. “The challenge for
researchers is to continue to examine which particular physical therapy
interventions work for specific types of patients with low back pain and
determine the optimal timing for physical therapy intervention.”
Abstract
Background: Many patients with low-back disorders
persisting beyond 6 weeks do not recover. This study investigates whether
individualised physiotherapy plus guideline-based advice results in superior
outcomes to advice alone in participants with low-back disorders.
Methods: This prospective parallel group multicentre
randomised controlled trial was set in 16 primary care physiotherapy practices
in Melbourne, Australia. Random assignment resulted in 156 participants
receiving 10 sessions of physiotherapy that was individualised based on
pathoanatomical, psychosocial and neurophysiological barriers to recovery
combined with guideline-based advice, and 144 participants receiving 2 sessions
of physiotherapist-delivered advice alone. Primary outcomes were activity
limitation (Oswestry Disability Index) and numerical rating scales for back and
leg pain at 5, 10, 26 and 52 weeks postbaseline. Analyses were by
intention-to-treat using linear mixed models.
Results: Between-group differences showed significant
effects favouring individualised physiotherapy for back and leg pain at
10 weeks (back: 1.3, 95% CI 0.8 to 1.8; leg: 1.1, 95% CI 0.5 to 1.7) and
26 weeks (back: 0.9, 95% CI 0.4 to 1.4; leg: 1.0, 95% CI 0.4 to 1.6). Oswestry
favoured individualised physiotherapy at 10 weeks (4.7; 95% CI 2.0 to 7.5),
26 weeks (5.4; 95% CI 2.6 to 8.2) and 52 weeks (4.3; 95% CI 1.4 to 7.1).
Responder analysis at 52 weeks showed participants receiving individualised
physiotherapy were more likely to improve by a clinically important amount of
50% from baseline for Oswestry (relative risk (RR=1.3) 1.5; 95% CI 1.2 to 1.8)
and back pain (RR 1.3; 95% CI 1.2 to 1.8) than participants receiving advice
alone.
Conclusions: 10 sessions of individualised physiotherapy
was more effective than 2 sessions of advice alone in participants with
low-back disorders of ≥6 weeks and ≤6 months duration. Between-group changes
were sustained at 12 months for activity limitation and 6 months for back and
leg pain and were likely to be clinically significant.
Article Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/11/11/us-health-backpain-physical-therapy-idUSKCN0T02AB20151111
Journal Source: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/early/2015/10/20/bjsports-2015-095058.short?rss=1ly/1PoQKkC
British Journal of Sports Medicine, online October 20, 2015.
British Journal of Sports Medicine, online October 20, 2015.
16 Nov 2015
Physiotherapist Vacancies- Updated on November 16 2015
November 16- Physiotherapist Vacancies in Bangalore,
Chennai, Kochi, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Delhi NCR, Chandigarh and Gulf.
For details register in Physiotherapy Jobs Portal www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
– Updated on November 16, 2015
Website: www.physiotherapyjobs.co.in
-A Registered Job Portal for Indian Physiotherapists for Job Search, Assistance and Career building
(Service Tax Code & Registration Number: DSFPS4451BSD001)
11 Nov 2015
Direct Access in Physiotherapy
Patients 'should have direct access to physiotherapy': Patients
should be able to see a physiotherapist in their GP's surgery, an expert has
said.
Patients should be able to see a physiotherapist in their
GP's surgery, an expert has said.
Professor Karen Middleton, chief executive of the Chartered
Society of Physiotherapy, said patients should have direct access to an NHS
physio rather than needing a referral from their GP.
This would free up GPs to concentrate on other cases, some
of which are more serious.
In a Scrubbing Up column for the BBC website, she said:
"If you ring your local surgery, you can probably get an appointment with
the GP or a nurse.
"But if you have a common problem such as back or neck
pain, should you also be able to see a physiotherapist?
"We think so - as do increasing numbers of GPs, who are
bringing in physiotherapists to work alongside them in their practices.
"These aren't physios the GP refers to - the physio is
a patient's first point of contact who they see instead of the GP.
"Up to 30% of a GP's caseload can be musculoskeletal
(MSK) problems, and physios are the experts in these conditions - so it makes
complete sense for them to see those patients."
She said the benefits for patients are numerous - speeding
up access to an expert, cutting the number of appointments they need and
potentially avoiding surgery.
She said: "The longer someone waits for treatment, they
greater the likelihood is that their relatively minor condition becomes
chronic.
"So why not see the physio in the first instance?
"A physio can assess and diagnose a patient at that
first appointment so that their rehabilitation begins immediately.
"In many cases, they will just need advice on what to
do and the problem will go away.
"This then frees up places on the waiting list for
people who genuinely need further treatment."
She said the new system would also save the NHS money.
"You'd also need to be living on Mars - or perhaps just
outside the UK - to not know of the urgent and enormous problems the NHS faces
financially.
"Our modelling shows that if even a fifth of the
patients seeing their GP for an MSK problem saw a physio instead, it would save
at least £525m a year for the NHS.
"That's a conservative estimate, by the way, as it
looks only at the savings from that initial appointment.
"Additional savings would come from reduced follow-up
appointments, fewer tests such as X-rays and scans and lower numbers of
referrals on to secondary care in hospitals."
Ms Middleton said there was a need to dispel myths, such as
it is not safe to skip the GP stage.
"Physios are trained to identify what we call red flags
- evidence of serious illness - and would always send those patients on to the
most appropriate medical professional," she said.
"Research has shown virtually no red flags are missed
by Physios."
News Link: home.bt.com/news/uk-news/patients-should-have-direct-access-to-physiotherapy-11364015654324


















