Struggling to help your patients meet their outcomes?
For the physical therapists in the room…
Are you looking for more ways to get the most out of your 30-minute sessions? Frustrated by patients who aren’t doing their homework and don’t seem to be improving? I can help! Hit the learn more button to see how integrating movement re-education can help your patients achieve better outcomes and how you can get the most out of each session.
For the doctors and practice managers in the room…
Not ready to operate? Tired of writing the same prescriptions? Are your patients complaining about their physical therapy experiences? Are you seeing the same post-injury patients over and over about their chronic issues? Stuck wondering if physical therapy is the appropriate referral to make? Hit the learn more link to see how neuro-muscular therapy, working with fascia and Active Movement Participations can support your patients success.
Practitioners Videos
For students past and present, and for colleagues and care providers who may be interested in how I work, I’ve put together a few mid-length videos that include some of my favorite techniques for working with fascia and myofascial trigger points to alleviate pain.
The principles I have employed in my practice since 2005, through programs and studies featured at the first fascia research congress, and also offered through the Fascia Research Society include 1) working more slowly than for traditional Swedish or relaxation massage, 2) working more tangentially to tissues being addressed utilizing ‘skin stretch’, and 3) also recruiting the assistance of the person on the table (when it makes sense to do so) to do some participatory movement (called AMPs ‘Active Movement Participations’) for certain applications.
A brief (with English subtitles!) documentary on the Study of Fascia:
Watch the German 10-minute film on Fascia here