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Join us today as I interview physical therapist and running specialist Chris Johnson. Topics discussed are:
- [4:14] Chris’s unique background as a physical therapist and athlete
- [7:30] How promoting longevity in fitness through smarter training is vital
- [9:24] One of the most critical mistakes runners make with training
- [10:05] 90% of runners run at 90% intensity, 90% of the time and 90% get injured – whoa
- [13:30] Chris’s current patient caseload and how he integrated running performance into his physical therapy practice
- [16:20] What are the most common injuries seen in the running population?
- [17:15] The importance of a thorough subjective during your initial evaluation
- [17:48] Chris’s assessment of an injured runner
- [18:34] Staging and typing an injury – Where am I in the stages of rehab?
- [19:14] The importance of single leg balance
- [19:57] Progression through the 1st ray and great toe
- [20:30] Eccentric closed chain tolerance – The step-down test
- [20:50] What’s frontal plane stability look like?
- [21:02] Can the patient properly hop?
- [22:00] We are returning runners to running too quickly after injury
- [22:44] How Chris progresses his runners back to running after injury
- [24:10] Teaching runners decision making while running – when to push and when to stop immediately
- [26:10] Chris’s favorite drills and progressions to enhance single leg stance
- [29:48] How Chris teaches progression through the 1st ray
- [32:52] Should we teach the short foot and can we actually teach a short foot?
- [33:53] How to cue people most effectively
- [35:18] How do we integrate more dynamic foot stability into our therapy once our patients have mastered static exercises (Single leg stance)
- [37:20] Chris’s favorite closed chain eccentric exercises – The importance of weightlifting for runners. The runner’s “core four”
- [39:17] How Chris checks frontal plane stability and then treats it – Single leg balance and hip abduction
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The other day I released an article entitled 10 Critical Principles Physical Therapists Need to Know about Crossfit for Successful Rehabilitation. I admit, I was a bit ticked off from so many therapists judging me for wearing crossfit t-shirts (Please don’t tell me you do that, blah blah etc etc.). A lot of that was written because I was just plain peeved about it.
I’m happy with the message that was sent but in honesty, I think it did backfire some. I had some smart therapist friends who had their patients come in with a copy of my article with the idea that their therapists were incompetent and didn’t understand their unique needs as a patient. I really didn’t mean to give this notion nor do I believe this in any way. Most physical therapists hold a doctorate level education and work all day everyday getting people out of pain. They’re good at what they do and deservedly so. I think the article pushed some patients to lose any and all faith in their therapists and I didn’t mean to do that.
What I think IS a more fair assumption is that our two professions just don’t know each other well enough. As a trainer/coach, when was the last time you called your patient’s therapist or doctor to ask about specific advice on what your client should and shouldn’t do? As a therapist do you regularly speak with your patient’s coaches/trainers to see how they are progressing back to their sport and recommend ways to ease back? I believe that if we understood each other’s roles better there would be much less animosity and more importantly, better patient/client outcomes. Here are my top five reasons that therapists and trainers should talk more.
1) Ignorance Breeds Misinformation and Hostility
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NYA KOMMENTARER
very nice!
posted in Nice & Clean. The best for your blog!from nice
also another nice feedback here, uh uh
posted in Nice & Clean. The best for your blog!from corrado