
#PTonICE Podcast
The faculty of the Institute of Clinical Excellence deliver their specialized content every weekday morning. Topic areas include: Population health, fitness athlete management, evidence based spine and extremity care, older adults, community outreach, self development, and much more! Learn more about our team at www.PTonICE.com
Latest episodes

Dec 7, 2023 • 12min
Episode 1615 - Master the rack pull
Learn about VersaLifts, a tool for improving squat form. Discover how to set up and dose rack pulls for isometric exercise without low back pain. Explore the benefits of rack pulls for rehab progression.

Dec 6, 2023 • 15min
Episode 1614 - Leave nothing on the table with sarcopenia
In this podcast, Dr. Dustin Jones discusses the alarming impact of sarcopenia, including increased risks of falls, fractures, and loss of independence. He emphasizes the significant opportunity for rehab providers in this area. The podcast explores new research on sarcopenia and its implications for work with patients and athletes. It also emphasizes the importance of resistance training and gradually increasing exercise intensity for individuals with sarcopenia.

Dec 5, 2023 • 16min
Episode 1613 - Deck chairs on the Titanic
Spine Division leader Zac Morgan discusses research supporting conservative care vs invasive care, specifically chiropractic care vs physical therapy. Learning spinal manipulation can improve PT outcomes and reduce patient dependence. The podcast also covers the effectiveness of conservative care for acute low back pain, the need for PTs to contribute more, and the role of spinal manipulation in reducing reliance on opioids and injections.

Dec 4, 2023 • 23min
Episode 1612 - Postpartum depression, pt. 3: treatment, support, and helpful resources
Dr. April Dominick // #ICEPelvic // www.ptonice.com In today's episode of the PT on ICE Daily Show, #ICEPelvic faculty member April Dominick as she wraps up her series on postpartum depression. In this episode, she will focus on first line of defense treatment for PPD including including medication, psychotherapy and exercise. As well as how to support someone with PPD as a friend or healthcare provider. She concludes with some important resources for emotional and mental health support that are free and extremely helpful to share with someone who is postpartum. Take a listen to learn how to better serve this population of patients & athletes. If you're looking to learn more about our live pregnancy and postpartum physical therapy courses or our online physical therapy courses, check our entire list of continuing education courses for physical therapy including our physical therapy certifications by checking out our website. Don't forget about all of our FREE eBooks, prebuilt workshops, free CEUs, and other physical therapy continuing education on our Resources tab. Are you looking for more information on how to keep lifting weights while pregnant? Check out the ICE Pelvic bi-weekly newsletter! EPISODE TRANSCRIPTION INTRODUCTION Hey everyone, this is Alan. Chief Operating Officer here at ICE. Before we get started with today’s episode, I want to talk to you about VersaLifts. Today’s episode is brought to you by VersaLifts. Best known for their heel lift shoe inserts, VersaLifts has been a leading innovator in bringing simple but highly effective rehab tools to the market. If you have clients with stiff ankles, Achilles tendinopathy, or basic skeletal structure limitations keeping them from squatting with proper form and good depth, a little heel lift can make a huge difference. VersaLifts heel lifts are available in three different sizes and all of them add an additional half inch of drop to any training shoe, helping athletes squat deeper with better form. Visit www.vlifts.com/icephysio or click the link in today’s show notes to get your VersaLifts today.APRIL DOMINICK Hello and welcome PT on ICE. My name is April Dominick. I am part of the faculty for the ICE pelvic division. And today's topic is all things treatment support strategies and helpful resources for postpartum depression. This is the final episode in my three part series on postpartum depression. So I am excited to dive in. But first I wanted to remind everyone of our array of course offerings in our pelvic division. Our first few live courses of 2024 are in Raleigh, North Carolina. That's going to be January 13th and 14th. And then Hendersonville, Tennessee, January 27th and 28th. And let's not forget about our not one, but two online eight-week course offerings. The level one cohort is going to start January 9th, while our brand new level two advanced concepts course will take place April 30th. If you've got someone asking you for some gift ideas or asking you to let them get you a birthday present, if you have a winner birthday, then have them help you out with some courses for ICE. That would be such a great gift of learning. And you can head over to ptonice.com to secure your seat in one or all three of those offerings, which is what is needed for our brand new ice pelvic certification. TREATING POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION All right, let's dive in today to the treatment section of postpartum depression. So one of the most common ways to treat postpartum depression is with antidepressants and psychotherapy. For those who are lactating, the conversation may include discussing the benefits of breastfeeding and known risks of antidepressant use during lactation. A lot of folks have concerns with the side effects that can occur when starting antidepressants. These concerns are totally valid and really excellent questions to bring up with their physician. For some, not being on the medication and leaving symptoms left untreated from a medical management standpoint could be just as risky in terms of their mental health and emotional health as well. For those who are concerned about the interactions that breastfeeding would have with antidepressants, or for those who would not prefer to take antidepressants, Psychotherapy is actually the first line of treatment. When looking for a mental health provider, we want to remind our clients, if possible, you want to find one that lists some sort of training in or special specialization of perinatal health as they will be really well-versed in the unique challenges that a postpartum individual faces. EXERCISE AS A FIRST LINE TREATMENT Now, Let's talk about a treatment that is within our PT scope of practice, and that's going to be exercise. So exercise is a great alternative or supplement to treating postpartum depression. Now, as a postpartum person, finding time to exercise while caring for a newborn, as well as taking care of the rest of life's demands, including chores or a job, That can be incredibly difficult and is a huge barrier for many to either return to or begin exercise in the postpartum period. When I was searching on the American College of Obstetrician and Gynecologist website, just seeing what all they have in terms of resources and recommendations, they didn't really have exercise as readily mentioned on their main pages when they were discussing how to address postpartum depression symptoms. And rather, they had like the medication and the mental health therapy, which was the greater focus, which is wild given that it Exercise is an excellent treatment offering that's conservative, it's generally accessible, and non-pharmacological. Not to mention, some of the forms of exercise can be cost-effective. And this may be a gap that we as rehab providers can remind our physician colleagues on the latest research that we know about of the effects of exercise and depression. and reminding them that, hey, we're those musculoskeletal experts in your community, and we are willing and able to help guide their clients in starting or continuing exercise, as we know, improving the postpartum individual's physical well-being and directly supports their mental health and well-being. THE EFFECTS OF EXERCISE ON DEPRESSION So what do we know about the effects of exercise in general on depression? Exercise helps to increase levels of endogenous endorphins and opioids, all of which have positive effects on mental health. And the team from Singh et al published a paper in 2023 on an overview of systematic reviews on physical activity for improving depression. they found that physical activity had medium effects on depression compared to usual care. So specifically, they suggested that aerobic resistance and yoga exercise was the most beneficial and exercise with higher intensity was associated with greater improvements. And then there was another study that was published in September of 2023, and this one was by Zhao et al. And they aimed to determine the association between seven lifestyle factors and lots of other body functions to see what their impact was on depression. They studied data from 290,000 individuals across nine years, with about 13% of those individuals developing depression. We love that length of time for data collection. Some of the seven healthy lifestyle factors that they found were associated with a lower risk of depression were healthy sleep, about seven to nine hours, that reduced the risk of depression by 22%. Frequent social connection that reduced the risk of depression by 18%. it was the frequent social connection was the most protective against recurrent depressive disorder. And then the other two of the seven healthy lifestyle factors was regular physical activity that reduced depression risk by 14% and then low to moderate sedentary behavior. When it comes to our postpartum population, we have to recognize that seven to nine hours of sleep is extremely unrealistic for most, but we can offer suggestions for improving the quality of that sleep, curating the best environment with maybe the control of limited noise. Can we make the room colder when we are going down for two to three hours, start to nap, uh, darker, uh, light or like less light and then cooler temperatures. Um, So those were some of the studies that looked at the effects of exercise and lifestyle behaviors on depression overall. What about the role of exercise in prevention and treatment of the postpartum population with depression? A little more niche. When it comes to aerobic exercise, there was a qualitative systematic review from 2023 by Xu et al. And it actually just came out last week. And it was studying the efficacy of aerobic exercise in preventing and treating postpartum depression. They found that compared to standard care, aerobic exercise, particularly 30 to 45 minutes of moderate intensity, three to four sessions a week, had a significant effect in treating postpartum depression with a greater emphasis on prevention. Many of the studies we have on exercise effects on postpartum depression, look at aerobic exercise. But what about resistance training? So in a study by Le Chemin et al. from 2019, the group examined the influence of resistance training in women during postpartum depression. They found that compared to a stretch-based program, those who engaged in resistance training reported a significant decrease in their depressive symptoms four months postpartum. compared to when they measured immediately postpartum. We also have data from our very own ICE faculty, Dr. Christina Prevett, who did a study that looked at the impact of heavy resistance training on pregnancy and postpartum health outcomes. And compared to the national averages, those who lifted heavy showed lower rates of perinatal mood disorders as well. So there's quite a bit of heterogeneity in the method sections of these studies that these systematic reviews are looking at when it comes to exercise and depression. This makes it difficult to specify any sort of intensity or specific type of exercise or timing frequency domain for what is best practice, what is most effective for using exercise to help with reducing depression. The SHU article was one of the first that I had run across giving a specific time and frequency domain for exercise in the postpartum depression period. It would be interesting if researchers could look at the effects of exercise alone, as many of the studies look at the combination of the treatment of psychotherapy, medication, and exercise. I'd also be curious about, hey, does it matter the specific time that someone returns to exercise postpartum. As in, is it most effective if someone returns to movement within two weeks, four weeks, six weeks? What makes the most difference? So while we're waiting for more dialed-in research in the clinic, If you're going to create a program or suggest a rehab EMOM for someone with postpartum depression, make sure that you're including a mix of aerobic exercise, resistance training, and mobility, as well as some sort of reconnecting with their breath and body, just to help tap into that downregulation of the nervous system and hit those preliminary time guidelines from Shu et al. of 30 to 45 minutes, three to four sessions a week. So to sum up treatment, while there are multiple options to address postpartum depression currently, our first treatment approach is usually a combination of the treatments of antidepressants, psychotherapy, and exercise. So that was treatment. SUPPORTING PATIENTS WITH POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION Now I want to talk about how do you support someone who has postpartum depression as a rehab provider or a friend. Overall, validation, education, and reassurance and psychosocial support go a long way in helping someone experiencing postpartum depression. Making the new mom feel taken care of. Everyone has shifted focus to the baby, so how about asking how the mother is doing, checking in with their needs or whoever the postpartum person is. So there are so many ways to support a new parent and these are just going to be a few suggestions for how providers or friends and family can support that person. As a friend and provider, highlighting and celebrating the wins is key. Small, big. How they have made a huge impact on caring for their child and supporting their family. How their baby needs them, the postpartum person, to be consoled and that that person is able to console the baby and how they are learning what their baby needs are and recognizing the needs for comfort, for food, for diaper changes. As a friend, if you're looking for a way to help them that may not have as high a financial ticket as some other ways that folks can help, offering to drive the postpartum person to their appointments or to sit in the stay with a baby so they can get out of the house or get in some exercise without being interrupted by the baby waking up. Or as a friend, offering to help them with some chores. Bonus, you'd get some quality time together. And then another option as a friend is just communication. A simple message can make someone's day offering consistent check-ins, text messages, phone calls, FaceTime, snail mails. You can share something funny about what you just experienced or maybe you just thought of them and wanted to share that with them. As a provider, brainstorming with the postpartum person, how they can ask for help from their support system and help offload their mental and physical demands. Um, maybe they could create a meal train or ask, um, friends to set up a grocery delivery or, uh, ask for some gift cards to a favorite restaurant or self care services like physical therapy, um, a massage, a facial or a haircut or a babysitter. Obviously those come with a little bit higher price tag, but just options to, um, suggest for the, uh, postpartum person to tap into their support network. And then as a provider, reviewing and sharing some resources with the client that are particular to postpartum depression, such as phone support lines, community groups, or even providing them with some postpartum depression related pamphlets so that if it's a hard conversation that they don't want to have, then they could read it on their own time. RESOURCES FOR POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION So I'll go over some resources now and put them in the caption for you to reference. That is my cat. She is joining and also wants to hear the resources. So the first one is the Postpartum Support International website. It is one of the best resources overall that I've encountered. It is good in that it is going to be helpful for connecting folks with local resources in their region, offering emotional support during pregnancy and postpartum. with online support groups and they also have live phone sessions every Wednesday and I think they're capped at about 15 to 20 people. They also have perinatal trained medication providers or therapists or community groups and tons of blogs with others sharing their stories and so Folks can also use the Postpartum Support International's directory of trained perinatal mental health providers on folks who are specialized in postpartum anxiety, postpartum depression, and they have a director specifically for those humans, which I think is awesome. The next resource is the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline. They provide free conventional support confidential support resources and referrals from professional counselors to help pregnant and postpartum individuals facing mental health challenges. And this is also available 24-7. They also have interpreter services that are available in multiple language, which is huge. The third resource is the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. It provides free and confidential emotional support to help people in suicidal crisis or emotional distress. This is also available 24-7 and individuals can call, they can chat, or look up all the different educational information on their website. The fourth resource is the Postpartum Progress website. It is just chock full of information on the postpartum period in general, with a big section on postpartum depression, They have a provider list, including a black mental health provider list. And, uh, one of their extras was a Spotify playlist, uh, called warrior moms, which I love the strength and energy behind that. And then finally another, um, uh, resource, which is on the ACOG website. Uh, it is an infographic on anxiety and they do a beautiful job of, um, pretty much going through all of my, uh, podcast series, but for anxiety. about the prevalence, what is postpartum anxiety, and what are some treatment methods, what are some resources, just kind of sharing information because it's helpful to know that other folks are going through the same thing and that there's help out there. This pamphlet is a great idea to put up in the clinic, put up in bathroom stalls, maybe even have on your clinic website, but making one for postpartum depression. So we as PTs, we are perfectly positioned to help break the silence of folks with postpartum depression who may also be unaware that they're even dealing with this condition. We can make a difference in these clients' lives. Combined with educating ourselves, we need to be educating the birthing individuals, their support system on what postpartum depression looks like and ways to prevent it. then actually informing the individual on a number of treatment strategies available to them, including the combination of medication that is right for them, psychosocial mental health therapies, or alternative therapies like aerobic or resistance training exercise, whichever of those treatment strategies makes sense to them. And of course, speaking with their medical provider for the medication and psychotherapy piece. Oftentimes finding the right care support and gradually adding in movement, physical movement, aiming for good quality sleep, which is so tricky with this population and addressing nutrition can be huge steps in treatment of postpartum depression. But there's so much more. The essential pieces are asking someone about their current ecosystem in their postpartum world, allowing them space to share the tough things and knowing when to refer out for postpartum depression. as well as encouraging them different ways that they can lean on their support system or offering them the free resources such as the support groups or hotlines I talked about. And those are available in the caption. So treatment for postpartum depression, remember it's not a one size fits all. And individual specific situations, their preferences, they all have to be taken into account. If you miss the other two episodes in this series that go over the prevalence, risk factors, how to screen and what to say to someone who you suspect has postpartum depression, check out episode number 1553 and number 1572 to learn more. And thank you so much for your time and attention today. And I hope you find some brightness in your day. And as a bonus, if you have anyone who is recently postpartum, send them a warm message and let them know that you are thinking about them. Take care, everyone. OUTRO Hey, thanks for tuning in to the PT on Ice daily show. If you enjoyed this content, head on over to iTunes and leave us a review, and be sure to check us out on Facebook and Instagram at the Institute of Clinical Excellence. If you're interested in getting plugged into more ice content on a weekly basis while earning CUs from home, check out our virtual ice online mentorship program at ptonice.com. While you're there, sign up for our Hump Day Hustling newsletter for a free email every Wednesday morning with our top five research articles and social media posts that we think are worth reading. Head over to ptonice.com and scroll to the bottom of the page to sign up.

Dec 1, 2023 • 15min
Episode 1611 - Assault your VO2MAX
The podcast discusses the benefits of using the assault bike or echo bike for cardiovascular conditioning, importance of conditioning for athletes after injury, efficient workouts for cardiovascular fitness improvement, and improving cardiovascular fitness and conditioning for athletes and all populations.

Nov 30, 2023 • 19min
Episode 1610 - Fitness-forward: the origin of a term
They discuss a challenging workout of the day and the benefits of heel lift shoe inserts. Learn about the origin of the term 'fitness forward' and its impact on their company. Discover the importance of incorporating strengthening and resistance training for injury prevention. Delve into the concept of 'fitness forward' and its connection to their brand. Explore embracing a fitness-forward lifestyle and its transformative impact.

Nov 29, 2023 • 17min
Episode 1609 - The beauty of hospice care
Dr. Christina Prevett // #GeriOnICE // www.ptonice.com In today's episode of the PT on ICE Daily Show, Modern Management of the Older Adult division leader Christina Prevett discusses her personal experience with end-of-life care, comparing different scenarios between family members who had hospice/palliative care and those who did not. Christina challenges listeners to step back and recognize if they are being mindful of the patient's choices when nearing the end-of-life, and respecting the dignity of those choices as it relates to physical therapy treatment. Christina also reminds listeners to always advocate for their patients and be a resource, especially with hospice/palliative care as it is often not recommended as an option for patients. Take a listen to learn how to better serve this population of patients & athletes. If you're looking to learn more about live courses designed to better serve older adults in physical therapy or our online physical therapy courses, check our entire list of continuing education courses for physical therapy including our physical therapy certifications by checking out our website. Don't forget about all of our FREE eBooks, prebuilt workshops, free CEUs, and other physical therapy continuing education on our Resources tab. EPISODE TRANSCRIPTION INTRODUCTION Hey everyone, this is Alan. Chief Operating Officer here at ICE. Before we get started with today’s episode, I want to talk to you about VersaLifts. Today’s episode is brought to you by VersaLifts. Best known for their heel lift shoe inserts, VersaLifts has been a leading innovator in bringing simple but highly effective rehab tools to the market. If you have clients with stiff ankles, Achilles tendinopathy, or basic skeletal structure limitations keeping them from squatting with proper form and good depth, a little heel lift can make a huge difference. VersaLifts heel lifts are available in three different sizes and all of them add an additional half inch of h drop to any training shoe, helping athletes squat deeper with better form. Visit www.vlifts.com/icephysio or click the link in today’s show notes to get your VersaLifts today. CHRISTINA PREVETTHello everyone and welcome to the PT on Ice daily show. My name is Christina Prevett. I am one of the lead faculty within our modern management of the older adult division. We are in full-blown, like end-of-the-year mode. I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving. We are getting ready for a really big 2024. Our next online courses are level one and level two, running January 10th and January 11th. And then we have two courses left for MMOA Live, Chandler, North Carolina, this next weekend, and Portland, Maine, that have maybe one or two seats left in them. And then, oh, hi, Hospice Nursing tuning in. We are really getting going for January so we are in Santa California Santa Clara on January 13th and 14th And we were in Maryville, Ohio that same weekend. Sorry, Santa Rosa and then I am in Greenville, South Carolina the 20th and 21st All right. HOSPICE CARE Let's get talking about hospice. I graduated from PT school about 10 years ago and there always are some moments in your education that really stick out for you. And the one that to this day sticks out for me was we had a panel that came from a hospice that talked about end-of-life care. There was a nurse, there was a social worker, a PT, and a physician who all worked in nursing and they all worked in hospice. And this session about respecting the dignity of end-of-life care was so powerful. I left that session thinking, about what a job, is like to be able to facilitate that person's dignity and respect at the end of their life. I remember thinking about the people that were on that panel and they all loved their job. but you could see that there was some sadness behind their eyes because they've seen a lot of beautiful and tragic transitions into the end of a person's life that can be really difficult to manage. And I have been lucky, three out of the four of my grandparents, this is gonna be kind of a bit more of a personal episode, three out of the four of my grandparents have In my mind died of natural causes my grandmother on my mom's side died at 89 my grandfather on my dad's side died at 93 and my grandmother on my mom my dad's side died at 97 she was almost 98 and I truly believe she was gonna live to 100 but um She ended up with stage 4 cancer, but you know mutated growth at 98. I feel like it's natural causes And they all had different variations of their end-of-life care. And my grandparents, my grandfather and grandmother on my dad's side, both ended up with hospice care and they received different types of hospice care. So I kind of wanted to speak a little bit about what hospice care is, palliative care in general, and just some of the personal experiences about how beautiful that transition in hospice care can really be. WHAT IS PALLIATIVE CARE? When individuals think of hospice or palliative care, they think that an individual is dying imminently. And this was true with my family as well. When I suggested that my grandmother, who was diagnosed with stage four cancer, be given hospice care, my dad thought that I believed that she was gonna die tomorrow. Hospice and palliative care is when the prognosis is not great when there are no thoughts for intervention, or when the person has decided that they are not going to intervene to try and change their diagnosis. And that was kind of what happened with my grandmother. So she was diagnosed at 97 with stage 4 cancer and she said, you know, what am I gonna do? She was of sound mind and she said, I'm not gonna fight this thing. It's gonna make me feel really bad. I'm almost 98 years old. I do not want any intervention. She was very clear in that. And that was really hard for my family because she was the matriarch of the family. She had been so healthy. We literally all had her that she was living past a hundred and she decided that she did not want any interventions. And when she decided that I made the recommendation that we go to a hospice or we put her on the palliative care list here in Canada. And it was a really tough discussion with my family because they believed that, you know, she had a lot that they could still do, and it always came back to this discussion of, in palliative and hospice care, they are going to respect the comfort level of the person that is with them, and they are gonna respect their wishes that they're not gonna do any extraneous interventions to try and change the cancer. COMFORT & DIGNITY AT END-OF-LIFE They're gonna make her comfortable, give her dignity, and allow her to continue with end-of-life care. And I said, you know, as soon as she gets on the list, you know, we may not be accessing, you know, pain management and all those things right now, when that time comes, she's gonna have the capacity to be able to access those services, access those individuals, hospice, support personnel of various forms that are going to be able to help her. Then she was able to access a hospice care home when the time was coming that she couldn't be independent anymore. And so for her, she declined and there was a lot of conversations back and forth about, let's try this ultrasound, let's try that ultrasound. And I was very adamant about coming back saying that this was not what she wanted. She wants to be in palliative hospice care and be comfortable and surrounded by family as she starts to transition to the end of her life. And there was a time when pain was starting to come up because her cancer had transitioned to her bone and she was having a hard time toileting independently. It was around that time that our family had a discussion about putting her into hospice care. Again, my family had a really tough time with it, but when she was in hospice care, she was able to have visitors. There were not tons of lines and tubes and monitoring that was happening. The room was so quiet. She was able to have all the pain management that she wanted. I'm probably gonna tear up at this, but when it was her time, they did this beautiful pass through this archway that had angels and a cross, she was religiously inclined, and it talked about creating this pathway to the end of her life. And it was a beautiful thing. And I remember thinking that there are so many people who don't have that beautiful experience at the end of their life because they are surrounded by so many lines and tubes and sometimes that's just the nature of what happens at the end of a person's life. But I felt so fortunate that my grandmother was able to have this transition to her afterlife in a way that was so respectful. My grandfather was 97, and she passed away just recently. And my grandfather, he was 93, and it was kind of the same thing that was happening. He was starting to decline, he was generally unwell, but he was 93, he didn't really want any interventions, but he did not want to go into the hospital. And so we were able to access palliative care at home. And so by accessing some of those services, we were able to get a hospital bed in the room at that point in Everybody's life we were able to do round-the-clock care. We had hospice Palliative nurses and palliative care physicians coming in and checking in on them. But the same thing we didn't have was he didn't have any lines and tubes He gradually kind of slipped into a coma. We didn't do any extraneous measures except for pain management and he was able to die surrounded by his loved ones at home and again, that was something that I So kind of different versus going from a, you know, into a home of hospice versus transitioning into the afterlife at home, but still two very calm, very peaceful transitions into the end of a person's life. And so I kind of lead with those two, one of, you know, peacefully dying at home, the other around, peacefully passing in hospice care. And I want to kind of contrast that with my other grandmother. So I had a grandmother at 89 who honestly just did not want to live anymore. She had lived a long life. She had been widowed for a long time. And the love of her life, she never really recovered from that. All of her kids were grown. They were all doing well. And she just started to generally decline. She just wasn't doing that great. One of her kids, she had 10 kids, and one of them called an ambulance. She was just kind of not thriving at the hospital. So they brought her to the hospital. Her labs were kind of all over the place. She wasn't really doing that well. And she just didn't, she wasn't really doing great. They couldn't really figure it out. They had decided not to do any invasive therapy. She ended up transitioning to a long-term care home. Now. This is not to say anything negative about long-term care though in Canada There's a lot of conversation about how to create a better environment in long-term care. This is to speak a little bit more to like the medical side, you know So she was kind of getting around-the-clock care and she was on kind of hostilities hospice palliative, it was a very different experience where It just felt like, it felt a lot more lonely because she didn't have that same type of support that my other grandparents had had. And she was, she ended up passing away in long-term care, which was adamantly what she did not want. She wanted to pass away at home. And she didn't know when she was kind of just feeling unwell that it was the last time she was going to see her home ever again. She was very upset by the fact that that decision had been taken away from her because now she was too sick to go home and they wouldn't let her go home. So there were a lot of sad emotions around my grandmother on my mom's side transition into a long-term care facility that wasn't kind of in the same bucket as hospice or palliative care. THE REMOVAL OF DIGNITY AT END-OF-LIFE And so why do I kind of bring all these things up? One of the things that I did not recognize as a person in geriatrics is how I was gonna be confronted with a lot of things around end-of-life care that I would not have expected going in. You know, you kind of go into PT a lot of the time thinking that you're interacting with pain, and you are, but you're gonna have these situations and circumstances where a person that you're interacting with will take a turn. When you go into acute care, you will be having these individuals who were doing fine the day before and then you come to their room for PT and they've passed away overnight or OT overnight and they've passed away. And it makes you think a lot about end-of-life care. And Atul Gawande wrote a book called Being Mortal and he talks about our medical system. It was a book that had a profound impact on me, especially being a person whose loved ones have had different experiences at the end of their life. He talks about how our medical system takes so much work of metrics of safety and length of stay in hospital, things that are very, many times business-driven or a removal of risk, a removal of dignified risk-taking really in a lot of different ways and how there's so much that we can do differently. One of the things that I think we have done right is having these beautiful people in hospice and palliative care who are really changing the way that a person is experiencing end-of-life care. As a geriatric physical therapist, when I'm interacting with individuals whose parents may be having a decline, if I'm talking to family or to individuals themselves, I am just a massive advocate for hospice and palliative care and what that may mean for them. And I think it is a wonderful way for us to be able to have discussions around end-of-life and not be afraid of those discussions. We are always trying to optimize a person's resiliency and keep them living healthier for longer. But there are going to be people that we interact with where that is just not the goal. And that is, we are trying to create comfort. We are trying to move limbs to prevent stiffness and pain in those limbs. we are interacting in a very different way. And by leaning into some of these conversations and being able to have some of these really candid discussions, I think it is a really beautiful thing. As a family member who has had a lot of different experiences with grandparents and thinking even about my own aging experience, and what I would want, I think having those discussions is super powerful. And we have a lot of therapeutic alliances. We have a great role and rapport with many of our patients and we can answer a lot of questions. So I hope that you found this helpful. It was more of a personal kind of anecdote, but I've been reflecting a lot on it. Kind of as we go into the holiday season, you think about loved ones a lot. And so I hope you've had any positive experiences with hospice or negative, I would love to know what your thoughts and feelings are. If you can put them in the chat, I would love that. If you were listening to the podcast, if you want to reach out, please do. Otherwise, I hope you all have a wonderful end of your week and we will talk to you all soon. OUTRO Hey, thanks for tuning in to the PT on Ice daily show. If you enjoyed this content, head on over to iTunes and leave us a review, and be sure to check us out on Facebook and Instagram at the Institute of Clinical Excellence. If you’re interested in getting plugged into more ice content on a weekly basis while earning CUs from home, check out our virtual ice online mentorship program at ptonice.com. While you’re there, sign up for our Hump Day Hustling newsletter for a free email every Wednesday morning with our top five research articles and social media posts that we think are worth reading. Head over to ptonice.com and scroll to the bottom of the page to sign up.

5 snips
Nov 28, 2023 • 16min
Episode 1608 - Spine isometrics
This podcast discusses the benefits of isometric exercises for the spine, including pain reduction, tendon health, and targeted strengthening. It also explores the advantages of incorporating isometric exercises in rehabilitation and highlights the flexibility in choosing surfaces for these exercises.

Nov 27, 2023 • 10min
Episode 1607 - Tips to control urinary urgency
Learn how to track and manage urinary urgency with objective measurements. Discover tools and techniques to use in the clinic. Find out how to effectively manage urinary urgency and regain control with techniques like urge suppression and distraction.

Nov 24, 2023 • 22min
Episode 1606 - Rowing 101
Alan Fredendall discusses the Concept 2 rower, including key components and basic maintenance. He coaches rowing technique and explains how to establish the ideal 'drag factor' and strokes-per-minute. He also explores improving rowing performance through testing and retesting established benchmarks. The podcast covers VersaLifts heel lift shoe inserts and upcoming courses for fitness athletes. It delves into understanding the rowing machine, maintaining the seat and monitor, and establishing rowing benchmarks for better pacing.
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