This practical course will cover every aspect of lower limb tendon assessment including differential diagnosis, as well as complete rehabilitation. It is critical we are evidence-based but not recipe driven. Come and learn how to tailor a program for every patient you see. You can enrol in the course here.
Ebonie has worked and researched alongside Jill Cook, Lorimer Moseley, Craig Purdam, and Sean Docking, who have all been responsible for some ground-breaking research in the areas of pain and tendinopathy.
Ebonie works as a Sports Physiotherapist at the Victorian Institute of Sport and runs a tendon clinic. Her previous clinical career has included the Australian Institute of Sport, Australian Ballet Company, Australian Ballet School, Melbourne Heart Football Club, Alphington Sports Medicine Centre, Victorian Institute of Sport, 2006 Commonwealth Games, 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics, 2010 Singapore Youth Olympics, 2012 London Paralympics, and spent 18 months travelling with Disney’s The Lion King stage show (Melbourne and Shanghai tour).
An AAP Education Accredited Course. AHPRA CPD 12 hours.
Pure and simple, as clinicians we are bombarded with information. We want to be up to date and provide our clients with evidenced based solutions, however sifting through all the relevant research taxes something that we don't have in unlimited supply - time.
The Clinical Challenges Symposium brings to the comfort of your living room, clinicians that are also researchers/leaders in their respective field. Each presenter has 50 minutes, in which to explain the importance and application of their research/experience and how you can apply it in your clinical practice. Furthermore, topics selected are clinical conundrums that we could all benefit from having some light shone on them.
While you may have missed the LIVE version, you can still gain invaluable clinical insights and guidelines from these amazingly gifted presenters on these new and/or challenging topics by watching the ONLINE recorded sessions.
Direct access is available here.
Pure and simple, as clinicians we are bombarded with information. We want to be up to date and provide our clients with evidenced based solutions, however sifting through all the relevant research taxes something that we don't have in unlimited supply - time.
The Clinical Challenges Symposium brings to the comfort of your living room, clinicians that are also researchers/leaders in their respective field. Each presenter has 50 minutes, in which to explain the importance and application of their research/experience and how you can apply it in your clinical practice. Furthermore, topics selected are clinical conundrums that we could all benefit from having some light shone on them.
While you may have missed the LIVE version, you can still gain invaluable clinical insights and guidelines from these amazingly gifted presenters on these new and/or challenging topics by watching the ONLINE recorded sessions.
Direct access is available here.
This page is a review of Dr Doug Cary's, Master's & PhD research examining relationships between sleep posture and waking spinal symptoms, that is pain, stiffness and bothersomeness, plus the relationship with sleep quality. This research is world-leading in the examination and assessment that sleep posture contributes to spinal symptoms and poorer sleep quality.
If you are a clinician wanting to incorporate these findings into your clinical practice to optimise your client's recovery potential then;
The fourth paper in our series of sleep studies compared symptomatic (neck or lumbar) and our control group across a broad range of pain, sleep and quality of life measures. The aims of this research were to compare sleep posture and sleep quality in participants with and without waking spinal symptoms. This is the first study using a validated objective measure of sleep posture to compare symptomatic and Control group participants sleeping in their home environment. In general, we found that participants with waking spinal symptoms spent more time in provocative sleep postures, and experienced poorer sleep quality. This paper is titled Examining relationships between sleep posture, waking spinal symptoms and quality of sleep: A cross-sectional study, published in PLOS One.
While we suspected that people sleeping in certain postures could be provocative of waking spinal symptoms, we were surprised to find that this also reflected through to their sleep quality. When sleep quality is negatively affected, this has flow-on effects to a much broader range of health outcomes like; memory & learning, fertility, maintaining a healthy body weight, cardiovascular health (high blood pressure, heart attack, stroke) and workplace injuries. So in addition to preventing waking spinal pain, improving sleep posture could also be an important aspect in a range of other health domains.
Data has been collected and analysed and will be written for manuscript submission or conference presentation.
NPR The Pulse: Episode Interview with mbg 29/3/2022 Podcast with Marion McCrae Article by Claudia Hammond
'Chasing Sleep' starts @ 16 mins on sleep posture and sleep systems Sleep & Spinal Pain BBC Future
Interviews on the ABC Perth Early Morning Program with Hilary Smale
In this 90-minute webinar presented to the Australian Osteopathic Association of Australia, you will learn about the clinical relationships between short sleeping and poor health, sleep posture and waking spinal pain and some handy subjective and objective methods to include in your assessment.
To assist in the process of knowledge translation from research to real life, we have created a unique sleep posture challenge. Once you have signed up, you will receive three emails providing background information and a video explaining how to optimise your sleep posture.
As a bonus, you will also receive 16 tips on improving sleep hygiene and additional material on how to select your mattress and pillow based on current research findings.
If you would like to better understand and improve your sleep posture - take the challenge.
Available now as an Everygreen course to assist clinicians in translating this research into actionable clinical practice. Key information from this research has been combined with sleep hygiene training, cognitive behaviour therapy for insomnia and validated outcome questionnaires, presented as The Sleep Mastery online course. If you are an early adopter of new research, you can enrol in this course now.