February 22, 2010

EIM Sports Physical Therapy Residency Program!!

EIM and Sports Medicine: The EIM Sports Physical Therapy Residency Program

EIM is excited to introduce its new Sports Physical Therapy Residency Program(SPTR)!  Dr. Teresa Schuemann has joined the EIM team as the SPTR content developer and director.  She is an experienced Program Director who has been Chair of the APTA Residency and Fellowship Credentialing Committee and now serves as one of seven members on the APTA American Board of Residency and Fellowship Education. 

“Going through a residency program was the best decision of my professional career”, states Dr. Teresa Schumann, SPTR director.  “I am thrilled to provide such and experience for other Physical Therapy clinicians.”

The SPTR is an 18-month program of post-professional clinical and didactic education for physical therapists designed to advance the physical therapist resident's preparation as a provider of client care services in sports physical therapy.  The SPTR incorporates key Orthopaedic Residency topics, such as Evidence-based Practice and Upper and Lower Extremity, with Sports specific courses, such as Emergency Response and SCS Prep.  The SPTR also requires Athletic Venue Hours in addition to Mentor Hours and Out Come Tracking. 

EIM’s SPTR is designed so that graduates will become highly skilled, autonomous practitioners who have substantially increased their ability to provide care to a full spectrum of clients with athletic injuries.  Sports Residents will gain a strong base of knowledge of evidence-based practice and preventative and rehabilitative sports therapy techniques.  Graduates will also be positioned to both achieve the Sports Certified Specialist (SCS) certification from the ABPTS and to be leaders in the sports physical therapy field.

The first cohort begins in June 2010 and the application deadline is May 1, 2010. 

Click here for additional details, SPTR FAQ’s, and the SPTR Fact Sheet.

January 12, 2010

EIM and Sports Medicine: The EIM Emergency Response Course

Rob's Sport Picture

EIM will be leading the way in evidence-based Sports Medicine and will launch this effort by offering the Emergency Response Course, taught by Dr. Teresa Schuemann. The course is a pre-requisite for our June 2010 Sports Medicine Residency Cohort (yes, you read correctly....Sports Medicine Residency,  more details will be coming soon from Dr. Schuemann, who is serving as Program Director,  but put it on your calendars: the EIM Sports Medicine Residency will roll-out its first cohort this June!) However, we are opening enrollment to the EIM Emergency Response Course to all interested therapists.

This course integrates the objectives set forth by the American Red Cross and the Department of Transportation for Emergency Response and is designed specifically for the physical therapist seeking to provide athletic venue coverage and respond appropriately to acute injury.  The class includes instruction and discussion of assessment, management and prevention of cardio-respiratory emergencies, musculoskeletal injury, environmental injuries and medical emergencies such as shock or diabetic reactions, brain injury and spinal injury.    An intensive laboratory weekend is included. This course fulfills the requirements for a physical therapist to be eligible for Sports Physical Therapy Residency Programs and submission of application for the ABPTS- SCS examination.   

Successful completion of both written and practical examinations will be required for this course.  The final practical examination will include successful completion of the following: bleeding control and shock management, trauma victim assessment and management, airway insertion and suction, management of injuries to soft tissue and skeletal structures and management of head, neck and back injuries.  Following successful completion of the course, the participant will be awarded a First Responder Certification (good for 3 years) and a CPR/AED usage for the Professional Rescuer Certification (good for 2 years).

 We look forward to taking sports medicine to the next level in 2010 -- and it all starts with this course!

Thanks!  Rob Wainner

January 01, 2010

Growing Technology in the World of Physical Therapy

ZeroG_stairs

The American Physical Therapy Association Combined Section Meeting will be here before we know it.  I've been checking out the programming and figured I'd begin to share sessions that spark an interest for me.  Granted, our profession spans multiple types of settings and various types of patients.  I realize what may spark an interest may not necessarily be conducive for attending because we don't practice in that particular realm of physical therapy.

When you think about our bodies and how we learn how to do things, it makes such practical sense to basically have people with substantial movement dysfunctions be able to learn from their movement mistakes.  Personally, I have never exactly understood how people with neurological deficits really learn efficient movement patterns when we as professionals focus on protecting them from falls or adverse events.

The ZeroG dynamic body weight support system looks cool!  I remember years ago telling a patient who had a stroke that if I could string her up from the ceiling, we could have a lot of fun, a few laughs and she could really learn how to improve her balance.  What is fabulous about this session is the fact that research is being conducted on the benefit of this particular weight support system for people who have had an acute stroke.

If you are interested in finding out more about this available technology (and I'd assume some pre-published research results), Diane Nichols has a session on Thursday, February 18, from 2:30-4:30 pm.

photo snagged from CABRR site (I assume they won't mind?)

~Selena

December 16, 2009

Winners of the EIM 2nd Annual Elevator Pitch Competition!

The winners of EIM’s 2nd Annual Elevator Pitch Competition are….

·         1st: Chris Robl- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiEDB8V3zkk

·         2nd : Cori Cameron- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lZCLA_YQkA

·         3rd : BJ Lehecka- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMgRzAaZzW8

 

Thank you to all who submitted entries in the competition!

October 28, 2009

2010 International Private Practice Business Summit!!


Larry Benz at the 2010 International Private Practice Business Summit

 

Hello!

I would like to personally invite you to the 2010 International Private Practice Business Summit on January 22-24, 2010.  The Summit is a 3-day business meeting for private physical therapy practice owners. There will be more than a dozen experts presenting on topics related to the business of physical therapy and strategies for creating high performing and prosperous world-class clinics.  This Summit will motivate, inspire and teach everything you need to know to transform your clinic into a top-notch, competitive, enjoyable business. 

 

I will be presenting “Clinical Excellence Begins with World Class Customer Service”  on January 22nd.  While physical therapy clinics are stressing their clinical expertise, practices with unprecedented focus on the customer experience and service excellence are gaining market share, “buzz”, and loyal repeat patients trumpeting their competition.  I will focus on the ultimate outcome of a physical therapy experience-an emotionally engaged, enthusiastic ambassador who has been impacted for life from treatment at your physical therapy clinic.   This session will give you the tools to deliver and sustain “the best” customer service experience for your patients.

 

Registration opens today, October 28.  If you register prior to November 19 you will receive an early decision maker discount.  Click here to register.  

 

Hope to see you there!

Larry

October 22, 2009

National Student Conclave

Greetings!

I am Rob Wainner and wanted to touch base with you to let you know that I will be attending the National Student Conclave next week in sunny Miami. Please stop by EIM’s booth, #708, to learn more about our Residency Program. It’s the largest and fast growing in the US! I would love to meet you personally and let you know more about our program. At the same time, you can also learn about our many other educational opportunities: Fellowship, Executive Program, OCS Exam Prep Course, Emergency Response Course, and CE programming. Want to win a thousand dollars?! Make sure you ask about EIM’s Elevator Pitch Competition where we will be awarding $1000 to the top entry.

I will be there along with George Burkley and Jessie Dugan; between the three of us I am sure we can answer any questions you might have.

We are also giving away “FREE STUFF”: an hour of free career advice from me, a copy of The Users’ Guide to Musculoskeletal Examinations, or a $25 American Express gift card. It’s a win-win situation…you can learn more about EIM while entering to win prizes! However, you have to drop by the booth to enter and win.

See you there!

Rob Wainner

August 20, 2009

Check Out EIM's Upcoming Upper Extremity Courses!!

"Overall, my practice will change tomorrow, and I feel much more confident that I have
the tools necessary to effectively treat my patients."

--EIM CE Student

EIM offers over 25 online and hands-on CE courses that enhance practical skills while granting
flexibility so you can maintain your competitive position in the marketplace.

For more course info click here and see below for upcoming hands-on
Evidence-based Examination & Selected Interventions
for Patients with Upper Extremity Disorders courses:

September 19/20       Alamance Regional Medical Center                    Dr. Jason Rodeghero
                                  Burlington, NC

September 26/27      San Luis Sports                                                   Dr. Rob Wainner
                                 San Luis Obispo, CA

September 26/27      ProAxis Therapy                                                  Dr. Jake Magel      
                                 Greenville, SC

September 26/27      ProRehab                                                            Dr. Jason Rodeghero
                                 Evansville, IN

September 26/27     Texas Physical Therapy Specialists                      Dr. Brenda Boucher
                                 Austin, TX

October 3/4              AthletiCo                                                               Dr. Joshua Cleland
                                Oakbrook, IL

October 3/4             Benchmark                                                            Dr. Robert Boyles
                                Atlanta, GA

October 3/4             ProActive                                                               Dr. Amy Kirkland
                                Syracuse, NY

August 11, 2009

Transitional DPT Truths

I have a confession to make. I have an non accredited (unaccredited?) tDPT.  This is simply because the tDPT program I earned  thru completion at MGHIHP is a completely unaccredited program. I must also confess that when I did this several years ago, I knew it wasn’t accredited but I did it anyhow.  I already feel better now thru this public declaration.

For the 11,000 or so PT’s who have received a Bachelor’s or a Master’s who then bought into the vision and movement of physical therapy to a doctoring profession by enrolling and completing a tDPT, none of yours are accredited either!  In fact, using terminology like “accredited” or “unaccredited” for tDPT is like asking Tiger Woods if he is licensed to play golf-it’s just not the right terminology.

What I have come to find out unwittingly is that the tDPT might be the most misunderstood concept within our own profession.  There is no accreditation, credentialing, or external approval for tDPT’s by design.  It is an aberration in the education circles as there have only been a handful of professions that have migrated from bachelor’s to master’s to doctorate.  Delving into those, namely optometrists, podiatrists, pharmacists, audiologists is actually quite interesting since there are few similarities in the way that each transitioned.  My favorite is the Podiatrists who woke up one morning after the good “doctorate” fairy sprinkled “initials” dust on them and they were all of the sudden Doctors of Podiatry.  Perhaps the optometrists were the most crafty-simply transitioning by name-if you happened to graduate before they converted to entry level doctorate degrees, you were forever labeled an optician.  Pharmacists, Audiologists, and us have been triplets of different mothers-choosing to be hybids of one another.  Frankly, APTA’s tDPT advisory group and the subsequent development of the PTET for very good reasons utilized a very similar framework as the Audiologists.  Admittedly, with 200+ PT programs and varying requirements by State’s Boards of Regents and licensure boards, it would have been impossible for PT to have a consistent across the board method.  Great credit goes to APTA by defining a preferred curriculum model and further revising it to provide guidance for those educational institutes who are obliged to follow. 

The tDPT concept is really very simple. Provide education in core competency areas that have been added since bachelors and masters to “true up” those that are now part of the entry level tDPT.  Obtaining a tDPT was never meant to be a requirement for licensure which is one of many reasons why an outside agency like CAPTE or anybody else would never waste their time accrediting. It is a post professional educational program with perhaps a lifecycle of 10–20 years.  Within the 2020 vision of PT being supplied by clinical doctorates, the tDPT is to bridge those PT’s who currently have a bachelors or a Masters to the doctorate level and have it become the de facto for our profession.  It is a “clinical” doctorate thus not necessitating extensive research projects nor any required publication or dissertation.  Please note that this means the tDPT is not a “scholarly” degree meant to prepare one for a teaching position within a PT program. Those so inclined towards that should prepare thru a traditional PhD program or the like.  It should also be noted that the designator for physical therapy is PT and not your degree-this may change in the future.

Because physical therapy is a hobby for me as well as my vocation, I decided to do an extensive current and historical check on the way more than the reported 70+ tDPT programs.  Frankly, there are so many that I am sure it is impossible to keep them up to date on APTA’s website.  Not surprisingly, the most common programs are those that already are PT degree granting.  They have in many cases provided a method for their prior graduates to obtain their DPT by allowing them to get the coursework that was added to the entry level DPT program.  They understandably limit the eligibility to their prior graduates.  Some have already ceased being in existence having reached their goals. There are also numerous programs that are based out of university’s that have transitioned their entry level to DPT and allow licensed PT’s from any program to enroll. Many review portfolios and then determine the necessary coursework that must be completed to earn the tDPT.  I personally chose to go this route with MGHIHP’s because I was impressed with their process, director, instructors, and completely online opportunity. As you can imagine, many programs are completely online, others are completely in residence, and yet others are a combination of both.  The critical component is whether they fulfill the intent on the “gap” in knowledge/competencies between B.S., MPT, and fulfill the preferred curriculum model as espoused by APTA thru member consultants representing academia and practice. 

Unfortunately, it then gets a little erratic.  If you do enough searching, there are clearly diploma mills for tDPT including those that give you the tDPT if you take enough of their traditional CE courses without respect for the intent or the model of tDPT.  I even found one that is only a tDPT if you are a foreign trained PT.  Ironically, they don’t even list their courses!  There are also tDPT courses that have you “specialize” in a particular area.  This is a little confusing for me because that is not the intent of the tDPT but it does allow one to essentially combine courses in fulfillment to the curriculum model and additional one’s that are of interest to perhaps allow focus on an area of study.  It is also difficult to tell in today’s world whether the organization is “allowed” to be degree granting.  Although there is no accreditation for tDPT, almost every state has a licensure of sorts for educational organizations. Perhaps anybody can call themselves a “university” the tell tale sign is if they have gone thru the process and rigor within their jurisdiction to actually allow them to do what they do.

What I find the most difficult to understand is the lack of popularity of the tDPT.  Given change in technology, there is simply no excuse for not obtaining if you really believe in our profession’s vision. While cost can be a factor, there are lots of very good programs that allow you to obtain it while still maintaining your work/life balance.  While we will never transition 100% of PT’s to DPT’s like the podiatrists, there are opportunities to move large numbers to DPT and provide for unprecedented elevation of the profession. The approach that we have taken at EIM’s Institute of Physical Therapy is to couple an executive management curriculum with the necessary clinical courses detailed in the preferred curriculum model. The students simply take the necessary and same clinical courses that our APTA credentialed residents and fellows.  While it is clear that a good portion of our executive management folks are not doing day to day patient care, we maintain that the knowledge base must fulfill the intent and model of a tDPT such that pharmacy, medical screening, radiology, and EBP courses are mandatory after determination thru a portfolio review that the candidate is a fit for the tDPT.  We have even partnered with the Private Practice Section of APTA to create this opportunity for the many that want a tDPT but also want to enrich their practice’s operations.

 Thoughts?

larry@physicaltherapist.com

June 18, 2009

EIM Receives Small Business Award!!

EIM won the 2009 Greater Louisville Inc. (GLI) Inc.credible Award for an outstanding small business. This award plays tribute to the top small businesses in the Louisville, KY area and EIM received the award for businesses with 10-49 employees. Nominated businesses were judged on the following criteria: community involvement, growth in employment, number of years in business, financial performance, innovativeness of product/service, and response to adversity. EIM was selected specifically for its flexible workplace model that has allowed for inc.credible talent attraction and cultivation. In recognition of EIM’s accomplishments, GLI states in their announcement that “EIM has created a genuinely unique on-line/on-site, best practice marketplace (an ‘educational-studio’) for the advancement of musculoskeletal physical therapy practice, incorporating a variety of educational strategies in a coordinated fashion, including; weekend courses, on-line courses, topical discussion threads, on-line journal clubs, and residency and fellowship degree tracks.” GLI went on to state, ”What makes EIM special is their founders and professional faculty. While administrative services are centralized, their network of subject matter experts (faculty/instructors/authors) reside throughout the US and occasionally beyond national borders. These experts would not be able to closely collaborate if required to reside in single or limited geographic location. Keeping this virtual office in mind, EIM developed and launched the first (and at this time, only) distance-leaning based residency and fellowship education model for physical therapists.” Thanks to everyone that has contributed to EIM’s success! Visit GLI’s website for more information.

May 21, 2009

Check Out EIM's Hands-On Evidence-based Continuing Education Courses!

EIM offers over 25 online and hands-on CE courses that enhance practical skills while granting flexibility so you can maintain your competitive position in the marketplace. 

 

You will benefit from EIM’s CE courses if you:

·         Desire to make evidence-based practice an immediate reality in your clinical practice.

·         Want to enhance your critical thinking and psychomotor skills to improve decision-making and outcomes of care.

·         Desire to learn from faculty who are widely published in the peer-reviewed literature.

·         Appreciate user-friendly online, on-site, and traditional class formats.

 

Click here for a course schedule or email us for more information.

 

Register EIM

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