Full Course Description


Pelvic Floor Function

Pelvic floor issues are not just a mom problem. They are more common than you realize – the taboo nature of the topic makes it difficult for patients to bring up.

On top of that, many therapists don’t feel comfortable addressing issues around pelvic floor dysfunction.

You’ll learn strategies to confidently identify and treat pelvic floor issues that are bringing down the quality of life of your patients. Being able to move is a necessity for health – and it should not be embarrassing or painful.

Walk away with practical and useful techniques that can be implemented immediately within your practice.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Develop an understanding of why pelvic floor function and dysfunction is important in our role as health care practitioners.
  2. Inspect the anatomy and physiology of the pelvic floor and supporting structures.
  3. Determine the most common conditions associated with pelvic floor dysfunction.
  4. Evaluate how to properly assess for pelvic floor dysfunction from an external perspective.
  5. Investigate treatment techniques and exercises to normalize function of the pelvic floor and improve body awareness.
  6. Determine when it is appropriate to refer to another provider.
  7. Construct a working list of the most common providers to have in your network.

Outline

Pelvic Floor Function

  • Role of the pelvic floor
  • Prevalence of pelvic floor dysfunction
  • 5 functions of the pelvic floor
Anatomy of the Pelvic Floor
  • Bony Anatomy
  • Muscles of the pelvic floor
  • Nerves
  • Ligaments
  • Organs
Pelvic Floor Dysfunction
  • Normal vs. Abnormal
  • Common Causes of Pelvic Floor Dysfunction
  • Common conditions
  • Pain
  • Incontinence
  • Pelvic Organ Prolapse
  • Diastasis Recti
Evaluating Pelvic Floor Dysfunction
  • History
  • Postural Assessment
  • Diaphragm and Rib Cage Assessment
  • Lifestyle/Stress Assessment
  • Mobility/Range of Motion
  • Strength
  • Diastasis Recti Testing
  • Standardized Tests
Pelvic Floor Rehab
  • Manual Therapy
  • Exercise
  • Modalities
  • Education
Creating a Team
  • When to Refer to Other Providers
  • Special Populations
  • Clinical Referral Sources

Target Audience

  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants
  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Physicians Assistants
  • OB/GYNs
  • Obstetric Nurses
  • Doulas
  • Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist
  • Personal Trainers
  • Licensed Massage Therapist

Copyright : 09/29/2020

Pelvic Changes Associated with Pregnancy & Menopause: Practical Management Techniques

With all of the systemic changes, it’s no wonder that pregnancy and menopause are challenging times for many women.  As a healthcare professional, you need to be aware of the hormonal changes and their impact on the musculoskeletal system.

With over a decade of experience in pelvic floor therapy, Liz Frey, FCAMPT, will unpack the hormonal changes associated with pregnancy and menopause and shine a focused light on their impacts on the pelvis.   You’ll explore:  

  • Why the inner core is often the missing piece of the puzzle   
  • How to connect with the diaphragm and pelvic floor to target incontinence, prolapse and dyspareunia  
  • Exercise interventions to maximize strength and mobility 

Filled with evidence-informed techniques you can use to optimize function, this is a “must attend” presentation for all healthcare professionals who work with women! 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Evaluate the hormonal changes that occur during pregnancy and menopause as they relate to the female pelvis.
  2. Differentiate pelvic conditions that affect women with and determine strategies to connect the diaphragm and pelvic floor.
  3. Determine strategies to connect the diaphragm and pelvic floor for maximal mobility and stability.

Outline

Implications of Hormonal Changes During Pregnancy and Menopause 

  • Overarching impact on MSK system 
  • Impact on the pelvis 
  • Importance of connecting with the core  
Most Common Pelvic Conditions  
  • Incontinence 
  • Prolapse 
  • Dyspareunia 
External Strategies to Manage and Recover from Pelvic Conditions  
  • Exercise specific do’s and don’ts 
  • Strategies to connect the diaphragm and the pelvic floor 
  • How to maximize strength and mobility 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/20/2021

Bridging the Gap between Yoga and Pelvic Health

You’ve utilized yoga in your personal life and have undoubtedly experienced the benefits...but when it comes to how you incorporate it into your clinical practice, you’ve hit a roadblock.  

The benefits of yoga for the female population are unparalleled.  Aimee M. Bailey, DPT, RYT-200, PCES is will provide the step-by-step guide to incorporating yoga into your clinical practice.  You’ll learn her proven methods and strategies that will help you to: 

  • Confidently address incontinence 
  • Reduce pelvic pain 
  • Strengthen the core 
  • Decrease stress 
  • Increase HEP compliance 

On top of all that, these techniques are also a great fit for those patients who say they hate traditional exercise.  This session will be experiential – leading you through each pose so that you can perfect the proper alignment and safely transition from one pose to another. This will help deepen your understanding of how each yoga technique engages the body and when to use them. 

You'll walk away with the practical tools you need to help guide your clients into a lifestyle that is more active, less stressful and pain free. 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Differentiate and implement simple yoga poses to improve strength and promote relaxation to improve function in the core and pelvic floor.
  2. Evaluate basic anatomy and function of the pelvic floor in relation to yoga poses and breathwork in order to utilize appropriately in treatment sessions.
  3. Utilize common precautions in yoga poses in order to avoid increasing pain in your patient.

Outline

The Impact of Yoga in Women’s Health 

  • Anatomy of the diaphragm, core, and pelvic floor 
  • Common diagnosis in which yoga is helpful 
    • Pelvic pain 
    • Incontinence 
    • Core weakness 
Top 3 Pelvic Health Myths, Busted 
  • It’s all about kegels 
  • Leaking is normal after childbirth and with aging 
  • There’s not much that can be done for pelvic pain  
Pranayama – 3 Most Effective Breathing Techniques 
  • Ujjayi breathing 
  • Alternate nostril breathing 
  • Box breathing 
Asana – Body Posture to Release, Mobilize, and Strengthen 
  • Poses to engage the pelvic floor muscles 
  • Poses to relax the pelvic floor muscles 
  • How to keep the core engaged 
  • Precautions 
Integration: Yoga and Clinical Practice  
  • Implement yoga safely into your treatment sessions 
  • Furthering your knowledge base of yoga 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/20/2021

The Ultimate Prenatal Exercise Workshop

The question just about every pregnant woman asks you: “Is it safe for me to exercise?”

Many expectant mothers become less physically active during pregnancy, usually due to pain, but in many situations, exercise is the solution to their pregnancy-related aches and pains.

Join Jennifer Dieter, MPT, mother of three, 7-time CrossFit Games athlete, world record holder in weightlifting, as she lays the essential groundwork for precisely programming exercise that is both safe and effective for expectant mothers.  You’ll uncover the top exercise recommendations and how to:  

  • Bust the 3 most common prenatal exercise myths 
  • Appropriately modify programming as the pregnancy progresses 
  • Target interventions to greatly reduce low back pain 

Long gone are the days of bed rest for all expecting mothers, you’ll uncover specific stabilizing and pelvic floor exercises that lead to significant improvements in overall outcomes: lower incidences of gestational diabetes, preterm birth and cesarean delivery, just to name a few. This session is jam-packed with evidence-based prenatal exercise recommendations that you can use in your practice immediately. 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Investigate the physical and functional changes that happen during pregnancy and their impact on exercise selection.
  2. Determine appropriate exercise techniques to utilize throughout the span of a pregnancy.
  3. Utilize treatment options such as kinesiology taping to help mitigate pain during pregnancy.

Outline

Pregnancy: Physiological Changes Across the Trimesters 

  • Posture changes 
  • Weight distribution 
  • Pelvic anterior tilt 
  • Gait velocity + cadence 
  • Changes in balance 
  • Peezing [noun] - sneezing and peeing at the same time 
Every Day is Another Chance to Get Stronger 
  • Pain relief 
  • Reduced risk of 
    • Gestational diabetes 
    • Gestational hypertension 
    • Preterm birth 
    • Cesarean delivery 
    • Low birth weight 
  • Increase mood + energy 
Strong as an Expecting Mother: Strategies for an Active Pregnancy 
  • Pelvic floor and stability exercises for LBP 
  • Simple yet effective kinesiology taping strategies 
  • Exercises that make labor EASIER! 
  • Considerations for vigorous exercise 
  • When low intensity is needed, we have a flow for that.  
  • How to stay on track with goals while being “tired as a mother”  
  • Contraindications and warning signs 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/21/2021

Running After Pregnancy: The 4th Trimester and Beyond: Evaluate and Address Postpartum Symptoms

The body doesn’t just simply “bounce back” after a pregnancy.  The physiological impacts can last for months or even years.

Many of your female patients have the goal to return to running and Julia Mitchell, PT is here to share her go-to, practical postpartum and external pelvic health strategies that help you address these issues with confidence!  You’ll learn an evidence-based approach to:

  • Determine when to return to running
  • Exercise progressions that increase strength, stability and mobility
  • Techniques that aid in quickly mitigating poor running mechanics

This seminar is a unique blend of both external pelvic health and orthopedic perspectives that will give you strategies you can use immediately in clinic.  And here’s the kicker - these strategies can be used by women at ANY stage postpartum, whether they had a baby 6 weeks ago, 6 months ago, 6 years ago.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Investigate common postpartum changes, and their effect on a running preparation program.
  2. Evaluate common postpartum issues and create strategies to address them and prepare for running.
  3. Determine relative and absolute contraindications to running postpartum.

Outline

The 4th Trimester: Postpartum Period 

  • Musculoskeletal postpartum changes 
  • Early vs late postpartum 
  • Subsequent pregnancies 
Adding Impact: Progression Strategies 
  • When is it safe to return to running? 
  • MSK and time based considerations 
  • Relative and absolute contraindications 
  • How to increase running capacity 
  • Best strategies for incorporating the stroller 
  • Running mechanics and cadence 
Practical Guide to Identify and Address the Most Common Issues 
  • Breathing pattern dysfunction 
  • Posture 
  • Diastais recti 
  • C-section scars 
  • Pelvic girdle pain 
  • Lumbopelvic stability 
  • Hip mobility 
  • Trunk rotation mobility and stability 
  • When to refer to a pelvic floor specialist 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/21/2021

A Movement Pro’s Guide to Menopause: Training Strategies for Optimal Aging

At the doctor’s office, everyone gets the standard pamphlet on all the other health related issues that will arise during a woman’s life: puberty, safer sex, pregnancy, pap smears...but they never seem to have one for menopause. Yet most women will tell you, entering menopause equates to serious changes for their overall state of well-being.

This session was curated in a flash – a hot flash.

It is time that we take things into our own hands and understand that there are things we can do to age well and on our own terms.

Jessica Hill, PT, DPT, MSPT, CSCS, SFMA, FMS, will explore the physiological changes that occur and how these changes can impact both our physical performance and overall health. You will learn powerful strategies to combat the fear surrounding menopause and keep your patients striving to be their best.

You'll explore the targeted interventions that directly address the key musculoskeletal changes that typically accompany menopause: increased visceral fat and decreased bone mineral density, muscle mass and strength. You will uncover actionable exercise strategies to secure a physiological edge in aging optimally.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Investigate what menopause is and its physiological ramifications on a woman’s body.
  2. Determine actionable, evidence-based exercise strategies to promote physical health, performance, and aging well in peri- and post-menopausal women.
  3. Utilize safety and scaling considerations pertaining to menopausal physiological changes for exercise program design.

Outline

Stages of Change: Peri, Menopause + Post 

  • Primer on hormones 
  • Physiological ramifications 
  • Co-morbidities of estrogen deficiency 
What to Expect: Systemic Effects of Estrogen Deficiency 
  • Body composition 
    • Adipose tissue - insulin resistance 
    • Skeletal muscle - sarcopenia 
    • Connective tissue – tendon, ligament, cartilage, skin 
    • Bone – osteopenia/osteoporosis 
  • Cardiovascular system 
    • Type 2 diabetes, htn, lipid profiles, etc. 
  • Vasomotor issues (hot flashes) 
  • Cognition, vestibular and visual systems, immune health 
Making Muscle After Menopause  
  • Strength training 
  • High, moderate, and light exercise training 
  • Fast velocity training, impact training 
  • Vestibular and visual training 
Program Design - Additional Recommendations and Considerations 
  • Scaling programs to meet needs and capabilities 
  • Stacking modalities – strength training with speed, vestibular, visual input 
  • Recovery considerations based upon body composition changes 
  • Nutritional supplement strategies to optimize connective tissue and bone health  

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/21/2021

Master Thyroid Function with Nutrition and Lifestyle Optimization

When the answer to ‘how are you doing?’ always seems to be “I’m tired,” it's apparent that there are issues at hand. Fatigue, weight gain, constipation and depression – these are all symptoms of a thyroid that is not functioning optimally.

Women are up to 8x more likely to have thyroid dysfunction, yet most still go undiagnosed! The good news is that many of these symptoms can be addressed with simple lifestyle modifications that are proven to get big results!

Join Cindi Lockhart, RDN, LD, IFNCP as she uncovers:  

  • Why the basic lab panel may not be enough to uncover thyroid dysfunction  
  • When raw broccoli may not be what the doctor recommends (SAY WHAT?!?)  
  • Streamlined strategies that optimize thyroid function, holistically  

During this session, you’ll discover targeted ways to identify and address thyroid disrupters.  And best of all, you’ll learn effective lifestyle strategies to naturally and holistically rebalance the thyroid.    

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Evaluate thyroid’s function in the body, how to best assess via lab testing, as well as the 3 primary types of thyroid dysfunction.
  2. Investigate the common symptoms and environmental causes of thyroid dysfunction.
  3. Determine a customized approach to optimizing thyroid function (and therefore energy and weight) via diet, gut health, exercise, stress reduction, and environmental exposures.

Outline

The Thyroid Hormone Pathway 

  • Organs involved in thyroid function 
  • Assessing thyroid function 
  • Interpreting lab values 
Thyroid Dysfunction: Symptoms and Causes 
  • Hypo, Hyper and Autoimmune  
  • Hashimoto’s, Grave’s disease, Thyroiditis 
  • Common symptoms of hypothyroidism 
  • Thyroid disruptors 
    • Nutritional deficiencies 
    • Gut dysfunction 
    • The many faces of stress 
    • Hormone imbalances, Insulin and estrogen 
    • Environmental toxins 
Optimizing Thyroid Function, Holistically 
  • Nutrition & diet 
  • Goitrogens, Micronutrients, Gluten  
  • Gut health 
  • Exercise 
  • Sleep 
  • Stress management 
  • Environmental toxins 

Target Audience

  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/21/2021

Estrogen Dominance: Symptoms, Causes, & Holistic Resolutions to the Ever-Common State of Estrogen Overload

The phrase “estrogen dominance” is not typically used in research, but the reality is that it’s prevalent and can occur at any stage in a woman’s life.  In this session, we’re going to walk through the good, the bad and the ugly as they pertain to our bodies’ ability to metabolize and eliminate estrogen.  

But what is it that causes estrogen to build up in the first place? 

Integrative and functional nutritionist Cindi Lockhart, RDN, LD, IFNCP brings over 30 years of experience and expertise in women’s health issues to help you discover the underlying root causes of hormone disruption, debilitating symptoms and chronic health conditions — as well as the environmental factors that disrupt this delicate balance. Transform your outcomes and optimize patient functioning — you’ll learn: 

  • Why having excess body fat can lead to estrogen dominance and an increased risk of breast cancer. 
  • How to keep the intricately connected hormone system balanced 
  • Potential implications for fertility, endometriosis, fibroids, ovarian cysts 

Cindi will show you step-by-step how to create the most highly effective lifestyle protocols for your clients. You’ll teach them how to simplify, heal, thrive and get the results they’ve been waiting for! 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Evaluate the function and metabolism of estrogen in the body, as well as the physiology of estrogen dominance.
  2. Assess the common symptoms and causes of estrogen dominance.
  3. Determine a customized approach to optimizing estrogen balance via diet, exercise, stress reduction, and environmental exposures.

Outline

The Sex Hormone Cycle: Estrogen and Progesterone 

  • Function of estrogen and progesterone in the body 
  • Metabolism of estrogen: the good, bad and ugly metabolites 
  • What is estrogen dominance – physiology of hormone imbalance 
  • Symptoms and associated conditions 
Causes of Estrogen Imbalance 
  • Nutrition 
  • Gut health, the estrobolome 
  • Adipose cells – they produce estrogen!  
  • Stress 
  • Medications –let’s talk birth control & HRT 
  • Environmental sources 
    • Plastics 
    • Personal care products 
    • Cleaning products 
    • Heavy metals 
Holistic Resolutions to Estrogen Overload 
  • Nutrition 
  • Water 
  • Exercise 
  • Sleep 
  • Stress Management 
  • Minimize environmental exposures 

Target Audience

  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/20/2021

Peri/Menopause: Empow(her)ing the Busy Woman

“Alexa, turn this hot flash off!”

“Alexa, help me get rid of this bloated belly!”

Unfortunately, it’s not always that easy. And when it comes to the curriculum from school – peri/menopause was almost completely skipped over. Now that you’re in practice, you see how common these issues really are!

You need simple yet practical solutions for these busy women who are in their 30s-50s and trying to balance their career, family and personal health.

Aimee Bailey, DPT, RYT-200, will help you to empower your patients who are struggling with peri/menopause symptoms. This session will pinpoint differences between perimenopause and menopause, what symptoms to look for, how to treat this client population and how to promote health and healthy habits.

You can help them to better understand their cycles and life phases so that they can remain healthy and active through their lifespan. You’ll learn powerful tactics that address bone health, heart health, strength, libido and more! Help your patients reduce peri/menopause symptoms with these targeted strategies in your very next session.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Evaluate perimenopause and menopause as well as the most common symptoms.
  2. Integrate education, simple lifestyle changes and exercise to enhance women’s health during this phase of life.
  3. Assess the basic role of hormones in women’s monthly cycles and how they change through the lifespan.

Outline

Perimenopause and Menopause – What's the Difference? 

  • Path to diagnosis 
  • Natural vs surgical/atypical presentation 
  • Impact of hormones in these processes  
Treatment Strategies for Managing the Symptoms 
  • Cardiovascular 
  • Bone heatlh 
  • Musculoskeletal 
  • Mental 
How Mindset Plays a Pivotal Role 
  • Empow(her)ing busy women 
  • Presenting a positive outlook  
  • Increasing Knowledge is the Key to Power 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/20/2021

Strengthening the Immune System and Alleviating Pain with Ayurveda and Yoga: Self Care for the Practitioner and Patient

The global pandemic has brought about many changes to society that affect our body, mind, and spirit.

Many have become less physically active, living more sedentary lifestyles. At the same time, high levels of stress and anxiety are affecting mental wellbeing. An unhealthy combination with a multitude of negative physical, mental, and emotional consequences.

Integrative medicine — a lifestyle medicine for prevention and wellness — focuses on healing the whole person and includes all aspects of our lifestyle.

Betsy Shandalov is an Occupational Therapist, certified yoga therapist, Reiki practitioner, and Ayurvedic wellness coach. She will share her tried and true techniques using integrative medicine to treat trauma.

In this experiential session, you’ll learn the science of Ayurveda, including diet, lifestyle, breathing techniques, meditation, and yoga, and how these hands-on treatment modalities help patients manage physical pain and bring balance back to mind and spirit. With a focus on the latest research on the integrative medicine techniques for pain management and building the immune system, you will learn practical techniques to assist you and your patients with ways to maximize health, decrease pain, and increase longevity.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Describe how Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine can influence pain responses and build our immune system.
  2. Create a daily lifestyle plan to benefit mind, body and spirit for self-care to prevent burnout and to balance the body during the pandemic.
  3. Perform yoga and movement practice and determine 2 ways that it can assist your client with pain and strengthening the immune system.

Outline

Ayurveda as a Treatment Modality  

  • Doshas/body constitutions  
  • Approach to diet, herbs, lifestyle and philosophy  
  • Incorporate yoga, breathwork and meditation  
  • Integrative medicine and wellness/prevention  
How the COVID-19 Virus Has Changed Our Body, Mind and Spirit  
  • The impacts of pain on the body, mind and spirit  
  • Resiliency and body mind techniques  
  • Integrative medicine techniques to transform daily routine  
  • Identify signs of burnout for therapists  
Experiential Lab: Practice a Daily Routine to Reduce Pain and Build Immunity  
  • Centering techniques for focus  
  • Forms of meditation  
  • Seated and restorative yoga poses  
  • Standing poses for focus and concentration 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/21/2021

Comprehensive Management of Breast Cancer

1 in 8 women are diagnosed with breast cancer, and the survival rate is increasing.  A substantial amount of research and growing number of specialists help these patients through a very challenging time of uncertainty.  We can help this population thrive! 

Cancer rehabilitation services are greatly underutilized, and you can make a positive impact on the lives of these women.  You’ll learn: 

  • Evidence-based treatment techniques that mitigate side effects of cancer treatment  
  • Red flags to watch out for and appropriate referral guidelines 
  • Key components of a comprehensive risk-reduction program 
  • How to advocate for available resources to improve quality of life 

As a pivotal player in the healthcare team, you can improve function, quality of life and optimize breast cancer recovery.   

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Utilize a breast cancer case to understand breast cancer treatments and cancer treatment-related side effects, which may lead to physical, emotional, and cognitive limitations.
  2. Apply interventions to manage breast cancer treatment-related side effects.
  3. Evaluate the appropriateness for treatment or need for referral to the interdisciplinary care team (oncology team or other health care providers).

Outline

Breast Cancer Journey  

  • Surgery and reconstruction 
  • Chemotherapy 
  • Radiation therapy 
  • Hormone therapy 
Effective Interventions for Treatment Side Effects 
  • Musculoskeletal impairments 
  • Lymphedema  
  • Cardiotoxicity 
  • Cancer related fatigue 
  • Peripheral neuropathy/balance and falls 
  • Cognitive deficits and psychosocial impacts 
The Comprehensive Breast Cancer Care Team 
  • Red flags to watch out for 
  • Most common sites of metastases 
  • Clear understanding of when to refer 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/20/2021

Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias in Women: The Latest in Prevention, Intervention and Compassionate Care

Dementia is one of the fastest growing women’s issues in the world. In the U.S. over 13 million women are living with Alzheimer’s or caring for someone with it. Worldwide, women with dementia outnumber men two to one.

It’s a complicated puzzle and the latest research is showing us that sex impacts risk, diagnosis, and manifestation.

Dr. Sherrie All is a licensed clinical neuro-rehabilitation psychologist and brain health expert whose trainings on dementia care have helped professionals across the country to understand the disease and provide the best care possible.

In this critical session, Dr. All will bring you up to date on the latest research surrounding dementia in women PLUS give you tools and interventions you can use to prevent and reduce difficult behaviors and improve your ability to communicate with cognitively impaired patients. 

As someone in rehab who works with patients with dementia, this is one training you can’t afford to miss!

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Assess how the manifestations of each type of dementia impacts identification and prognosis.
  2. Investigate how non-verbal communication skills can help professionals identify meanings behind gestures when working with patients who have dementia.
  3. Determine how patient safety can be enhanced with strategies to redirect wandering and manage paranoia.

Outline

Manifestations and Prognosis for Each Type of Dementia  

  • The number one risk factor for dementia  
  • Dementia vs. Alzheimer's - what's the difference?  
  • The latest research on dementia in women 
  • What we know about prevention 
Communication Strategies to Improve Care 
  • Smart communication strategies – avoid arguments and get down to business 
  • Three things you should never do when talking to a person with dementia 
  • Causes of and solutions to challenging behaviors  
  • Innovative communication tools you can use when communication becomes difficult or slows to a stop 
Causes of and Solutions to Challenging Behaviors 
  • Two ways to assess for a hidden cause of challenging behaviors 
  • Sundowning — How to prevent it from happening and handle it when it does 
  • These five signs indicate a patient might be at risk for wandering — Here's how to spot them 
  • Hallucinations vs. delusions vs. schizophrenia — How do you tell the difference? 
  • Paranoia management strategies 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/20/2021

Conscious Cancer Care: Integrative Rehabilitation, Pre-Op and Post-Op Advanced Healing

With the incidence of cancer on the rise, discover how rehab professionals play a significant role in pre-op and post-op healing journey. Our current evaluation and treatment procedures of cancer patients needs to be rewritten. The process of diagnosis, surgery and treatments are primarily fear based. One in two people in the United States may have a cancer diagnosis. Karen Pryor’s journey with bilateral mastectomy brought her face to face with an outdated system of protocols, that warrant revision. Patient’s today, when armed with knowledge, demonstrate reduced anxiety and participate in their self-care and have improved functional outcomes. Dr. Pryor will bring humor and deep respect while showing you how to empower and place your patients. Armed with knowledge, you will be able to reduce anxiety and direct self-care for improved and personalized functional outcomes.

Consider the deep history of your patient to determine therapy progression. Take the humorous and serious journey with Karen and discover how to empower you patients and yourself.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Develop Pre-op and Post-op gentle treatment techniques that support recovery and healing.
  2. Construct home programs utilizing integrative knowledge of nutraceuticals, mindfulness, and hydration.
  3. Investigate scar tissue mobilization techniques through early post-op treatment to reduce fear avoidance behavior and pain.
  4. Appraise the benefits of exercise for breast cancer patients.
  5. Determine the stages of tissue healing and when to adjust the treatment of a breast cancer patient based on their stage of tissue healing.
  6. Understand techniques for gently palpating, determine the extent of web or cording and treating patients with axillary web syndrome, upper quarter soft tissue dysfunction.

Outline

PT, OT it’s not just ROM! 

  • Prepare for intervention
  • Choices
  • Fear
  • Trauma informed care
Finding the Sentinel Lymph Node
  • Drawing on the body
  • Injection, X ray
Lymphatics – be a fanatic 
  • Teach pre-op to reduce collection
  • Post-op attention
  • Wedge rest
Education of your patient
  • Pre-op testing
  • Post-op
  • Active home program
  • Pain control
  • Exercise program 
  • Nutrition strategies to boost healing

Target Audience

  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors

Copyright : 07/21/2022

Heart Disease in Women: Lifesaving Insights from a Cardiac Clinician

The differences between men and women go well beyond just the reproductive organs.   

The way that women display symptomology for heart conditions is different.  Heart Disease is the #1 killer of women and yet studies show that women do not receive the same cardiac care as men.   Their pain is often dismissed or downplayed by doctors and they are often just sent to a psychiatrist for anxiety instead.  

Your female patients depend on you.  You’ll learn:  

  • The critical differences between a male and female heart and their impact on symptoms 
  • Red flags that other practitioners often overlook 
  • Effective assessment strategies for identifying CVD risk 

You will walk away with many pearls of wisdom from this cardiac expert to implement into your daily practice and personal life.   Become the person who has the confidence and skills to deliver the very best care for your female patients! 

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Distinguish the impact of heart disease in women
  2. Evaluate the risk factors, clinical presentation, and treatment outcomes of heart disease in women.
  3. Appraise the strategies to have a healthy woman’s heart.

Outline

Heart Disease in Women 

  • Heart Disease is the #1 killer of women 
  • Epidemiology 
  • Go Red for Women Campaign 
  • Cardiac Risk Factors specific to women 
  • Clinical management goals of risk factors 
  • Gender Differences in rehab after cardiac event 
  • Strategies to have a healthy woman’s heart 
  • AHA Top 10 Take home messages for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease 

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/20/2021

Covid Brain: Using Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine to Increase Brain Neuroplasticity for Treatment and Prevention for Adults and Pediatric Patients

COVID Brain… the unfortunate follow-up for many COVID-19 survivors.

Unfortunately, many who have contracted and recovered from COVID-19 are displaying lingering neurological complications, including confusion, headaches, changes in behavior, and even stroke.

Additionally, the COVID-19 pandemic has led to high levels of psychological distress in the general public. Presenting as anxiety, depression, even aggression, this level of stress has caused alterations in the immune system and the brain.

Betsy Shandalov is an Occupational Therapist, certified yoga therapist, Reiki practitioner, and Ayurvedic wellness coach who brings decades of experience using integrative medicine to heal trauma for staff and patients to the forefront to provide tools you can use immediately with your patients.

In this session, Ms. Shandalov will explain how integrative medicine treatments like Ayurveda, yoga, meditation, and breathwork can not only encourage brain neuroplasticity for the general population, but also for clients who have recovered from COVID-19 infection. Ms. Shandalov will explain the latest research on the SARS-CoV-2 virus and its effect on the brain, and how to integrate these age-old traditions into your patients’ treatments.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Demonstrate how to help a client change their daily lifestyle and routine using Integrative Medicine with symptoms affecting their brain during and after the pandemic.
  2. Create a customized treatment plan for a client with cognitive dysfunction using Integrative Medicine techniques.
  3. Assess the role of trauma on brain neuroplasticity and formulate 2 examples of how what happens in the body can affect the brain.

Outline

Ayurveda as a Treatment Modality for Neuroplasticity  

  • Doshas/body constitutions  
  • Ayurveda approach to diet, herbs, lifestyle and philosophy  
  • Yoga, breathwork and meditation for cognitive change  
  • Integrative Medicine and its role with COVID-19  
Societal Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Our Brains and Mental Health  
  • Mental Health and its global impact on each person and society  
  • Latest research on brain health  
  • Practicing meditation, seated yoga and breathing for brain health  
  • Ayurveda and its role in increasing brain neuroplasticity  
The Role of Trauma and Neuroplasticity  
  • Vagus nerve/polyvagal theory  
  • Adrenal fatigue  
  • Inflammation and stress  
  • COVID-19 vs trauma  
Case Study: Client with Anxiety and Depression During the Pandemic  
Case Study: Client with Cognitive Dysfunction After COVID-19  
  • How to treat online  
  • Goals to improve neuroplasticity  
  • How our brains change as we work with our clients  
  • Integrative medicine and lifestyle healing for a lifetime 

Target Audience

  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/21/2021

More YOU: The Power of Passion

As a busy healthcare professional, it’s easy to forget the magic that you bring to the table every day: giving your all, always listening, invariably putting the patient need’s first.

And through all of that, you may find yourself in a situation where you’re starting to feel burnt out.

I know because I’ve been there...but then found my jump-off point where I determined what I wanted – and I went for it. Through this experiential session, you’ll explore how to:  

  • Create the window of opportunity to emphasize your skillset  
  • Develop opportunities that align with your passion  
  • Shine through with authenticity in everything you do  
  • Make more space for what YOU want to do 

My goal is not for you to think what I think or do what I do.  My goal is for you to think, and do, what YOU have decided is right for YOU. Because after all, if you create something that can help someone, it becomes your responsibility to share it.

Live in fearless pursuit of what sets your soul on fire.  

What we often forget is that we hold the key to our future. We do have choices and we will never get the things we don’t ask for.

Whether it's improving patient buy-in, treating pain, or getting a new job, more you is the mojo. So before you join me for this session, ask yourself – what are you waiting for? 

Program Information

Target Audience

  • Athletic Trainers
  • Chiropractors
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Occupational Therapy Assistants
  • Personal Trainers
  • Physical Therapists
  • Physical Therapy Assistants 
  • Physicians 
  • Physician Assistants
  • Strength and Conditioning Coaches

Copyright : 05/20/2021