Evidence
Based Physical Therapy Articles-Manual
Therapy
When Not
to Use Manual Therapy
A Hard Lesson
Learned
Michael Rinaldi, PT, OCS
Ever had this scenario:
You've been seeing a patient for a five weeks and you've got
them progressing very well. You've got momentum with them and
they're feeling better, believing in you and becoming a great
success story. Especially when you consider they were a wreck
when they first started with you.

But, you've finally got them turned around and today they
come in and say they've been feeling great...nearly fully
pain-free for the last five days.
You both smile and you both pat YOU on the back! : )
"So," you figure, "let's keep it going." And you proceed to
work on the patient, feeling great about yourself and your
ability to get results with tough patients.
After the session your patients sits up, still happy, though
not smiling as big as she was when you started the session. You
ask how she feels, and she says, "okay." "Great!", you say and
offer her a salutation goodbye.
The next session, you're excited to see her and ask how
she's doing.
"Terrible," she says, "I feel like I took a step back after
the last treatment....I was doing so good!"
Your day is wrecked.
Hmmmm...... what happened???
Over the years, I've looked back at things done well, things
done not so well; lessons learned from successes and
failures.
Abstaining from intervening still strikes me as one of the
toughest things to do and I've figured out why.
It's counter-intuitive.
When a patient comes in, you feel compelled to
intervene...to do something for the patient... to give them
something. After all, they drove in to see you, waited and paid
their $30 co-pay, so you've got to do something.....right?
It's times like the above when the best course of action is
to abstain from doing a procedure. But TELL the patient that
and WHY. Very simply, when a patient is having a gain, let them
enjoy it---don't always feel compelled to try and one up it.
They'll appreciate it much more than if they were doing fine
before seeing you and had a setback after.
For heaven's sake, they get less when the see their PCP--and
usually have to wait an hour longer for it!
KEY POINT: If a patient says, "I'm feeling
great!".... congratulate them and let 'em enjoy it. Use the
time to review anything they may be confused about otherwise,
review goals, set new goals or take the time to educate them
about something. Then let them get on with enjoying a day of
life without pain. Skip the manual therapy.
This is a sign of a maturity.. The clinician has set aside
time to reflect on situations and her responses and behaviors
in them, and adjusts her practice habits to align with better
practices.
Better practice habits generally lead to better
outcomes.
And a better clinician.
|