|
In this
scenario you did your patient a disservice. You sacrificed
managing the one problem she came to you for and seeing it
through to a conclusion for being everything to that
patient.
Why?
Good question. That's for you to reflect upon.
(Reflection, by the way is one of the characteristics of an
expert clinician).
Manual
therapy skills are important, very important. They will get
you out of situations that exercise or stretching or
modalities simply can not, and as a unique skill set this is
very important in becoming an expert clinician.
But
there are four other attributes that expert clinicians have
and they all matter.
On
the road to becoming an expert clinician in your career you
will at some time have to develop these. One thing common to
many experts is that they have either designed or learned to
use a systematic approach to handling various problems
because they learn that a system yields the results and that
leads them to clinical certainty. This is a topic for
another conversation and we’ll leave it until
then.
Until
then imagine having an effective system for handling
non-surgical shoulder problems, whereby you know what to
do in every session, with every problem, with every
patient. What if you no longer got stumped by a shoulder,
but instead were completely confident, sure of yourself, and
invoked trust and confidence in your patients and
peers?
Would that be of value to you?
If
so, then you simply must register for
this shoulder seminar.
Today.
Take Your Ability to
Treat Shoulder Pain to the Next
Level!

|