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Evidence Based Physical Therapy
Articles-Manual
Therapy
The Trap of Manual
Therapy
Michael Rinaldi, PT,
OCS
In
recent times there has been a rise in the practice of manual
therapy in the physical therapy profession as many schools
of thought and continuing education providers are
putting out their own spin on the subject. Current thrusts
of research are trying to determine what specific type of
manual therapy and in what situations are they indicated and
most useful. I get the sense that practitioners have
gravitated towards the use of manual therapy techniques as
they have found that stretching and general exercise
programs have become inadequate in the total care of their
patient, and that the addition of such skills gives the
practitioner a certain edge over other practitioners. This
edge I would suspect in some PTs may be a more
egocentrically-based attribute where the PT has a desire to
stand out or be special in comparison to his
peers.
Others
have simply recognized that patients do better when skilled
manual or manipulative therapeutics are introduced into
patient management. All others probably believe that simply
laying on of the hands in some fashion assists in patient
progression.
None
of this is wrong.
In
each scenario if the patient benefits from the intervention,
it doesn’t really matter why a PT would use manual
therapy.
But
here’s the trap. In many cases a therapist using a great
deal of manual techniques (more than 75% of treatment
session) does get results and gets them quickly. Therefore
they have the ability to change the patient’s complaint
quick. Why else do
people continue with chiropractic?
But
are they really changing the problem?
As
you consider this scenario you will begin to understand
the point.
Your
new patient walks in says she’s had therapy at five
different places, seen two chiropractors and had massage
therapy that left her bruised. In her previous therapy
interventions she went from machine to machine, had
modalities, maybe some stretching, and one person that
pushed even on her back and even out her hips because she
has "one leg longer than the other".
But
for whatever reason she’s carrying around a problem for the
last 17-22 years and she’s finally tired of it. And now
she’s in your office in because her physician says “I want
you to go see this person, because he/she gets results.
Trust me.”
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