I think for me it's more about the patient rather than the intervention itself. I'm still a student but my bias would be towards education and exercise in the first instance, but there are bound to be people who we see whereby manual therapy offers almost a gateway into that through those transient changes and quick wins and allowing them to believe they can have positive changes to their pain experience
I think for me it's more about the patient rather than the intervention itself. I'm still a student but my bias would be towards education and exercise in the first instance, but there are bound to be people who we see whereby manual therapy offers almost a gateway into that through those transient changes and quick wins and allowing them to believe they can have positive changes to their pain experience
Good point, if the patient believes in it or desires it I think the outcomes improve as well.
Good stuff brother. You may not get a lots of popularity points in PT world thou🙂
Ya, depends on the crowd you’re talking to I think.
and thank you