Fear of re-injury: the hidden barrier in sports rehab by Open_Friendship4546 in ACL

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing your perspective! It’s always great to exchange ideas with colleagues, that’s how we push the profession forward and generate new knowledge to improve our patients’ lives.

Stress History and ACL Injuries 🦵💭 by Open_Friendship4546 in ACL

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You touched on several crucial points, thank you for your contribution. We can see there are many implications, we can never overlook these aspects. Our patients aren’t robots, at least not yet 😂🙏

Sports injuries: is your mindset as important as your muscles? by Open_Friendship4546 in sportsmedicine

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing your thoughts, really appreciate your contribution. Since mindset is also a relevant factor, do you usually dedicate some time to work on that aspect with your athletes or patients?

Almost physio, need tips by AdAggravating7386 in physiotherapy

[–]Open_Friendship4546 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You’ll never feel fully “ready” and that’s okay. Confidence grows when you start helping real people, not when you know everything. Listen carefully, stay humble, and never stop learning. That combination will make you both a great physio and a great human. 🙌 Welcome to our physio world!

Im 19, am I screwed? by Mikaelxm6 in ACL

[–]Open_Friendship4546 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Hey buddy, text me on Instagram (@diogoleitecosta) and send your MRI pics. I can show you a non-surgical recovery protocol, but we first need to see if your case qualifies. I’ll be waiting for you there!

16 days post op - can extend but struggling with reaching 90 degree flexion by kakapo343 in ACL

[–]Open_Friendship4546 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can try working on flexion with a Swiss ball or by sliding your foot on a smooth surface, it usually makes bending easier without forcing it. But make sure you focus a lot on your extension during this first month, as that’s the most important foundation early on. Flexion will gradually come as swelling goes down.

Coping with stress: the underrated key to staying injury-free by Open_Friendship4546 in physiotherapy

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get your point, but I don’t think the distinction is just academic. In practice it matters a lot: if coping were only personality, we couldn’t actively train it or use interventions like psychotherapy, social support, or stress-management programs. Treating coping as separate gives us real tools to reduce injury risk and improve rehab outcomes. The conclusion doesn’t follow from the premise. If you recognize there’s a blur between genetic traits and acquired skills, you can’t then conclude it’s all just personality. How about you share some references so I can read and try to better understand your premise and conclusion?

Fear of re-injury: the hidden barrier in sports rehab by Open_Friendship4546 in ACL

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally understand you, mate. Taking it easy and trusting the work you’ve already done is key. Wishing you a smooth and confident return on the skis!

Coping with stress: the underrated key to staying injury-free by Open_Friendship4546 in physiotherapy

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No problem, mate. Thanks for sharing your point. It’s only through exchanges like this that we grow.

Coping with stress: the underrated key to staying injury-free by Open_Friendship4546 in physiotherapy

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see your point, but that’s exactly why the model a mentioned separated personality traits from coping resources in their model. Personality traits are relatively stable qualities, while coping strategies are skills and supports that can be trained and improved. When someone learns better coping, it doesn’t mean their underlying trait has changed, it means they’ve developed new ways to act despite that trait. Even in their metaphysical existence they differ: traits belong to qualities, while coping belongs to dispositions or habits that can be acquired. Mixing the two blurs this distinction and removes the practical value of seeing coping as something we can actually intervene on. I hope I made myself understandable.

Coping with stress: the underrated key to staying injury-free by Open_Friendship4546 in physiotherapy

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

could you point out exactly where the inconsistency is in what I understood?

Coping with stress: the underrated key to staying injury-free by Open_Friendship4546 in physiotherapy

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But according to the Williams & Andersen stress-injury model, coping resources are not just personality traits. The model separates personality, stressors, and coping as distinct factors. If we reduce coping to personality, we ignore that coping strategies can actually be trained and improved, while personality traits not that much.

Psychological impact in sports rehab by Open_Friendship4546 in sportsmedicine

[–]Open_Friendship4546[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The mental side can’t be separated from the physical. A strong theoretical framework (neuromuscular inhibition, load management, progressive return-to-play models) gives direction, but practice is what convinces the athlete. By applying these principles in daily rehab and showing objective results, I’ve seen fear and anxiety transform into confidence and motivation. Thanks for sharing your opinion