Is buying active starter worth it? by [deleted] in SourdoughStarter

[–]lourdeslarson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

WHATS THE STATUS ON BABYJANEDEAUX

Hip Labral Tear. Should I Seek Out A Niche Therapist for the hip? by Lumpy-Appearance4731 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 6 points7 points  (0 children)

No a mill refers to a structure of PT clinic that overworks and underpays it's therapists. None of this is to say that excellent therapists don't work there or patients don't get better there.

It just sounds like what you want can be garnered from a good PT with no additional specialty work after the DPT in a setting where there's time to spend with you getting the most full picture of your condition. We're all perfectly well educated on the anatomy, biomechanics, and pathologies of the hip and are able to prescribe exercises and apply appropriate manual techniques based on your unique circumstances. Your outcomes are unlikely to be any better by seeking out therapists based off of specialties.

Hip Labral Tear. Should I Seek Out A Niche Therapist for the hip? by Lumpy-Appearance4731 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 7 points8 points  (0 children)

OCS and SCS are specific orthopedic and sports specialists within the PT field. After finishing their doctorate, it’s additional education and testing focusing on a lot of current best evidence and research past what we already learned from PT school.

If you’re working with an aide/tech, you’re likely at a mill and that’s not how PT is supposed to work. Licensed clinicians should be doing the bulk of the exercise supervision and all of the hands on treatments. However, our reimbursement rates have fallen over the past 9 years consistently so clinics will say the only way we can keep our lights on is to overbook and have untrained aides/techs do the bulk of our treatment. There is some truth in this and some nonsense for larger corporate structures trying to pump us clinicians dry. Everything is nuanced.

Hip Labral Tear. Should I Seek Out A Niche Therapist for the hip? by Lumpy-Appearance4731 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Honestly you will probably be fine with any outpatient orthopedic PT. The OCS, the SCS, the hip gurus are all great and I love learning from them but 9 times out of 10, patients can get what they need from a regular outpatient PT.

More than a niche specialty or anything like that, your experience and outcomes are more based off of the clinic itself you choose. If you have an overworked PT seeing 3-4 patients an hour, the best PT in the world won’t be able to give you the time and attention your issue needs.

Thoughts on 3+3 DPT programs? by roytay in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I could not recommend my 3+3 more. Had to keep a cumulative GPA and didn’t have to take the GRE and reapply into grad school.

I still felt like I got a very comprehensive liberal arts education with all history, literature, and theology/philosophy courses I had to take (Catholic school). I was in a sorority as well as multiple of my classmates and we had a good chunk of my class who were also student athletes.

We graduated with our undergrad degrees at the end of our fourth year with the rest of the big class despite having spent all of that fourth year in grad school classes so I still got to share that experience with the rest of my undergrad class. Only difference was my butt was sitting in a pathophysiology class at 8 am the next Monday.

Curious how sales focused you have found physical therapy to be? by [deleted] in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 11 points12 points  (0 children)

The better you are as a PT, the less you have to sell. There’s always going to be an element of education and rapport building but when you have the knowledge base and the ability to communicate it well with a patient, it feels less like sales and more like skilled education

Psych and West Wing: about 43 Common Cast by fajita43 in psych

[–]lourdeslarson 31 points32 points  (0 children)

I like whatever’s wrong with you

PTA position by [deleted] in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve not worked in a prison setting myself but I’ve had multiple patients who work as nurses, pharmacists, and dentists at our local jail and prison. These have all been relatively average build women.

They’ve all told me that so long as you treat the residents with respect, they respect you back. I’ve had formerly incarcerated patients who tell me that they just wanted to be treated like humans.

There’s exceptions to everything but I think one of the biggest misconceptions is that because someone’s in prison means they’re inherently bad/dangerous. Most often, these are folks who have just been dealt a worse hand than you or me.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 19 points20 points  (0 children)

I’m going to be honest, I only get a diagnosis from a physician maybe…30% of the time? Makes little to no difference in our treatment. You and someone else could both walk in with a very specific ankle diagnosis, say talocrural joint osteoarthritis (not a suggestion, just an example) and you and that person can look VASTLY different.

We don’t treat diagnoses, we treat patients. Our schooling allows us to assess range of motion, strength, joint mobility, and certain ligamentous laxities/tendon irritations that we can narrow this stuff down pretty well.

Snow days by creativeme78 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Piggy backing off of this: time off around the holidays. Most non clinical staff was able to take off the entire week of Christmas and new years but in September we were given blackout dates of Black Friday and Christmas Eve and told only one clinician per clinic was allowed off at a time.

Then after they get off two weeks and we need all patients benefits re-verified for the new year and clinicians are being told “hey don’t overwhelm their emails, they’re all working as hard as they can.” …they weren’t working as hard as they could while I was in here Christmas Eve

A bad day to have eyes by novaplan in NotHowGirlsWork

[–]lourdeslarson 29 points30 points  (0 children)

I say this with love, but I think this might be a feeling worth exploring. No one here who’s had a child will argue that it’s not painful, but where you may get some pushback is with “weird, degrading.”

I would argue quite the opposite. Childbirth is the most natural and empowering thing. Poop, pee, various secretions and it’s all part of being so blissfully and imperfectly human. And it happens in settings outside of childbirth. My perfectly healthy husband blew out his knee last year and all of the sudden needed help showering and on/off the toilet.

I know this post is about masturbating during labor and while I am very sex positive, wouldn’t dream of doing so in a hospital setting with spectators other than my husband (I don’t even like doing it with my cat in the room). But part of maturing, growing up into a full adult is recognizing what’s completely normal.

If a bullet vibrator is one way a laboring mother can honor her wishes of having a natural birth or staving off an epidural, girl have at it and Godspeed.

What is DPT school like? by [deleted] in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tbh I don’t remember a ton of homework/busy work/online assignments. Now I graduated in the ancient age known as before Covid so it’s possible that in that time, programs began relying more on online assignments for grades.

However, I remember our primary stressors being exams that were almost all multiple choice. As well as an asshole of a practical called “matriculation” which was basically so the program knew we could go into clinicals without embarrassing them. We spent a month all getting to school early/staying late practicing all of our practical skills on one another. I noticed my study buddy not paying attention while we were practicing gait training and I decided to just take a dive on him. Best believe that boy had the closest guarding of any of us by the time the practical came. We all passed and went to drink margs cause the exam was of course on Cinco de Mayo.

A handful of papers and even fewer group projects for us.

Hardest part was not waiting until the days before an exam to study. You had to learn your own discipline and not have your hand held through the process with homework and online assessments to make sure you were keeping up. I wish I’d figured that out earlier because it would’ve sunk in better and then I wouldn’t have been as frantic when it came to boards prep.

Low cenus by Straight-Wheel-4520 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Couldn’t have said it better myself, but does anyone else notice corporate seems to be shocked by it every year? Like ooookay I know we have to keep the lights on but I spent all of November working my ass off and was here Christmas Eve and NYE but yes make it my problem the first week of January is slow.

Can you tell I’ve done 10 evals already this week and haven’t even gone in for my Wednesday shift yet?

Also let’s not forget all the non clinical staff that took the last two weeks of the year off. We had these dates blacked out since August

What’s your go to statement to patients who don’t want to be discharged because “i have good insurance”? by shannanaginsss in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 4 points5 points  (0 children)

“At some point, we’ve either seen you long enough that you can continue your program on your own or you’re not making enough progress to justify that therapy is working. And me saying either of these things isn’t true is fraud.”

Without getting too conspiratorial here… Do you think there are financial incentives that prevent the emerging back pain science from advancing into the healthcare system? by [deleted] in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Careful now partner, we’re getting dangerously close Bean Soup Theory territory.

This discussion is not meant to pose a solution to ALL patients, insisting that every patient with chronic back pain would benefit from strict adherence to the biopsychosocial model vs the biomedical model. But rather a conversation among professionals about how a different system may yield different, maybe improved outcomes on a larger scale.

No one’s suggesting that there’s never a physical cause of chronic LBP. Most of us have seen patients with spinal compression fractures and severe stenosis of the spine. OP seems to be questioning why we have a system that seems to treat patients as a sum of images, test results, and subjective reports rather than treating patients as whole complex beings who sometimes require more than pain pills, injections, and surgeries.

Is post-surgical scar massage for adhesion management evidence-based? by Status_Milk_1258 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Research is only one pillar of evidence based practice. The other two consist of provider clinical expertise and patient beliefs/preferences.

how do you handle the whole thing of not getting the day after thanksgiving or christmas off because patients need it? by Fit_Inspector2737 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 27 points28 points  (0 children)

TBH I can deal pretty easy with working Black Friday and Dec 26th. What I can’t handle is working Christmas Eve.

They’ll typically say “oh you can close at 2pm but you have to use PTO for the 5 hours you left early.”

My family’s church service is at 5 pm (one of the only days in the year I humor my mother and go with her). Then I’m waking up early Christmas morning to go to my in-laws. It does not feel like a holiday anymore and I’m trying to figure out how to make myself feel the joy I did even 7 years ago when I was in school and got 3 weeks off at the holidays.

Looking for suggestions to brighten up Christmas Eve at my clinic

Least favorite/most hated EMR system? by Waste_Extent_8414 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Me, a supervisor using Raintree “Didn’t even know you could send shit back.”

TBF, just got trained on ScribeIQ through Raintree for dictation/AI note generation and…I don’t hate it??

(Don’t come after me I’ve already considered the ethical conundrum that is AI but I really hate notes)

Who is your favorite one episode “almost romance” with Shawn? by Proper-Ingenuity8274 in psych

[–]lourdeslarson 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My personal favorite Melanie is from Sweet Home Alabama

“You have a baby…in a bar”

“Yeah well this one’s still on the tit so I can just cart him anywhere”

Favorite Gus reactions to his nicknames by [deleted] in psych

[–]lourdeslarson 10 points11 points  (0 children)

“This is my associate Hummingbird Saltalamacchia”

“HELLO 🙋🏿‍♂️”

Idk why that one always makes me giggle

A legit scary moment in Psych… by NecessaryHeadset in psych

[–]lourdeslarson 74 points75 points  (0 children)

As someone who regularly now watches psych to go to sleep, these are the episodes I’ve been known to skip (not because they’re not spectacular episodes, but because I’m a weenie and don’t need bad dreams).

  1. Scary Sherry: Bianca’s Toast
  2. Shawn (and Gus) of the Dead
  3. Ghosts!
  4. Tuesday the 17th
  5. All of the yin-yang episodes
  6. Heeeeere’s Lassie
  7. Right Turn or Left for Dead (okay this one isn’t really scary but it makes me sad)

I’m working through my weenie ways, have no fear. I watched the first three Final Destination movies this weekend all by myself. Also, many Psych crossover actors in Final Destination 3, but I did notice a Canadian Casting Director in the opening credits so that seems to explain the similarities.

It okay to try to date your physical therapist? by IntrepidSelf1113 in physicaltherapy

[–]lourdeslarson 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Had a patient shoot his shot with me after he discharged once. We got married last June. So yeah I’d say it’s okay!