BACK PAIN – A MOVEMENT PROBLEM: A CLINICAL APPROACH INCORPORATING RELEVANT RESEARCH AND PRACTICE
Back Pain – A Movement Problem: A clinical proceed incorporating applicable investigate as well as practice
Back Pain: the transformation complaint is the unsentimental primer to support all students as well as clinicians endangered with the evaluation, diagnosis as well as government of the transformation associated problems seen in those with spinal suffering disorders. It offers an unifying indication of posturo-movement dysfunction that describes the some-more ordinarily celebrated facilities as well as associated pass patterns of changed control. This serves as the framework, running the practitioner’s comment of the particular patient.
Key features:
1. The book explores engine carry out as well as organic movement, the development, as well as explores how as well as because it is changed in people with behind pain.
2. It integrates à la mode scholarship with the insights as well as knowledge of endless clinical practice.
3. The book maps the some-more usual clinical patterns of display in those with spinal suffering as well as associated disorders.
4. It provides the elementary clinical sequence complement for behind pain.
5. Abundantly with pictures to benefaction concepts as well as to spell out the disproportion in between so called normal as well as dysfunctional presentations.
6. Written by the practitioner for practitioners.
Rating:
(out of 1 reviews)
List Price: $ 64.95
Price: $ 48.08


Tiger2
on June 24th, 2010
Review by Tiger2 for Back Pain – A Movement Problem: A clinical approach incorporating relevant research and practice
Rating:
I am a long-term sufferer from back pain and bought this book because I read everything I can on the subject (much of it contradictory!). However, this is one book I am very keen to show my doctor and chiropractor.
Although this book is technical, I believe it offers hope to anyone living with the life-limiting misery of a bad back and who like me is stuck on a roundabout of therapy that isn’t working, painkillers and conflicting medical opinions about surgery.
The author Josephine Key is an Australian physiotherapist who has apparently mined the scientific research on the subject of back pain and seems to have decades of practical experience to confirm that her approach works. To me, she makes refreshing good sense.
The book gets down to basics on the reasons why our backs hurt and what we can do about it. It takes a scientific commonsense approach, showing in technical detail how back problems can be solved by properly-informed physical therapy and “movement re-education”.
In her introduction the author says:”We can fly man to the moon yet despite the advances of modern science the effective diagnosis and treatment of back pain remains somewhat elusive”. Countless people in my situation have found that’s unfortunately true. But it looks like this author and others like her could at long last be offering a way forward from the impasse.
For example, going through this book I discovered things I am doing in my daily life that I now realise are likely to be contributing to my back pain. It also points out that a lot of fitness and exercise regimes and gyms with their emphasis on ‘stretching and strengthening’ actually create back problems.
While not written for the layman, I’d recommend this textbook to anyone whose life is blighted by back pain or who is responsible for treating others. And if you are not an expert, read what you can understand then hand it over to your practitioner. It may give you the answers you need on back pain instead of an endless quest for solutions.