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What Physical Therapists Need to Know about Top Ranking Hospitals

Author Therapy Career Blogger | 03.23.2010 | Category Allied Healthcare, Locations, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapist Jobs, Therapist Jobs, Therapy Jobs, Top Rehab Careers, Top Therapy Blogs, physical therapy, rehabilitation therapy

The best rehabilitation hospitals in America boil down to a “Top 25” list, and are chosen via recommendation of specialists who give their highest marks to facilities offering state of the art procedures and care.

In review of the crème de la crème, PTs and therapists of every stripe find the following consistency: the top 25 rehab hospitals share zip codes with some of the most metropolitan cities in the country; for some professionals living in these exciting environments, the cost of living is high—fortunately, this is not the case for employees of our Therapist Staffing Agency, where free private housing make physical therapy jobs infinitely more appealing.

Another reason therapists and folks in occupational therapy jobs will be glad they read this?

Travel Force matches qualified applicants with physical therapy jobs in the thick of our nation’s top rehab hospitals, named by U.S. News & World Report.

You can read more about the metro areas where top rehabilitation therapy facilities are located on online professional platform sites, like AfterCollege.com, which helps college students, alumni and employers utilize career networks across the country, ultimately landing the best Rehab Jobs.

Therapists craving city details—let’s say, for example you and the rest of your graduating class wanted to apply for physical therapist jobs in Florida—would be wise to click around and get more information on PT jobs in the sunshine state, where benefits and compensation are nice and high.

Let us once again remind you, though, that therapists perusing websites like Travel Force and AfterCollege —and subsequently finding scintillating photos of Top metro areas for rehab therapists, need not worry about pricey renter’s fees that have a way of making such cities notorious—notorious for skyscrapers and sky high costs in living that is—at Travel Force you don’t pay any rent—and, as a result, you do a LOT more living!

In closing, and because we think it resonates better this way, check out our list below, containing the ambitious therapist’s short list of cities we staff with allied health professionals. When you apply online for a job in one of these happening towns, or in a Travel Force staffed state close to the high ranking action, you’re likely to land at one of the Top 25—a fantastic move for your physical therapy career!

Have an Appetite for Fun Food? Check our Therapist Deal’s Guide

Author Therapy Career Blogger | 03.17.2010 | Category Good restaurants nationwide, How to Tips, Locations, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapist Jobs, Therapy Jobs, Traveling Therapist, physical therapy, rehabilitation therapy

Rehabilitation therapy jobs can create an appetite for fun food; read on to find some great deals ….

In physical therapy jobs, PTs and likeminded colleagues are bound to ask upon arrival in a new city: “So, is there a good place to eat around here?”

Any foodie worth his salt, especially a local one, is happy to answer this question, plugging local cuisine that lends the cities your Rehabilitation Therapy Jobs take place in, character…a la mode.

Yep, it’s the locals who recommend great vegetarian venue guides, like happycow.net, which puts veggie loving therapists in touch with the nearest organic restaurants and health food stores—with any luck, word spreads there’s an alternative to meat lover’s pizza at the next Occupational Therapy Jobs roundup.

Herbivore or meat loving, the locals know where it’s at; that’s why sites like Where the locals eat are worthy bookmarks in the months you work in physical therapist jobs away from home.

Food for thought: When physical therapy jobs mean you’re often too busy to cook, eatin’ good in the neighborhood—at restaurants that come highly recommended—means you’re twice as likely to extend your assignment.

Click on Applebee’s as proof that signing up to receive e-mails at your favorite franchises is a great way to save. Have OT Jobs and physical therapist jobs starved you for time to surf restaurants? Applebee’s sign-up page removes the guess work, and the good news is its simple steps to free membership are very similar to tasty competitors, i.e. Red Lobster’s Fresh Catch Club.

When restaurants like these are running a sale on surf or turf, you’ll be the first PT to know. Check in at all your favorite franchise websites to see what we mean.

You may already be a smart phone enthusiast working in travel therapist jobs whose restaurant app on the ol’ mobile quite capably makes your dining decisions for you, but that hardly means PTs and OTs aren’t interested in deep discounts available in the 2010 Entertainment Book. If you haven’t heard about it already, we’ve got the 411! This huge volume of coupons provides an online membership, where additional (printable) discounts are available just by typing your current zip code; you can also apply for an Entertainment Card, designed for discretion when the bill arrives.

Whether you find the perfect bargain or not, PTs, OTs and the medical professionals in between, gotta eat! Find out on the Travel Force therapy career resources page if you’re destined to work in one of the top 5 travel therapy spots.

Once you get there, make sure to ask: “So, is there a good place to eat around here?”

Physical Therapists Working with Recovering Arthroscopic Surgery Patients …

Author Therapy Career Blogger | 03.03.2010 | Category Ellen Bloome-PT, Locations, Medical/Surgical, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapist Jobs, Therapist Jobs, Top Therapy Blogs, physical therapy

Knowing more about new tools in medical robotics is a help.

Arthroscopic surgery means allowing a surgeon to repair or remove tissue from a joint with virtually no disruption to other critical parts. The surgery is achieved via insertion of microscopic instruments and camera through the portal of an incredibly small incision site. Sufficed to say, surgeon careers are changing in the new millennium—and most medical professionals, including those in therapist jobs agree those changes are positive and exciting.

Arthroscopic procedures are monitored on a television screen, and to laypeople and healthcare professionals alike, it sounds like the stuff of science fiction. Physical and occupational therapists that work with recovering surgical patients, understand that sci fi or no, arthroscopic operations are stories that generally end well.

Here’s why. Patients benefit from this procedure because they are at a substantially lowered risk for blood loss and infection; as ideal as an arthroscopic procedure can be, there is, however, room for improvement, especially in the area of arthroscopic surgeries on the hip joint.  Mechanical engineers, like Emily Geist are working now, in a collaborative effort with engineers at Carnegie Mellon, to ensure patients like Ellen Bloome, PT continue to receive, should they need one, successful arthroscopic surgeries in the future.

To better understand what warrants further research on arthroscopic surgeries to the hip joint, therapists may be the first to point out what a tricky place in the human body the hip joint resides. Says Geist, “The hip is a lot deeper in the body than the knee or the shoulder, and it’s a lot tighter. The hip has a ball and a socket. It’s a little more difficult to get an instrument in there. There is a navigation challenge often times when you are that deep in the body.”

Luckily, there are mechanical engineers working with surgeons, that can navigate that challenge, as evidenced in a recent article about computer aided arthroscopy becoming the wave of the future—for therapists who love a good career enhancing read, please click here to learn more about some of the inspiration and research behind medical robotics. It’s all fascinating stuff, and, who knows, it could lead to future therapist jobs at a top rehab hospital—check out Colorado Therapist Jobs to further that possibility and earn up to 20% more!

How to make your therapist career an open road to happiness and professional fulfillment

Author Therapy Career Blogger | 03.01.2010 | Category Career Tips, How To's, Occupational Therapy, Therapist Jobs, Top Therapy Blogs, physical therapy

Occupational and physical therapist jobs are part of a strong rehab team, wherein everybody understands that attitude is key; a good one takes you places, sometimes—and especially on a Travel Force assignment—literally!

If you’re looking at travel physical therapist jobs or recently landed one, your chief concern is excelling at your new post. There’s no better feeling than being invited to return, receiving an offer to extend the therapist job, or simply making friends you’ll keep in touch with forever.

How can you be “PRFCT” in anticipation of, say, a new physical therapist career? In your best cheerleading voice, “What’s that spell?! “therapist career

The ‘P’ is for Professional; the ‘R’ for Reliable; the ‘F’ for Filling-in for a friend or colleague in need; the ‘C’ for Cordiality and, last but not least, the “T” is for Time Conscientiousness—you never, never want to run late.

So, ladies and gentleman of PT and travel occupational therapy jobs world, we give you PRFCT—tion in short order. When you do all of these things right, you can’t go wrong.

  • Arrive a couple days ahead of your start date, so you can get a feel for your new environment.
  • Make a test drive to work. How long does it take you to leave your new apartment and begin your shift?
  • Take a tour of the facility and familiarize yourself with the unit you’ll be working in.
  • Remember that your first day sets an overall tone for the rest of the assignment, so make sure it’s a positive “1st Day”!
  • Be prepared for anything! Some assignments take a while to get intense, while others hit the ground running.
  • Bring at least two pens and a notepad to take plenty of notes on your first day. The more technical savvy can use a new smart phone app called Evernote, reviewed here.
  • Be a team player—as clichéd as it sounds, you know what it means and how important it is.
  • At the end of each assignment, ask for written references from the colleagues and managers you worked with—it creates positive career momentum for your next job.

Lastly, get on the road to success in your travel therapist career by bookmarking career resources; its links provide, among other things, an opportunity to share pictures of your traveling experiences on all the major social networking sites, find AAA info, Zagat rated restaurants, maps, hotel recommendations, etc. You’ll get psyched to work hard and travel light!