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What do Physical Therapy Jobs, Sports-Related Injuries and the World Cup have in common?
Author Therapy Career Blogger | 06.30.2010 | Category Allied Healthcare, Ellen Bloome-PT, Ongoing Education, Physical Therapist Jobs, Therapist Jobs, Therapy Jobs, Travel Therapist, Travel physical therapy jobs, Videos, physical therapy, rehabilitation therapy
For those of us who live for sports, it’s all about soccer this summer. Many of us are on the edge of our seats wondering who will capture the World Cup as the competition plays out in South Africa. So what does the World Cup have in common with physical therapy jobs and sports-related injuries?
Whether players are competing at the World Cup or playing on their high school soccer team, physical therapists treat plenty of patients with sports-related injuries who play the game. Here’s a fact to back up the claim: the US Consumer Product Safety Commission reported more than 186,000 soccer related injuries in 2006 alone; 80% of those were owned by players less than 24 years of age. Soccer is a fun game and even better exercise, but videos like the one we’ve included here show what a fierce sport it can be. Watch a physical therapist at the top of her game, administering a third therapy session with a patient who tore her ACL, meniscus and MLC in a challenging game of soccer.
This video helps us appreciate a new reality impacting physical therapy careers: more girls are participating in high school and college sports—and it’s not just them creating more work for physical therapists, in what has become for PTs, a seemingly recession proof industry—it’s the Baby Boomers, too. Born in an era stretching from the 1940’s to early 60’s, the Boomers are reaching retirement age and with it, the aches, pains and haunts of old sporting related injuries that keep physical therapists in high demand.
As most of you reading this already know, sports related injuries drive a lot of patient traffic through ERs and into the eventual care of physical therapists. If you’ve ever wondered what a PT feels like on the other end of the therapy equation, you can read about one of our own receiving post op therapy after sustaining a sports related injury.
CDC stats on sports related injuries may be grim, but physical therapy careers are providing rehabilitative light at the end of that tunnel. PTs have a lot to feel good about; the press they receive is incredibly positive. In November of 2009, CNN ranked physical therapy jobs at # 7 on the list of America’s best occupations. Since then, physical therapy careers are a continuously rising star; however, experts advise that landing a successful PT career requires a lifelong commitment to continued education. The APTA encourages specialization in one of 8 areas of physical therapy with the long-term goal of (the majority of) PTs earning doctorates by 2020.
Keeping your eyes on the prize is well worth it, as evidenced by the turnout at this year’s American Physical Therapy Association’s Annual Conference & Expo in Boston. Whether it’s the influx of young female athletes matriculating into colleges or more Baby Boomers seeking physical therapy, business is booming for PTs. Observes remarked that the conference made them momentarily forget the country is in a recession; the event reported a surplus of physical therapy jobs in home health systems and large medical centers across the country.
When it comes to finding physical therapy jobs, seeking education at top physical therapy schools or playing the sports that challenge our bodies enough to one day seek physical therapy ourselves, the sporting motto from Nike said it best, “just do it!”
Side note: Until mid-July, we hope you enjoy FIFA. Feel free to post a comment about who you hope wins the World Cup!
Physical Therapy Career Choices Open up a World of Possibility
Author Therapy Career Blogger | 06.23.2010 | Category Career Tips, Ongoing Education, Therapist Jobs, Therapy Jobs, Travel Therapist, Travel physical therapy jobs, physical therapy
Different Ways to Take your Physical Therapist Career
When you’re a qualified physical therapist the whole world is your oyster—the interesting part of that old phrase being that there’s more than
one pearl when it comes to the career choices inside your field. Whether it’s permanent staff hospital work, travel therapist careers or branching out to start a PT private practice, you and other professionals in this industry will be happy to uncover the benefits unique to your physical therapist career path.
Permanent Physical Therapy Jobs
If you’re a PT looking to build seniority in a hospital setting, rehabilitation center, physical therapy clinic and/or skilled nursing facility, permanent physical therapy jobs offer the perfect professional arena. Permanent PTs enjoy all the benefits, excitement and prestige of their traveling counterparts, with strong likelihood of making a recognized name for themselves locally. Start a physical therapy job—custom made for those who like to stay—or go—by applying at any of these top staffing agencies: Travel Force Staffing, American Traveler or 50 States Staffing
Travel Therapist Career
Oh, the places you’ll go! Let’s start by describing what you can expect from a Travel therapist career—our details are just a sampling of limitless possibilities; it is said of physical therapy jobs, after all, that it’s more than just a career—it’s a lifestyle! PTs on the road, traveling America as they heal and comfort their patients, experience plenty of advantages, like the excitement of a new location as often as every 8 weeks, or after 6 months. What happens if you like it too much to leave? At Travel Force, PTs often have the option of going permanent.
PT Private Practice
An independent physical therapist career is a testimony to the exceptional growth and evolution of physical therapy in the last 50 years. The APTA site offers a PT in motion page that advises on how to overcome the challenges of private practice start-up. Remember the title that 1970s book popularized, “What color is your parachute?” Well, the great thing about your physical therapy career is that you already know—you just have to pick the best career choice and apply it, so that you can touch a patient’s life today!
Physical Therapy Career Path
No matter where your physical therapy jobs take you—and diversity and potential abound as staffing agencies work with individuals in all stages of their physical therapy career—it’s a good idea to commit yourself to lifetime learning. With the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicting a 27% climb in the PT field through 2016, PTs are expected—now more than ever—to keep their competitive edge via continued competency and learning.
Career Resources a Terrible Thing to Waste
Travel Force offers a wealth of information on the DPT degree, as well as how to specialize in one of 8 physical therapy certifications that open up a world of possibility for your physical therapist salary, hiring potential, and, most importantly, the ability to provide your patients with the superior level of care they deserve. Don’t forget to look toward the APTA for career resources. Their Vision 2020 plan—one that would like to see the majority of PTs earn their DPT degrees by 2020 has been acknowledged as a leading reason some may look to opening a PT private practice.
2010 Physical Therapy Association Calendar Packed with PT Events
Author Therapy Career Blogger | 05.10.2010 | Category Allied Healthcare, Career Tips, Certifications, Continuing Education Units (CEU), Fun Events, Monthly Events, Ongoing Education, Physical Therapist Jobs, Therapist Jobs, Therapy Jobs, Travel Therapist, Traveling Therapist, physical therapy, rehabilitation therapy
Continuing to grow and improve your skills as a PT takes time and dedication. Of course, you’ll learn a lot from your physical therapy jobs; but you’ll also want to attend as many physical therapy seminars as possible, to stay up on the latest trends in healthcare.

Luckily, The American Physical Therapy Association is a great resource for physical therapists. The association’s events calendar is jam-packed with interesting and informative activities, including the annual conference, as well as physical therapy seminars in everything from pediatrics, to geriatrics, to specific parts of the body (e.g., shoulders and feet).
Here’s a sampling of the physical therapy events on the 2010 events calendar, listed chronologically:
Pharmacology for Physical Therapists
- May 22-23
- Chapel Hill, NC
- Description: Study the effect of drug actions on the major body systems, problems of drug interaction, and variables that modify their effects.
- June 16-19
- Boston, MA
- Description: This annual gathering for the Physical Therapy Association has everything the practicing physical therapist could wish: seminars, networking, discussions, and, of course, socializing with your fellow PTs.
Screening for Medical Referral: The Pediatric Client Birth to Six Years
- July 10-11
- Valhalla, NY
- Description: Course emphasizes taking a history for the pediatric patient and using evidence to screen and review the cardiovascular, pulmonary, gastrointestinal, neuromuscular, musculoskeletal, urogenital, and integumentary systems for infants, toddlers through the use of case studies.
Biomechanics, Examination, and Selected Interventions for Foot Disorders
- July 17-18
- Portland, OR
- Description: The biomechanics of the foot and ankle with normal and abnormal motion during walking will be evaluated especially in relation to lower extremity dysfunction and the physical examination of the foot.
Women’s Health-Men’s Health: What All PTs Need to Know
- Sept. 11-12
- Burlington, NC
- Description: Gender and sex differences are presented using an evidence-based, body systems approach that illustrates how the unique characteristics associated with sex/gender matter across physical therapy practice settings.
Evidence-Based Assessment, Examination & Rehabilitation Interventions in the Medically Complex Older Adult
- Sept. 25-26
- Somerville, NJ
Examination and Selected Interventions: Lower Extremity: Hip, Knee, and Ankle
- Nov. 6-7
- Jacksonville, FL
- Description: Course is designed to integrate a comprehensive clinical examination with selected manual therapy interventions for the hip, knee, and ankle.
In addition, there are several physical therapy seminars and conferences for specific disciplines scheduled around the country, such as:
The American Society of Hand Therapists Annual Meeting
- June 23
- Orlando, Florida
- Description: Meeting theme “Best Practice in Hand Therapy.”
Aquatic Section Summit
- Oct. 6-8
- Colorado Springs, CO
- Description: Conference of the APTA’s Aquatic Physical Therapy Section will coincide with World Aquatic Health Conference. Note: e-seminars will be available at this event.
- June 5-6, Tempe, AZ
- Nov. 6-7, New York, NY
- Description: For gait and foot-function specialists: Learn how in-shoe pressure mapping technology is used to analyze foot function and gait by revealing what the eye cannot see.
These are just a few of the numerous choices for physical therapy seminars and PT events around. With physical therapy jobs from Travel Force, you may very well find yourself on assignment in an area that is featuring one or more of these physical therapy seminars and conferences. In which case, you’ll certainly be in the right place at the right time!
Want a rewarding career in Physical Therapy? Read on for cutting edge credentialing and licensure info
Author Therapy Career Blogger | 02.15.2010 | Category How to Tips, Ongoing Education, Physical Therapist Jobs, Therapist Jobs, Therapy Jobs, Top Therapy Blogs, physical therapist licensing, physical therapy, rehabilitation therapy
As a dedicated PT, you spend your days restoring, maintaining and promoting the overall fitness of your patients; chances are you’re just as invested in doing the same with your career. Whether you’re a practicing Physical Therapist, PT Assistant, a recent graduate preparing for the NPTE Exam, or just beginning to consider accredited physical therapy schools, we have career resource tools to benefit you greatly.
In traveling physical therapy jobs, you can expect to work in one or more locations (of your choosing) per year, and see a six-figure ceiling in earning potential, a nice return on your investment after graduating with a master’s or doctoral degree from a PT educational program. The American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) lists accredited schools in every state in the U.S. –just click here to check them out—you’ll also find links to APTA, and other benchmarks in physical therapy, on our therapist career resources page.
As for recent PT grads, you’re eager to practice your affinity for therapeutic procedures and examination techniques! Your next step is licensure
within the state you wish to practice. The Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy (see the FSBPT website) has all the information you need on registering for state licensing exams and learning more about mandatory continuing education; every PT should book mark FSBPT for its state-by-state licensing authorities.
Almost every job posting for a PT position requires, in addition to state licensure, a completion card from a 4 ½ hour Basic Cardiac Life Support (BCLS) course. PTs are expected to recognize life-threatening emergencies and respond with the right maneuver, i.e., CPR, Heimlich or through use of an Automated External Defibrillator (AED).
Physical Therapy Assistants (PTAs) can get a high octane career off to a great start by getting involved in the Recognition Program, which honors advanced proficiency in a specified area of work – such as, Musculoskeletal, Neuromuscular, Geriatric, Pediatric, Cardiovascular/Pulmonary, and/or Integumentary. You’ll need to create a user name and password on the APTA website if you’re interested in downloading an online application.
Best wishes in your continuing education!
Electronic Textbooks Take a Step Closer to Reality
Author Therapy Career Blogger | 02.10.2010 | Category Apple iPad, Gadgets, Ongoing Education, Product Reviews, Videos, physical therapy
Physical therapy students who are tired of paying exorbitant prices for their instantly-outdated health textbooks (and then having to haul the weighty books around!) will be glad to see that electronic textbooks are taking a major step closer to becoming reality.
Just recently, major medical textbook publishers — including Random House, McGraw-Hill, Perseus, Wiley and Kaplan — struck a deal with app developer ScrollMotion to adapt their products for the iPad electronic page.
Rik Kranenburg, an executive with McGraw-Hill Co., was quoted in the Wall Street Journal as declaring:
“People have been talking about the impact of technology on education for 25 years. It feels like it is really going to happen in 2010.”
Publishers have certainly embraced the idea in theory, because electronic versions of their medical textbooks save them time and money in production, printing and storage, as well as enabling them to update the books virtually, rather than having to publish new print editions.
However, in practice, publishers have tended to produce online versions of medical journals, product manuals, study guides and the like, rather than actual health textbooks – partly because the technology has not been available that makes e-books attractive to students. (Though their unique features — such as instant access to particular references; and brighter, more lifelike graphics — can make electronic books quite useful, these products have not been as interactive as needed for students in physical therapy programs and elsewhere.)
But the recent release of the highly-anticipated Apple iPad is a game-changer. ScrollMotion’s development deal with publishers includes iPad applications to let users, such as occupational therapy students play videos, highlight text, record lectures, take printed notes, search the text, and participate in interactive quizzes.
As of now, the iPad seems to be lacking many such features. For instance, there’s no capability to let users play Flash-based videos downloaded from the Web; there’s no camera for video-conferences or virtual study groups; and there’s no handwriting recognition for taking notes. Also, the current iPad does not allow for multitasking.
Here is a video with more details on the iPad’s shortcomings
All of these drawbacks come at a hefty price: $499, plus at least $30 per month in utility charges, not to mention the cost of the e-books. Thus, other competing technologies on the market, such as cheaper netbooks, or Amazon’s Kindle DX, may end up being the e-book devices of choice for students. Or, it very well could be the next generation of the iPad that physical therapy students find themselves hauling around.
Are you a therapy program student? What do you think of the Apple iPad?
Stay tuned!
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