Thanks Mark for having John on that podcast.
Again, I work as a PT assistant in various settings and my frustrations with the medical model for PT implementation in the outpatient setting is the same. I originally got into the profession because I want to help people get back to living their lives to the fullest. I soon found out once completing school that the notion of progression and exposing patients to full range strength training close to discharge is essentially none. It's just not taught. It is true though that the majority of jobs in the PT world are not outpatient settings, but rather nursing homes and hospitals where the goals are completely different.
So at my outpatient job I'm on the front lines trying to change things, but it's very upsetting.
I too would like to see Mark and John's practical approach to basic rehab for the common injuries put in video form as a series or part of the future revised editions of SSBBT.
Cuff repairs are among the most debilitating surgeries I see on a regular basis. Nobody is prepared for how much pain they are going to be in post-op. Just about every single one of them I see are genuinely shocked at how much their arm/shoulder/neck hurts the first few weeks after surgery.
I've got osteoarthritis in my GH. Ortho's keep mentioning replacement but I'm kinda young(39) for that. Anyhow I had decompression, bone spur removal, and Mumford on my left shoulder.
As for the arthritis it doesn't cause me anywhere near the amount of pain the Ortho(s) think it should after looking at the MRI. I believe that's due to keeping all the muscles of the shoulder strong.
In retrospect it was pretty silly of me to think I wouldn't have much recovery, they shaved my bone off.
My dad has gone through two complete hip replacements, one total knee replacement and a cuff repair on his shoulder. The only time I’ve ever seen him literally break into a cold sweat and nearly come to tears was with the shoulder rehab. As far as pain in rehab is concerned, he still says he’d take a hip or knee replacement over the shoulder.
The best thing you can do for your shoulder long-term is to continue to train. You should check out Dwayne Wint's training log in the Competitive Lifter's forum. He had a similar diagnosis and surgical procedure last year and made a full recovery. He even benched over 400 this past summer in competition less than a year after his surgery.
I hear stuff like this all the time from my patients.My dad has gone through two complete hip replacements, one total knee replacement and a cuff repair on his shoulder. The only time I’ve ever seen him literally break into a cold sweat and nearly come to tears was with the shoulder rehab. As far as pain in rehab is concerned, he still says he’d take a hip or knee replacement over the shoulder.
Re: the references to the lit review process and John's paper on pulling mechanics. It's not just the NSCA: SCIENCE!!! ?Personality is a capitalist construct? [Darleen Click] | protein wisdom