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Where Physiotherapy Gets Logical

Where physiotherapy gets logical

Physiological

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Why Do Ineffective Treatments Persist?

April 22, 2018 Kenny Venere
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Effective healthcare can be thought of as delivering the most beneficial treatment(s) at the minimum dosage required to produce a positive outcome that outweighs associated side effects and cost. Unfortunately, healthcare is too often wrought with overdiagnosis, overtreatment and exorbitant costs while producing a less than desirable outcome. Pain, in particular, is an overwhelming burden on both individuals and society at large with an estimated economic cost of 560-635 billion dollars a year. This is in part due to an abundance of diagnostic approaches that fail to identify meaningful pathology, leading to numerous treatments that fall short of delivering a meaningful outcome. Unfortunately, many of the treatments designed to address people’s pain have been well studied and found to lack a meaningful benefit, but nevertheless, these interventions continue to be delivered, often by passionate purveyors eager to fill a desperate need.

In the face of evidence demonstrating that many of the treatments offered to patients fail to justify their continued use when adequately controlled and studied, why do ineffective treatments persist in clinical practice? Many of the contributing issues are by no means unique to physical therapy and more broadly are inherent to human nature and reasoning. Nevertheless, I am a physical therapist and as such these issues will be viewed through a physical therapy lens.

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Tags Science, Research, Critical Thinking, Evidence Based Practice, EBP, Physiotherapy, Physical Therapy
2 Comments

Mechanistic Reasoning and Science Based Physio

September 2, 2017 Kenny Venere
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The idea of science based physiotherapy (adapted from the popular science based medicine) is a response to the notion that evidence based physiotherapy places too great an emphasis on comparative clinical studies at the expense of basic science. This is to say that evidence based physiotherapy undervalues, or even ignores aspects such as mechanisms, mechanistic reasoning and biological plausibility. This call for a greater emphasis on improving our mechanistic reasoning and our understanding of how and why we achieve the outcomes that we do is important. Sound mechanistic reasoning can improve the manner in which we research and deliver interventions while helping rule out more far-fetched ideas prior to dedicating limited scientific resources to them. This is because it encourages us to ask the question “are we confident that this treatment aligns with current knowledge of biology, physiology and physics?” As with all things, of course, it is important to recognize the limitations of our mechanistic reasoning as means of justifying our treatments.

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Tags Science, Reasoning, Research, Critical Thinking, Mechanisms
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Lost In Translation: Communication in Physiotherapy

August 3, 2017 Jason Eure

I am someone who rarely feels compelled to offer my unsolicited advice in a public forum. Therefore, it may seem strange that I am writing for the second time on the issue of intra-professional communication. Despite my desire to remain an impartial observer of the world surrounding me, an unnerving theme persists and motivates my interjection. In many ways, we fail to engage in constructive dialogues regarding professional topics.

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Tags Critical Thinking, Communication, Physiotherapy, Debate, Reasoning
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Argument and the Ever-Shifting Goalposts

March 4, 2017 Jason Eure

Here's another guest post from Jason Eure, who is still a pretty smart dude whose thoughts are worth your time. Follow him on twitter @jmeure

February 3, 2003: Adam Vinatieri lines up to kick a potential game-winning 48 yard field goal to win the Super Bowl for the New England Patriots. The snap and hold go smoothly, the kick is up and on line… but just as it’s about to sail through the uprights, a St. Louis Rams fan pushes the goalposts back 20 yards and the ball falls short: leaving the Patriots to lose in overtime (or at least I wish this above scenario had happened…I view my happiness as inversely proportional to the number of rings in Tom Brady’s possession).

While we (sadly) can’t influence physical goalposts to this extent, this happens metaphorically during many arguments — evidential standards are arbitrarily altered in order to make a counter-argument inadequate or insufficient. This is an informal fallacy known as (wait for it) ... shifting the goalposts.

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Tags Critical Thinking, Reasoning, Logical Fallacy
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Expectations Versus Reality

December 17, 2016 Kenny Venere

If a patient comes into a clinic, naive to the incredible benefits of Therapeutic Cabbage Rubbing and a physical therapist proceeds to sell them on how truly remarkable cabbage is, informing them of the unique resonance the cabbage creates when rubbed on skin, the science-y neurophysiological effects and stories of the success other people have had with the treatment from a position of assumed knowledge with obvious charisma — That patient might actually leave the clinic feeling a little better and be more likely to seek out therapeutic cabbage rubbing in the future. 

Now say they walk into your clinic and as a well informed physical therapist, you know that therapeutic cabbage rubbing has no basis in our current understanding of physiology and lacks clinical evidence to support its efficacy and effectiveness, but this patient REALLY expects that the cabbage will help them out — does this expectation all of a sudden make Therapeutic Cabbage Rubbing a well reasoned treatment option?

No.

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Tags Critical Thinking, Science, Research, Reasoning, Placebo, Expectation
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