Pat...

Please talk more about what you are doing in pain management....  I am
very interested.... 


Christi Vicino
OTA Program Director
Grossmont College
619-644-7305


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Pat
Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2007 6:00 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [OTlist] Why are YOU on this list

Hi Ron,

For my part, I am here to learn.  Believe me, if there was a topic I was
well versed on, or even knew enough about to converse on, I would jump
in.

Take, for example, the recent posts about NDT.  Sure, it was gone over
in school, but I have never used it, and have never even seen it used
with a real patient (we role played in school).  I think that someday I
might want to work with stroke patients.  So I read, and pay attention,
and am interested in what others have to say... but I have absolutely
nothing to contribute.

I also do not do marketing, and wouldn't know where to start.  Like you,
I am still struggling to even put into words lay people could
understand, what we do and how it differs from PT.  That is why I didn't
post anything when you were posting your questions.

I am not doing traditional OT, and no one else on this list works in my
field (pain management), nor do I have experience in their fields.  I
keep trying to learn all that I can, in case this job ever goes away and
I end up working in a "traditional" OT job.

I may not contribute much, but I do enjoy this group when it's active.

Pat

At 06:09 AM 8/16/2007, you wrote:
>Hello All:
>
>The  OTlist has been around a long time. But I believe this is the 
>least amount of participation that I've ever seen.
>
>What  is  going  on?  I  know that every topic is not important to 
>every person,  and I know that all of us have busy lives. But this list

>has NO purpose if YOU don't participate!
>
>I don't know if people are scared, uninterested, uninformed or what, 
>but this  is  the  only  place  that  I know to discuss the topics that

>have recently come up.
>
>Please  put  your  fingers  to  the  keyboard  and  share your 
>thoughts, questions and opinions.
>
>Thanks,
>
>Ron
>
>--
>"... as a profession that offers unique services that are ideally 
>suited to  meet  the health, participation, and quality of life needs 
>of people of  all  ages,  occupational  therapy  is well-positioned to 
>succeed and flourish in the 21st century." [Fred Somers, AJOT, April, 
>2005, p. 127]
>
>"The  part of convalescence that I found most profoundly humiliating 
>and depressing  was  [OT]...  I was reduced to playing with brightly 
>colored plastic  letters  ...  like  a three-year-old..." [AJOT, April,
2005, p.
>231]
>
>
>--
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>
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