Does she?not lift?with her right shoulder because of the high pain level?? If 
she lives alone how will she take her trash out?? How will she load and unload 
her groceries from her car?? How will she carry her laundry basket to her room 
to put her clothes away?? Unless this lady has a fulltime maid, her life is a 
little difficult right now.? Perhaps prompting the lady's memory isn't such a 
bad idea, considering that her mind is probably focused on her high pain level, 
and she is probably thinking to herself "Why does this guy have to know that 
information, I just want him to work on my arm", and she is giving you short 
answers, probably unaware that you were going to DC her. ?I would start on goal 
oriented compensation techniques to get her through her typical IADLs and a 
restorative program for her shoulder involving modalities, soft tissue 
mobilization around the coracoid process, relaxation facilitation techniques 
for?the shoulder,?and a graded therapeutic exercise program.? Based on AOTAs 
position papers over the years, this is certainly an appropriate?approach.? 
What is wrong with a bottom up approach starting with body functions and 
gradually improving to graded functional activities when the pain and the AROM 
improves significantly.? There is no way a patient like this would improve 
based on a top down approach.? She would learn to compensate, but from your 
evaluation it sounds like she wants her pain to improve, and for her shoulder 
to improve to her normal baseline.? Why in the world wouldn't a skilled OT with 
orthopedic shoulder?experience take this case?

As OTs it is in our scope of practice to treat shoulders, knees, backs, hips, 
whatever, from a compensation and a restorative approach depending on the state 
in which you practice.? Now based on our level of education I would not suggest 
diving into restorative techniques for these areas unless you have 
had?extensive training, and if your PT partner on the other side of the clinic 
is working on the same thing.? Team work and communication is the key for those 
situations.


-----Original Message-----
From: Ron Carson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Kari Rogozinski <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, 26 Aug 2008 7:03 pm
Subject: Re: [OTlist] Would You Treat For Refer to PT?



Oops, I failed to mention that I my referral to PT was s/p my OT eval.
Everything  the patient stated matched my observation of her movement.
Yes,  it  is  her dominant side. She does not do much lifting with her
right  arm, because of the pain. She does close in work with her right
arm, such as crocheting, eating, turning book pages, etc. But she does
no lifting with her right shoulder.

I  also  think that within the course of an evaluation, it's difficult
to  assess  ALL  daily  living  tasks,  (i.e. driving, washing dishes,
shampooing  hair).  What  I  do is extrapolate my observations and the
patient's  reports  to form a basis of "all" daily living. However, it
is  best  to not say "all" when I don't really know that to be a fact!

Ron

----- Original Message -----
From: Kari Rogozinski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2008
To:   [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subj: [OTlist] Would You Treat For Refer to PT?

KR> Ron, 
KR> ?
KR> I noticed that you said you asked the patient.? I find that
KR> usually when i have them perform specific tasks instead of asking,
KR> the findings don't match what is reported.? Don't you think she is
KR> entitled to an evaluation at least and then decide which way to
KR> go.? It is hard for me to believe that she is safe and Independent
KR> with all daily living tasks.? If her dominant side is affected(
KR> I'm assuming she is right dominant), it makes me wonder how she is
KR> lifting things or carrying things with that side.? Is she using
KR> proper compensatory techniques or is she going to cause damage elsewhere??

KR> --- On Tue, 8/26/08, Ron Carson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

KR> From: Ron Carson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
KR> Subject: [OTlist] Would You Treat For Refer to PT?
KR> To: "OTlist" <[email protected]>
KR> Date: Tuesday, August 26, 2008, 4:15 PM

KR> Received  a  new  home  health  referral. Patient's diagnosis is right
KR> shoulder  pain.  Patient  presents with bicep tendon pain during AROM,
KR> PROM  and  palpation.  She lives alone and is independent
 with all her
KR> daily living tasks.

KR> I  referred  the patient to PT for the shoulder pain. Would you, as an
KR> OT, treat this patient?

KR> Thanks,

KR> Ron


KR> -- 
KR> Options?
KR> www.otnow.com/mailman/options/otlist_otnow.com

KR> Archive?
KR> www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]



KR>       


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