Pelvic Organ Prolapse Training Better than Watchful Waiting
Pelvic organ prolapse is a pervasive disorder affecting up to 65% of women, depending on the definition used, examination procedures used, and geography.1
Pelvic organ prolapse is a pervasive disorder affecting up to 65% of women, depending on the definition used, examination procedures used, and geography.1
In peripheral artery disease (PAD), the five-year mortality rate climbs to 20%. Cardiovascular events account for seven out of ten of those deaths. Additionally, three out of ten PAD patients experience nonfatal cardiovascular events.1
The International Continence Society defines urinary incontinence as “the complaint of any involuntary leakage of urine.” The prevalence increases with age, and the severity of the condition can wax and wane.
Compared with younger women, postmenopausal women reported greater improvement in pain following treatments such as physiotherapy, despite being prescribed fewer drugs.
On any given day, 7.3% of the population suffers from activity-limiting low back pain (LBP). This makes LBP the world’s most disabling condition, and, worse yet, it’s on the rise.1
Heightened fall risk leads to fractures, fear of falling, loss of confidence, and subsequent self-restricted activities.1-3. Those fractures that occur from standing height or less are often referred to as fragility fractures.
Eighty percent of heel pain cases presented to orthopaedic practices turn out to be simple plantar fasciosis.1
Less than a third of Australians commence cardiac rehabilitation as needed, and a small percentage of those demonstrate adherence throughout their individualised programmes.1,2 This results in avoidable morbidity and mortality.
Hamstring strains rank among the most common injuries in high-speed running sports. The recurrence rates of previous decades, reaching 20% and 33%, appear to be on the decline, due to improved utilisation of the most effec tive physiotherapy protocols.1 Still today, recurrence rates appear high, and interest in improving outcomes continues.2
Type 2 diabetes has risen to the level of a global pandemic.1 In the presence of a foot ulcer, five-year mortality rates climb to 44%.2 Additionally, the economic burden of diabetic foot disease costs Australia 1.6 billion annually.3
The World Health Organization estimates that 27.5% of people are not getting enough exercise,1 and a separate analysis published in the Lancet attributes 9% of global premature deaths to inactivity.2 Clearly, when sedentary patients increase physical activity, the risks posed by cardiovascular disease are greatly mitigated, but what is the role of the primary care practitioner in this? Moreover, what is the difference between a physical activity recommendation and prescribed exercise?
As many as one out of ten patients in Australia’s primary care settings deal with peripheral artery disease (PAD).1 The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare associates PAD with nearly 60,000 hospitalisations annually, as well as 1,900 deaths
Until recently, diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) was considered a contraindication for exercise walking and other weightbearing exercise. The concern was that such exercise would increase the risk of foot injury and the serious consequences such injuries can introduce where there is DPN.
Osteoarthritis (OA) ranks as the most common category of joint disease as well as the leading source of pain among older patients.1
One in twenty Australians age 45+ live with COPD.1 The resulting dyspnoea, reduced exercise tolerance, and communication hindrance strongly impact quality of life. What’s more, each year, roughly one in five people with moderate to severe COPD experience an acute exacerbation requiring urgent care.
Patellofemoral pain (PFP) proves to be a pervasive and recalcitrant challenge for healthcare professionals.
Sarcopenia leads to functional impairment including poor endurance, slow gait, and reduced mobility. Moreover, the condition predicts falls, poor quality of life, disability, and mortality.1
Australia sees almost 150 hospitalisations for opioid harms daily
Due to an aging population and increasing obesity, the prevalence of knee osteoarthritis (KOA) has more than doubled in the past ten years, pointing to an impending endemic state.1,2
An aging population suggests we can expect an increasing incidence of cognitive impairment and dementia through year 2050.
The Dose-Response Relationship to Therapeutic Exercise Dementia ranks as a leading cause of disability for elderly patients, and the prevalence is expected to quadruple over the next three decades.1
Physiotherapists at Cairo University recently produced a first-of-its kind study offering important insight into the correlation between forward-head posture and reduced respiratory function
At the turn of the century, adolescent low back pain was considered uncommon.1 In 2016, this bulletin reported the prevalence at 5%.2
With roughly one out of ten cases of shoulder pain being attributable to adhesive capsulitis, frozen shoulder ranks as the most common cause of shoulder dysfunction.1
Physiotherapists at Cairo University recently produced a first-of-its kind study offering important insight into the correlation between forward-head posture and reduced respiratory function.
Susan Hardy, MD and colleagues recruited 439 adults age 65 and older to assess multiple possible predictors of mortality that could be used in primary care.1
Australians are living longer, yet the growing burden of chronic disease means society is living longer but in poorer health. Osteoarthritis of the knee (KOA) is a primary contributor to this situation.
In 2017, low-back pain (LBP) caused 65 million years lived with disability. That was 17.5% worse than in 2007.
2022 Journal of the American Medical Association
In 2017, low-back pain caused 65 million years lived with disability. That was 17.5% worse than in 2007.1
hiplash associated disorder (WAD) encompasses a syndrome of symptoms that may result from an acceleration/deceleration injury of the neck - especially disability and neck pain.
While healthcare has been rapidly building knowledge about COVID-19, data regarding post-COVID, long-term pulmonary sequelae is only beginning to trickle in.
Physiotherapy Proves to be a Viable First-line Treatment
Delayed PT Associated with Better Results Rotator cuff tears are a common cause of shoulder pain.
Affecting an estimated 2% to 5% of the general population, adhesive capsulitis (also known as frozen shoulder) ranks as the leading cause of pain at the shoulder joint among the middle-age and older.1
Exercise Protocols that Achieve Triple the Results with the Same or Smaller Time Investment
ffecting an estimated 2% to 5% of the general population, adhesive capsulitis (also known as frozen shoulder) ranks as the leading cause of pain at the shoulder joint among the middle-age and older
In the past few years, scientific journals have seen an explosion of interest in diabetes remission.It is well established that gastric sleeve surgery can put diabetes into remission.
Australians are living longer, yet the growing burden of chronic disease means society is living longer but in poorer health.
A report published recently in the Medical Journal of Australia finds that Australia has the highest incidence of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction surgeries in the world.1
Meniscal tears seem to occur as part of a degenerative process in the knee. More than half of people age 50+ have meniscal tears without pain.1
Workers’ compensation records show that in New South Wales, before decompression surgery, more than a quarter of patients receive no physiotherapy. Nearly another quarter of patients receive only one to eight physiotherapy sessions before decompression surgery
Fibromyalgia (FM) is a “syndrome of widespread pain, decreased pain threshold, and characteristic symptoms that include non-restorative sleep, fatigue, stiffness, mood disturbance, irritable bowel syndrome, headache, paraesthesia and other less common features.”1.
Takeaways for Outpatient Providers -While not unusual in Australia, dedicated emergency department physiotherapists remain relatively new. The concept is novel in other parts of the world.
he Indian Journal of Orthopaedics recently published a first-of-its-kind study comparing four proven treatment approaches to plantar fasciosis (previously referred to as plantar fasciitis).
Roughly six out of ten patients seeking primary care for back pain also report back-related leg pain.1 That number includes both leg pain characterized by nerve root entrapment (sciatica) and referred leg pain without nerve. root involvement.
In our November bulletin, we described a study out of the U.K. that is reversing a decade’s old consensus opinion that sciatica has a good prognosis, with the majority of paincomplaints resolving within four weeks.
Joseph Pilates developed the exercise system bearing his name to be a low-impact fitness routine that would be suitable for anyone and that could also enhance mindfulness and mood.
In February, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) published a review of groin pain syndrome.