Saying Goodbye Is Hard
By Tom Fontana, MSPT
It’s with a heavy heart that we part ways with patients, particularly those with whom we have worked with for a long time and gotten to know so well. So, if it’s so hard, why do … Read more »
By Tom Fontana, MSPT
It’s with a heavy heart that we part ways with patients, particularly those with whom we have worked with for a long time and gotten to know so well. So, if it’s so hard, why do … Read more »
By James Goodwin, PTA, CSCS
Hiking season is in full bloom! If you have tight ankles this can be very limiting especially when you want to complete those 4,000 footers or just go for a leisurely stroll on your favorite … Read more »
By Lauren Fournier, PT, DPT
Fall is a great time to live in New England as we are seeing the beautiful change of colors and the weather is transitioning to cooler temperatures. That same transition can happen for us as … Read more »
by Karolina Kozlova, PT, DPT, Neurologic Clinical Specialist
In 1906, German physician Dr. Alois Alzheimer first described “a peculiar disease” — one of profound memory loss and microscopic brain changes — a disease we now know as Alzheimer’s. So how … Read more »
By Tom Fontana, MSPT
Set point is what every tennis player wants to achieve—the point, if won, that captures the set and moves you closer to winning the match.
Set point is also a theory used in endocrinology, and other … Read more »
By Cathy Leer, PT, MBA
I am trying to keep a positive outlook on what the future may bring, but as the pandemic continues world wide, and the numbers of confirmed cases continue to fluctuate, or rise, I find myself … Read more »
By Cathy Leer, PT, MBA
On Christmas day, 2018, one of the presents that I received was a book entitled “One Question A Day, A Five-Year Journal”. Yesterday’s question, “who always has your support” was answered simply: “I support fairness … Read more »
By Tom Fontana, MSPT
“Body:” by Sam UL is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
When something hurts or is “not right,” people want to know THE CAUSE and that often means (in musculoskeletal medicine) a bone, muscle, nerve, joint, tendon, … Read more »
By Cathy Leer, PT, MBA
Do you know what we mean when we say, “a patient has a right to choose”? When it comes to physical therapy this means that you can pick and choose where you go and who … Read more »