OT168 Improving Your Ability to Think Critically ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT01 A Mother's Occupation: OT for Mothers with Hard-to-Parent... ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT268 Family Caregiver: Doing Double Duty ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT02 Hospice Care: Critical Concerns for Occupational Therapists ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT400-60 Cultural Competence for Today’s Healthcare Professionals:... ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT441 Awareness Enhances Care for Muslim Patients ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT455 Moving Past Stereotypes with the Roma ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT183-60 A Quick Guide to Preparing Professional Presentations ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT05 Is Online Education a Fit for OTs? : How Learning Styles ... ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT04 Food Allergies and the Role of the Occupational Therapist ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT03 Fizzling Out? Recognizing Compassion Fatigue and Burnout ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT175 Anxiety Disorders ( 2.0 Contact Hours - 0.2 CEU)
OT06 Dispelling Multitasking: A New Era for a Multigenerationa... ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT267-60 Bariatric Surgery Update ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT17 Understanding Distal Radius Fractures ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT07 Aging in Place, Part 1 ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
OT08 Aging in Place, Part 2 ( 1.0 Contact Hours - 0.1 CEU)
Sharrie O’Neal has been working out on the Gyrotonic Expansion System for six years, and she has X-ray proof of a 2 mm increase in the space between her previously compacted T1 and T2 vertebrae to show for it. Although she had been receiving chiropractic treatment for her injury, it wasn’t until she started Gyrotonic exercise that the adjustments started to take. Read more »
Fractures of the distal radius have been referred to as Colles fractures since they were first described by Irish surgeon Abraham Colles in 1814. Wrist fractures are the single most common fracture in the under-65 population, occurring at a rate of approximately 270,000 per year in the United States, and most often involving the radius. Read more »
Molly McMillan, OTR/L, owner and director of Manhattan Myofascial Release, New York, reinforces this concept with her patients over and over: The right big toe is the bottom of the top of your head. Read more »
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