Celebrating National Rehabilitation Week and the Journey to Recovery
A landmark study developed by the World Health Organization in conjunction with the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation in 2019 revealed an estimation that one in three people in the world are living with a health condition that could benefit from rehabilitative services. Applying these statistics to the Shreveport-Bossier community (SBC), it is estimated that over 81,000 people are living with health conditions amenable to rehabilitation in the River Cities.
The goal of
rehabilitation providers across the country is to promote healing and
recovery to achieve a meaningful quality of life. Physical
rehabilitation includes a wide range of services to assist with
completing daily activities in the home, work and community.
Interventions may include muscle strengthening, fall prevention,
balance, speech, cognition, hearing aid fitting and recovery from
painful conditions. A rehabilitation provider works with you to assess
your physical and cognitive barriers in daily life and creates a plan to
help overcome these barriers.
The
benefit and success of rehabilitative professions in optimizing patient
outcomes are evident in the growth these professions have seen over the
last century. What started as a group of less than 300 women seeking to
minimize the disabilities of injured soldiers in the wake of World War I
has blossomed into hundreds of thousands of rehabilitation providers
across multiple professions and disciplines seeking to restore function
in individuals with disabilities across the country.
In
honor of National Rehabilitation Awareness Week in September, the LSU
Health Shreveport – Allied Health Clinics would like to highlight the
benefits of rehabilitative services for the people of the SBC. Services
available to the SBC within the Allied Health Clinics include physical
therapy, occupational therapy, speech and hearing services, child
clinical psychology services and applied behavioral analysis therapy.
Providers within these clinics genuinely
desire to improve patients’ well-being by providing education and
restorative services to those presenting with musculoskeletal,
neurologic, cognitive, communication, congenital and functional
disorders, and issues related to chronic pain and pelvic health.
To
communicate the heart and passion of rehabilitation providers within
the Allied Health Clinics, we asked our providers to tell us why they
love to serve the patients of the SBC.
-
“The coolest thing about serving the patients of the SBC is getting to
witness their confidence in returning to simple things they once thought
they would never do. There is nothing more heartwarming and rewarding
than getting to see the joy and accomplishment on a patient’s face
because they were simply able to go the grocery store independently to
buy groceries or shake a visitor’s hand at church.”
- Occupational
Therapist
- “To be able to serve the community where you were raised is special! As a therapist
serving the pediatric population in this area, it is gratifying knowing
that early diagnosis and intervention enables children and their
families to achieve their fullest potential.”
- Speech and Language
Pathologist
-
“One of the greatest joys of my life is helping people with neurologic
dysfunction achieve their personal goals and return to their highest
potential quality of life. It is an honor to serve the people of the
SBC”
- Physical Therapist
-
“It is my goal that each client’s level of independence is improved and
every client gains education and empowerment to become better
self-advocates for their health through the provision of rehab
services.”
- Occupational Therapist
With
a multidisciplinary approach, rehabilitation providers can evaluate and
treat dysfunction across body systems to promote physical, mental and
emotional wellbeing. In short, we seek to understand what makes each of
our patients “go.” Whether it is being able to get up and down off the
floor to enjoy playing with grandchildren or returning to a high level
of performance as a professional athlete, rehabilitation providers seek
to make their patients’ goals a reality. We are grateful to the
rehabilitation providers across the SBC who are committed to
transforming the lives of their patients so they can become the best
possible versions of themselves.
Megan
Flavin, PT, DPT, is an assistant professor of physical therapy at LSU
Health Shreveport School of Allied Health Professions. Matthew Martin,
PT, DPT, is a clinical instructor of physical therapy at LSU Health
Shreveport School of Allied Health Professions.