Saturday 29 August 2015

Y3S2: Mid-Semester Break-ing Bad.



"The burden of research" pertains to the participants in the research. Occasionally minority groups are subject to research participation more than other groups, and this can be seen as a burden on these groups... but over the break, I  felt there was a burden on us to transcribe the interview because it takes a very long time to transcribe an hour and a half of interview! Luckily we could split transcribing the interview up within our group.

From the interview transcript (see last weeks blog post for info on what I'm talking about) there are two assignments.
  • The first is a group assignment where we discuss the meaning of 'quality of life' and 'empowerment' for the volunteer that we interviewed, then to discuss the role of the physio in maintaining functionality and wellness (based on volunteers experience). In addition, we hand in the questionnaires and interview transcript with it.
  • The second assignment... well... I can't remember where the instructions for it are...

I was up Signal Hill, which looks over Dunedin and the harbour, for sunrise on Sunday.
Sunday was then spent at the Sport Injury Clinic for there was a year 9/10 netball tournament which had athletes from Christchurch to Invercargill competing. It was quiet on the injury front, leaving only three knees and two ankles to strap between 9am and 3:30pm... again, it was a quiet day in the clinic.


I'm on placement next week at Dunedin Hospital. I'll be up on the 7th floor (ward 7A: respiratory, and ward 7B: coronary care). The placement description suggests we will be seeing inpatients whom have had elective or emergency cardiothoracic surgery, and respiratory conditions (COPD, pneumonia, cystic fibrosis etc). In preparation for this placement we have to complete a small online wiki and group case study... so I done that over the break. We were also asked to do some reading around anaesthesia, cardiac and respiratory conditions to refresh our memories and to help us with our line of subjective assessment (questioning) for these patients.



The University of Otago, and School of Physiotherapy have scholarships available for third year undergraduate physio students. One of the scholarships currently open for applications is the 'Sheila Consuela MacDiarmid Scholarship' valued at $1500 to be awarded to a student with an interest in further studies in the MSK area (with a strong academic and a developing professional standing). Sheila was a graduate of the Dunedin School of Massage in 1928 (now School of Physiotherapy) whom had a particular interest in orthopaedic work. I decided to have a quick search about Sheila, and discovered that she was a registered physio in the same year that she graduated (nb. the first physiotherapist to registrar in NZ was in 1921). I couldn't find any more info than that with a quick Google search. Anyway, I will add my application to the mix and hope to get an interview (the second part of the application process).

By now you'll realise that I enjoy the challenge of finding new spots to capture the Southern Lights (Aurora Australis) around Dunedin. Over the break there was a big display that was unfortunately washed out by a full moon. I still joined the chase and captured a small glow (which would have looked magnificent if it weren't for the moon). 

Aurora Australis, Waldronville (South of Dunedin)


Tuesday 18 August 2015

Y3S2W7: Public Speaking

It was my birthday on Monday, and again my kind hearted peers wished me a wonderful day and signed a card. They're too good!

Even at work, the team put on a morning tea, a happy birthday sign behind the reception desk and a card! Spoilt!



So what else happened on Monday? Well, we had two public speakers. Both of whom work at the Dunedin public hospital. The first was an anaesthetist. He described his how the anaesthetist developed from its historical roots, as well as his role at the hospital, making it clear that they do more than the stereotypical lounging around drinking coffee, listening to music, doing cross-words whilst the surgeons are at work. We got a brief insight as to the role of physiotherapy before or after surgery too. The second speaker was a sports physician who discussed conditions of the athletes heart, such as cardiomegalopathy and Spontaneous death syndrome / Sudden arrhythmic cardiac death syndrome. He also touched upon drugs in sport. Both speakers were exceptionally entertaining!

This is the week of our CVP community visits - interviewing people with chronic conditions about empowerment & quality of life in their own home. This meant that, in groups of three or four, we were off on very short road trips (some longer than others) around Dunedin to learn about a client's life, living with a condition(s). My group had organised Tuesday afternoon to visit our client. Each person in the group had a task, whether it be the leader, driver/navigator, QoL questionnaire researcher. I was fortunate enough to be the driver and lead the interview process for an hour an a half... as this interview is a key component of our next two assignments, somebody will need to transcribe the conversation word for word!


On Tuesday evening I was asked to medic Dunedin Technical Football premier lad's game against University. Having not been their sport medic this year (three second year physio students / sport medics have been looking after them) I arrived at the changing room to an almighty cheer - they must have missed me. By the end of the match they were joking that I was their lucky charm. Dunedin Tech won 16 - nil... what a slaughtering. My understanding is that this score margin is the record for the season so far. Well done lads! Dunedin Tech are currently second on the table, behind Caversham (same as in 2014).

Dunedin Tech (while/maroon) vs University (yellow/blue)

This was also the week of our clinical presentations. These presentations were about a case we were involved with or a condition/treatment/assessment procedure(s). For my presentation I attempted to emphasise the role of clinical reasoning and evidence based practice (literature, client preference, clinician expertise) by making use of a case I treated whilst on Unipol (MSK) placement. The case was a stiff neck with end of range pain (left rotation and side flexion) and I described how I went about choosing the best manual therapy technique (this happened to be Mulligan's SNAGs). Then, to finish I was going to elaborate on the technique and demonstrate it. However, following on from last weeks foolish 'no prep for the presentation' approach I rambled (probably quite poorly) through the allocated time and had to wrap up halfway through my powerpoint presentation... I didn't use any cue cards, didn't have a speech memorised, it was all purely off the cuff... not recommended. Others who had prepared well gave superb presentations!

There is a growing group of physio students who are keen to improve their photography skills, so on Wednesday night some of us made a trip to capture the night sky - I was on a mission to take a star-trail picture... here's what I came up with. The orange glow is from Dunedin city lights.

Papanui Inlet, looking toward Dunedin

Thursday was fairly eventful too. Our 8am lecturer was a physician at Dunedin Hospital who was involved with emergency ischaemic heart attacks. We got the overview from the paramedic to hospital interventions and soon came to realise that living in a remote place at the time of bad weather was not advantageous to minimising heart damage (or mortality) - many hours waiting for the rescue helicopter, then a return waiting time as you're flown back to hospital.

The 8am lecture was followed by a sitting in on more PHTY355 clinical presentations. From the presentations I've had a good reminder about MSK management for sore backs, necks, shoulders... some neuro balance stuff and today I heard about the student experience on the orthopaedic ward - especially the physio role in perioperative abdominal surgery. The following lecture was on patient rights in research - this all made good sense. Finally, our Integrated Studies lab in the afternoon was an eye-opener! The theme for Integrated Studies was phantom sensations, phantom pain and amputation. We were practising our amputee stump bandaging skills on models then had the opportunity to hear from an amputee - yes that's right, another guest speaker! This person had lost their hand in a workplace accident. They brought in their prostheses which included the classic 'Hook' (think Peter Pan) and a $100,000 bionic hand... yes, we got to play with the bionic hand!!

Current assignments on the go:
- Group and individual qualitative-based assignments from the info we collected during the home visit. I'll tell you more about these next week.

... Half the semester gone!! Off on a one week (mid-semester) break next week!

Tuesday 11 August 2015

Y3S2W6: Hokey Pokey


"You do the Hokey Pokey and you turn yourself around, that's what it's all about"
...and you thought I was going to talk about Hokey Pokey ice cream, right?!

On Wednesday we gave our group presentations. My group presented a community exercise and education programme for peripheral vascular disease to the class. This was a topic I knew a lot about (having covered it in a presentation in my BPhEd degree) so I was able to cover exercise prescription and management without much preparation or any cue cards. The exercise component included a choreographed 'Hokey Pokey' in which the audience (and assessor) joined in ... good fun! 

Other groups, with other topics, pulled out equally interactive and informative presentations... and put the hard work in as not to rely on cue cards!! The asthma group presentation had us breathing through straws then playing games like 'tag' - mainly because there is a high incidence of asthma in school aged persons... check out 'Jump Jam' on youtube to see how primary children can integrate dance and exercise. The COPD presentation was targeted to the elderly, so naturally we sat in a giant circle and done a chair aerobic warm-up, then kick many small Swiss-balls around the group circle. This was followed by exercising our upper limbs in the same way with balloons. The diabetes outreach team invited to the local Marae looked to incorporate Maori culture, and had choreographed a couple of upbeat songs for an aerobic exercise session; "Shake it off - Taylor Swift", and "Jump - Van Halen". I heard that another lab group on diabetes introduced themselves with a Mihi. The cardiac rehabilitation group had a focus on transitioning patients from a phase II to phase III programme. Many groups gave out 'home-made' information brochures. All the groups had a slightly different interaction between presenters which made it very entertaining - some gave a patient interview demo whilst others treated the audience as the targeted audience that we were suppose to be.

Integrated Studies focused on connective tissue conditions like fibromyalgia, rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylosis and gout. In the first lab, we were given the diagnostic criteria, practised evaluating xrays, and physical assessments of these conditions (n.b. xrays won't pick up on fibromyalgia... obviously). It also required us to think how we would adapt our MSK consultation for a patient with osteoarthritis and/or rheumatoid arthritis going in for a full hip replacement in two days time! For the second lab, we had a middle aged person come in so our year group could interview them and find out about how ankylosing spondylosis was diagnosed and what it is like living with it (they have ankylosing spondylosis). It was mentioned that their first port of call was a physio, and that physio didn't pick up on the condition (and neither did the chiropractor whom they saw after a year of non-improving symptoms)... rather it was an osteopath that referred the patient for an xray. I'm not sure whether Osteos refer most people for xrays, but I'm pleased the condition was diagnosed so it could be appropriately treated! Ankylosing spondylosis is a disabling condition, and when medically treated can put the patient back to near 100% functional, pain-free living!

Required readings are usually articles or book chapters that we are REQUIRED to read (they are usually associated with a lecture or lab)... it is expected that we know the content in these texts. Anyway, reading these is usually a mundane task. Occasionally we will be required to read an article that strikes us as interesting or enjoyable to read. One article (that may have been last weeks required reading... don't stress, we'll have a one week break soon for catching up) that was strikingly good to read was: 
'Pryor, J. A. (1999). Physiotherapy for airway clearance in adults. European Respiratory Journal, 14, 1418-1424'
Confession: I don't usually read articles from beginning (intro) to end (conclusion) - usually it's the abstract followed by the discussion that I read first... followed by whatever section in a jumbled order has the info I'm looking for. This probably isn't good practice - but it's proven to be time efficient. However, this text gave a historical background on physiotherapy / respiratory therapy in the introduction, something that struck my attention before I had a chance to skim-scroll-down (a.k.a "eyeing up") the document. So this is one of the few articles I have read from start to finish (from intro to conclusion). Here is a brief bullet-pointed outline of the origins / development of documented respiratory therapy adapted from Pryor (1999).
  • An Assyrian text instructed that a condition characterised by 'fits of hissing coughs, murmuring wind-pipes, and phlegm' be treated by 'braying together roses and mustard in purified oil, then drop some on patients tongue and blow some into his nose'... then "he shall drink several times beer of the finest quality; thus he will recover".
  • 1898: The 'intermittent' then (1901) 'continuous' postural [drainage] method was described for bronchiectasis.
  • 1915: Soldiers with lung injuries were given 'exercise' and taught forced expiratory techniques.
  • 1953: Vibration and percussion techniques were added to postural methods.
  • Post-1960s new technologies emerged from around the world, and have been adapted by others since.
    • Belgium's 'Autogenic Drainage'
    • New Zealand's 'Active Cycle of Breathing Techniques'
    • Denmark's 'Positive Expiratory Pressure'
    • Switzerland's 'Flutter'
    • USA's 'Incentive Spirometry' & "frog breathing / Glossopharyngeal Breathing"
"We've got to die of something, eventually". On Thursday morning we had a lecture from a cardiothoracic surgeon working at Dunedin Hospital. Although there was very little relevance to physiotherapy, we got a good history about the development of surgeons, the problem solving and chaos they were faced with. Apparently Henry VIII empowered barbers 'barber-surgeons' (yes, the people that shave man's face and cut hair) to perform surgeries... mainly because they had sharp knives/blades. Historically, problem solving was related to sterilisation, keeping the lungs inflated, anaesthetic, and there was a belief for some time that if you touched the heart it would go in to fibrillation (it would have been very hard to operate on the heart without touching it!!). The surgeon described their role (general procedures for various conditions and materials i.e. heart valves) when repairing the plumbing or heart components. 

On Saturday we had the Physio Ball. There were a couple of pre-ball gatherings, with good food and great company. It was raining, but that didn't put a damper on the evening!


The ball itself was set at Dunedin's iconic railway station. There was a lot of work put into setting up the ball room to make it look Grecian (big thank you to the ball committee). The ball had everything: food & drink, live artists, DJ, lights, cameras, dancing. Photo-wise there was a photography guy who stayed around the dance floor, and a dedicated Grecian scene group photo area - with props n' all!  



Wednesday 5 August 2015

Y3S2W5: Hands Up

Last Friday we were given our preliminary fourth year placement locations. I'll keep you all in suspense as to where I'll be placed. I created a quick graphic showing where AUT send their fourth year students versus where UoO send their fourth year students. (My artistry is at a 'stick-man' level, so bear with it!). Pleased note that I've likened the students of both schools to superheroes (and not making one a villain)... However, I'm pretty sure Yoda would beat Superman if they were to clash over a turf (clinic) war... 


Hand therapy was the theme of Integrated Studies this week. We had a guest lecturer Hand Therapist take two lectures. The first lecture was pretty gruesome (awesome)! We saw hands that had been chopped, crushed, burned, broken, congenitally deformed, post surgery, missing skin... we were impressed to learn about the intricate work that a hand therapist can do to facilitate healing of the hand. We were reminded of the complex anatomy of the hand and forearm then given skills to differentially diagnose the involvement of different structures. The lab associated with this theme had us measuring pinch strength, sensation testing with filaments (it reminded me of fishing line of different diameters), STI testing (Shape, Texture, Identification test... nb. physios don't do sexual health screening), palpating structures (bones, ligaments etc), differentiating between extrinsic and intrinsic muscle stiffness (i.e. lumbricals), muscle testing (very specific!!), reducing a finger dislocation, and differential diagnosing (tennis elbow, radial tunnel syndrome, posterior interosseous nerve syndrome) and treating conditions of the upper limb such as Mullet Finger & swan necking.

Hand Therapy is NOT Palmistry
One of our lab demonstrators for a hand therapy lab suggested the following book was a 'bible'... so I've added it to my growing physio library of books (and ebooks).

The CVP lecture and lab looked at physio interventions for respiratory disorders: breathing control techniques, relaxation positions, postural and autogenic drainage, flutter/acapella and PEP (positive expiratory pressure), percussion/vibration. We also looked at inhalers, spacers, nebulisers and oxygen therapy devices.



Cultural competence lab had us reflecting on our prejudices, culture and building rapport by talking about our ancestry/family history and ties to regions of the world/NZ as is the cultural norm with Maori greetings (rather than introducing ourselves and getting straight to the point of what brings them in to the clinic).

In social events this week, we had an inter-faculty quiz night on Thursday and a piss-up on Friday!



Coming up next week is the annual physio ball!

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 I spent some time browsing around the internet for more physio memes!  
I'm definitely blurring the line between good humour and poor taste with a few of these.












Hopefully you got a chuckle from a few of those!