Posts Tagged ‘physiotherapy’

Solihull Physiotherapist treats 2012 Olympic Athlete hopeful

Monday, October 17th, 2011

Nathan in action

Solihull physiotherapist and osteopath John Williams is supporting 400m hurdler Nathan Woodward in his attempt to gain a place at the 2012 London Olympic Games.  John and his staff who treat elite athlete Nathan have always considered that Nathan is a class act and will reach the top.  John spotted his talent 6 years ago at Tamworth Athletics Club and decided to help him by offering free treatment and sports massage up until the 2012 games.

Nathan has progressed well as is now considered a real prospect for the future.  The staff at Atlas Sports Injury Clinic all wish Nathan the best of luck in his preparation and look forward to watching him compete.

Atlas Sports Injury Clinic is part of the services available to anyone looking for accurate sports injury diagnosis and a fast recovery treatment plan.  Visit the website   www.solihullphysiotherapist.co.uk   or telephone 01827 59943

Solihull Physiotherapist warns of Knee Injuries from Skiing and offers advice for Birmingham Skiers.

Sunday, January 9th, 2011

Solihull physiotherapist John Williams of Atlas Sports Injury Clinic in South Birmingham warns that skiers are at high risk of knee injuries when on the ski slopes. Physiotherapy for Birmingham knee injuries increases in the winter mainly from ski related injuries.

Snow boarding and snowboarders tend to have less knee injuries but replace this with back injury and wrist injuries from falling on outstretched hands.

This time of year, after Christmas, many people take skiing holidays overseas and end up injured after an accident.  Most skiing injuries are as a result of a fall and minor falls at very slow speed are more dangerous to knees than a high speed tumble.

As a novice you could slip on the icy surface and lose your balance, falling backwards and twisting, even from a stationary position, can tear knee ligaments.  Generally from a situation like this the bindings on the ski’s will not release and result in excess stresses on the knees.

Medial Collateral ligaments will sprain if twisted or the joint line of the knee is opened up and severe pain and swelling can result making skiing virtually impossible.  If more severe, then anterior cruciate ligaments can tear making your knee unstable.  It will then give way on you at any time and can become dangerous.

If anything like this happens to you on your first days of your holiday it is not only painful and frustrating having to sit out the rest of your holiday and watch everyone else ski but you have the added complication of lost time off work when you return home and even knee surgery in the case of a cruciate ligament rupture.

So how can we help prevent such knee injuries from happening?

High speed falls usually result in the ski bindings releasing and the long levers of the ski’s do not contribute to excess knee stress.  Slower falls and loss of balance is more likely to injure the knees as they twist.

A hinged knee brace worn on each knee as part of your kit should be a priority.  It protects your knee ligaments and will lessen the chances of a knee injury and ruptured knee ligaments.  Prevention is better than cure and once purchased, this will be a valuable piece of equipment, similar to that of a crash helmet for all forms of cycling.  Many people wear knee braces when skiing after sustaining an injury instead of using the knee braces preventing one.  A knee support is a valuable aid in preventing a knee injury

On average a good hinged knee brace will cost about £50 so a pair will set you back £100.  When you compare this to a ruined holiday, lots of pain and lost time off work, this is a small price to pay for regular safe skiing holidays.

If you are unfortunate enough to pick up a skiing injury then contact the sports injury team at Atlas Sports Injury Clinic where the expertise of our Solihull sports physiotherapists and osteopaths can help you recover from injury quicker.

The sports injury clinic is based near Solihull in Birmingham and has another branch in Tamworth Staffordshire.

A website has been set up www.solihullphysiotherapist.co.uk which has all the contact details. Sports injury advice and appointments can be made by telephoning 01827 59943 for both Birmingham and Tamworth clinics

Solihull physiotherapist receives signed photo from Silver Medalist in Delhi

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

Solihull physiotherapist John Williams received a signed action photograph of Birmingham Elite Athlete Meghan Beesley before christmas.  Meghan collected a silver medal in the 2010 Commonwealth games in Delhi India during the 400m senior ladies relay race.

Meghan also made the senior ladies final in the 400 hurdles which is a stepping stone event towards the 2012 London Olympic Games.

Physiotherapy in Solihull for the Birmingham athlete is an important part of her regime and preparation for races.  Regular sports massage from Solihull physio John allows examination of muscles and joints which may highlight potential problems.  This allows early intervention to prevent unwanted injuries.  Sports massage also loosens tight muscles and stretches help keep the body supple and injury free.

Birmingham runner Meghan in Delhi

Solihull Physiotherapist compares private physiotherapy and NHS treatment.

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

Solihull Physiotherapist John Williams considers differences between musculo- skeletal physiotherapists in the NHS and in private practice.  The Birmingham based physiotherapist has a useful website www.solihullphysiotherapist.co.uk where you can view information on back pain and other common complaints

As a Birmingham physiotherapist who has always worked in private practice and never spent any time working within the NHS John finds it interesting to talk to other local Birmingham physiotherapists who have either done both or have just spent their time providing physiotherapy services within the NHS.

There does appear to be a fundamental difference between the private sector physiotherapy and the NHS version.  As you might imagine the time constraints within the NHS are a factor and with long waiting lists designated as a government target to address, this has affected frontline physiotherapy services.

In the private sector the customer’s needs are very important, physiotherapists can offer as much time as necessary in order to treat a patient.  If a patient is not happy with the treatment or recovery progress is not as expected, they are at liberty to change from one practice to another without notice.

In private practice you survive or fail by your results.  Sadly this is not the case in the NHS.  It appears that successful treatment outcomes are not measured and instead only waiting times.  How often do we hear politicians report that they have successfully reduced waiting times to see a doctor, surgeon or physiotherapist.   This may be so, however being seen is no good if the treatment is not successful.

Many patients complain that they turn up at a physiotherapy appointment after waiting a number of weeks, which in some cases can be 12 weeks, only to be given a sheet of exercises to be done at home.   No doubt this may be disputed by some, however it happens far too often and patients report that they attended for NHS physiotherapy which was a total waste of time!

If this occurred in private practice, then the physiotherapist would soon be out of work.  As you can imagine faced with long waiting lists to cope with and a mandate to drastically reduce these waiting lists, management have to design a plan to achieve this.

As the targets are “being seen” and not successful outcomes, then handing a sheet of exercises and sending them away can tick the box of “being seen” and one physiotherapist can see a lot of patients in an hour.  If the same physiotherapist had to examine and treat the patient, then reducing the waiting list would not be achieved.

Having talked this through with some NHS physiotherapists they feel frustrated that they are not allowed to treat patients anymore and the emphasis seems to be on the patient self managing their own condition.

In the cases of low back pain, which has to be the most common complaint of all, the patient experience is often very poor if using the NHS.  First a visit to their GP will usually result in pain killers or anti-inflammatory oral medication.  As most GP’s have little training in diagnosing the cause of back pain the patient usually is usually sent home without a proper examination and diagnosis.

If the pain persists then they are often referred for physiotherapy which can take months before they get an appointment.  Imagine after suffering back pain for months and then eventually attending your physiotherapy appointment to be handed a sheet of exercises and sent away without any treatment.

The physiotherapy profession in musculo-skeletal is not being seen to be effective by patients however much the government announce success.  The current system is not designed to help patients, its designed purely to address targets of waiting times.

As long as this continues physiotherapists in private practice will pick up work by default because patients cannot get the care they need under the NHS.

This is great news for our private practices but a sad reflection on a well established health service which was designed to meet the needs of the public and now seems to have lost its way.

As a private practitioner one could never work in a system that wasn’t patient focused,

Good practitioners are being wasted and eventually will lose heart.  You can only swim against the tide for so long before you tire and give up.

As for the patient , they have choices, pay additional fees for their treatments and choose when and where they are treated in the private sector, or take up the free NHS programme after a substantial wait.   Not everyone can afford to pay privately and sadly it is those people we are letting down.

The sooner the NHS scrap targets that are not designed to measure successful outcomes the better.  If not, more and more skillful physiotherapists will leave the NHS to enter the private sector where they will get better job satisfaction and in many cases, better pay.

Solihull Physiotherapist wanted at Atlas Physiotherapy Clinic in Birmingham and Tamworth

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Atlas Pain Relief Centre are looking to recruit a chartered physiotherapist for their Birmingham physiotherapy clinic and their Tamworth physiotherapy clinic.

Physiotherapy opportunities are scarce and physiotherapy jobs in the private sector more so.

Applicants who are happy to work in musculo skeletal and sports injuries are preferred and experience in acute and chronic back pain is an advantage.   Atlas have physiotherapy vacancies for enthusiastic physiotherapists.

Applicants can visit the website www.solihullphysiotherapist.co.uk  for details

Solihull Physiotherapist provides Sports Massage at pop concert in Tamworth

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Solihull Physiotherapist secures contract to provide Sports Massage, physiotherapy and Injury Cover at the 2010 Tamworth pop concert.  www.solihullphysiotherapist.co.uk

 

Tamworth onsite sports massage

The Tamworth Party in the Park has been booked for 17 an 18 July 2010 and  looks to bring top acts to Tamworth Staffordshire.  Playing an open air concert in the Castle grounds in Tamworth near Lichfield, the concert will take place over 2 days making it a great weekend for music fans.

Variety is the spice of life and a range of music tastes should be catered for over the two days.  Westlife, McFly, Saturdays, Peter Andre, Alexandra Bourke, and finalists from XFactor together with popular rap artists are rumoured to be on stage.

Sunday looks to cater for the past masters of music with Brian Ferry, Roxy Music Spandau Ballet and Ultravox among others who may show up.

Solihull Physiotherapist John Williams and his massage team will be working back stage to provide all the artists with massage and any injury treatment they might require.

John who leads the Atlas Sports Massage team who also look after the models and dancers at the Birmingham Clothes Show Live every year provides a valuable service to the organisers and celebrity guests.

John works from the Atlas Sports Injury Clinics in Solihull and Tamworth and is heavily involved in treating runners who are currently training for the 2010 Virgin London Marathon.  Running injuries are now increasing due to the increased mileage required to train for the London Marathon.

For a sports massage you can contact 0121 745 8792

Solihull Physiotherapist voices concerns over Private Health Insurance Companies

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Private Health Insurance participation is growing due to the long waiting times for treatment and the perceived improvement of service you would receive under the private sector.  This is looking under threat now and needs to be addressed before things deteriorate further.

Over the last 3 years we have seen one private health insurance company reduce their fees payable to private physiotherapists twice.  In total the amounts payable now stand at £30 per visit which has to be invoiced to the insurance company and would probably be received 30 days later.

Most policy holders seem to have an excess attached to their policy which usually means when the invoice arrives its value reflects this.  We then need to chase the patient for the excess payment who has long since completed their treatment and is sometimes reluctant to pay.

The introduction of Physiotherapy Referral Agencies into the private Health Insurance arena has further squeezed the margins for private physiotherapists.  These agencies secure contracts with the health insurance companies and act as a go between.  Obviously they take a percentage and thus negotiate the fees payable to the physiotherapist down in order to make more profit.

If you want the work you have to accept the reduced fees and some of these agencies will favour the lowest fees for their referrals. 

Another aspect that is of concern is that the physiotherapy agencies will apply an NHS mentality to the treatment protocols.  By this I refer to the concept of home management and exercise prescription as the treatment plan.  Mostly the client is offered 4-6 treatment sessions of physiotherapy treatments and if more sessions are required there seems a reluctance to be able to get authorisation.

The majority of these agencies now require Initial assessment reports, update treatment reports and discharge reports filling in online which is time consuming and unless this is carried out during the appointment is more cost to the practitioner.

If practitioners have to do this during the treatment session then the patient receives very little hands on treatment.

The whole patient experience seems to be overlooked once again and by adopting this NHS style of cost cutting approach the patient’s treatment appears secondary to the business aspect.  Hitting targets and making things cost effective are the focus and instructions are highlighted about delivering reports on time otherwise you will lose the work.

Having fully understood the NHS system of physiotherapy, it appears not good for patients.  Targets focus on waiting times and not patient satisfaction and effective treatment.  One would think that once the patient decides this NHS system is non effective and results in long waiting times and they opt to pay a premium for a private health insurance scheme that things would improve.

The only thing that seems to be improved is the waiting times.  The physiotherapy treatment’s seems to be being controlled in an NHS style of management now and thus it will be forced to deliver the same service.

It’s ironic that by going private, because you are dissatisfied with the physiotherapy service you receive on the NHS, you expect something better!  In fact you are likely getting little better in the private sector.

The best way to get value is to find an insurance company who does not use a “go between” or request that you pay for the treatments yourself and claim the money back from them.  Although this is not satisfactory, at least you get to decide who treats you and if you are paying the physiotherapist yourself you can evaluate if you feel the treatment meets your expectations.

The concern is the way this section of healthcare is heading because the tendency is to try and reduce physiotherapy fees to practitioners, not only fees are reduced but also allocated treatment sessions in order to save money.  This means your practitioner receives less money for their time and has less time to try and help you with your particular problem.  The result being you are receiving a second rate service while paying for private health insurance.

If all the physiotherapy practitioners insisted upon their full treatment fees and asked the patients to pay the balance between the full fee and the reduced fees available from the insurance companies, it would highlight to the patients that their insurance company are not offering sufficient cover for their needs.  This hopefully would result in many patients cancelling their policies and transferring them to other more reputable companies who offer to pay the physiotherapists a proper rate for the job.

It would not take long for the insurance company to revise this strategy of reducing physiotherapy fees.  Unfortunately as physiotherapists are flooding into the private sector after graduating because of the lack of opportunities for work in the NHS, their will always be someone willing to accept work at reduced fees. 

This means that this system is unlikely to change and will get more and more cut throat resulting in practitioners either turning away work, working for reduced fees and giving patients less time or treating patient in a multi bed situation ( patients treated with others in separate cubicles by one physiotherapist)

The advice is to think carefully before you choose your Private Health Insurance provider.  Check out points I have highlighted and see if you have restrictions on physiotherapy fees.  Ask for how much they allow for treatment fees and then compare this to the fees charged by the physiotherapist you wish to use. 

At Atlas Pain Relief Centre we are totally patient focussed and want to help you. www.solihullphysiotherapist.co.uk

Restrictions imposed upon the physiotherapists make this very difficult and in private clinics may result in a 2 tier treatment protocol.

This could result in better treatment for private self funding patients and a lesser option for Private Health Insurance patients which has been introduced because of the cost cutting activity of the Private Health Insurance Industry.

Welcome to Solihull Physiotherapist Birmingham News

Monday, February 22nd, 2010
Solihull Physiotherapist looks after Peter Shilton, England Goalkeeper

Solihull Physiotherapist looks after Peter Shilton, England Goalkeeper

 

Physiotherapy in Solihull Birmingham from Atlas Solihull Physiotherapists.  View the testimonial video on the website www.solihullphysiotherapist.co.uk  and see why Atlas Physiotherapist John Williams and his team of Solihull Physiotherapists are the people to see for your physiotherapy and Sports Injury needs.

Birmingham Clothes Show Live gets the Solihull Physiotherapist treatment

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Tipped for the top!

Tipped for the top!

Radio and TV presenter Fearne Cotton and new boyband sensation“Vice” get the Atlas touch at the Birmingham Clothes Show Live 2009

 

 

Solihull physiotherapist John Williams looks after new boyband “Vice” during their gig at the Birmingham Clothes Show 2009.

Tipped to be a big hit with their new single “bounce” the 4 man band perform an impressive song and dance routine that send the girls hysterical.

The Solihull physiotherapist supported the band, catwalk models and dancers through 7 shows a day over a 6 day period at the Birmingham venue with physiotherapy, osteopathy and sports massage techniques.

Solihull physiotherapist John works from the Atlas Sports Injury Clinic in Hall Green Birmingham.  The clinic has an excellent physiotherapy clinic and supporting website www.solihullphysiotherapist.co.uk

Solihull Physiotherapist supports Birmingham Clothes Show

Sunday, November 29th, 2009
On Site Sports Massage

On Site Sports Massage

Solihull Physiotherapist John Williams and his team of Sports Massage therapists will once again provide support for the Birmingham Clothes Show Live event in December 2009.

Physiotherapy and Sports massage will be available for the catwalk models and dancers backstage and injury cover should it be required is available from the experienced Atlas Solihull Osteopath and Physiotherapist.

Atlas Sports Injury Clinic supply therapists to the Clothes Show and provide valuable support to the dancers and models who have a punishing 7 shows per day over 6 days at the Birmingham venue.

Massage and Sports Massage helps ease tired aching muscles and can be a valuable aid in preventing dancing injuries.

Atlas Solihull have a sports injury clinic in Hall Green Birmingham which is supported by an excellent website www.solihullsportsinjuryclinic.co.uk