28Nov

Impact of Knee Pain and physical disability on the economy of India

Today if you tune into any news channels, you’ll see people debating (even shouting) about how the Indian economy is growing too slowly, what steps the government should take, and why there’s a need to bring reforms – the list is neverending. While there’s a genuine need to discuss such issues, every single media agency missed out on one silent parasite affecting the Indian economy – physical disability. With around 15 crore Indians suffering from knee pain alone, incidents of knee arthritis are about 15 times higher than in most …
21Nov

Is Knee Surgery Really The Best Way Out?

There has never been a shortage in the number of attractive statistics supporting any type of surgery. Why would ailments related to your knee be any different? Individuals suffering from knee pain often consult an orthopedic doctor who then usually takes them in for either an X-ray investigation or an MRI, depending on the patient’s history of course. The reports generally reveal degenerative changes or ligament tears. The obvious prescription for this – Knee Surgery. Little do people know that surgery for most of these cases is very much avoidable. …
14Nov

Patient Adherence to Physiotherapy

It is well-known that the field of physiotherapy, like many other forms of healthcare, is not immune to poor patient adherence. Although the extent of non-adherence isn’t quantified well enough, the problem is fairly recognized and understood. Patient adherence reports are limited to the early 1950s and late 1990s, making them outdated and not statistically accurate or consistent with the current decade or population. Why is patient adherence to physiotherapy important in the first place? As a clinician, is it necessary to understand the extent of adherence your patient has …
08Nov

The Physiotherapy Paradox: A Doctor’s Word is Only as Good as the Patient’s Trust

“Oh, I can’t take it anymore!”, “This pain is tearing me apart!” , “Please help me feel better doctor.” These are just a few of the lines that physiotherapists have to listen to on a daily basis. Looking at this, you would imagine that a patient would follow anything that a doctor prescribes them to do right? If only that were true. Studies suggest that roughly 80% of patients don’t follow up on a doctor’s consultation after the first sitting. Even among those who do, the dropout rate mid-treatment is …