The Osteopathic Lyceum
The Osteopathic Lyceum
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Відео

Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 52: Only Move Them As Far As Is Needed, Not How Far You Think They can Go
Переглядів 6314 годин тому
Here we discuss how those sensations you cannot detect in the patient matter in how you apply treatment while being guided by the barrier concept
Osteopathic Treatment Concepts Demonstrated: Soft Tissues of the Hip
Переглядів 308День тому
Here we demonstrate treatment approaches to the soft tissues of the hip with a patient in prone, lateral recumbent, and supine
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 51: The Data Says Something is Happening
Переглядів 33День тому
Here we present early data from experiments performed by students of the Osteopathic Lyceum. The data does show some signal of treatment of the cervical column and the application of CV4 both having an aggregate positive impact on heart rate and blood pressure. We discuss the observation as well as what it may or may not suggest.
Osteopathic Concepts Demonstrated: Prone Erector Mass
Переглядів 13714 днів тому
Here we demonstrate some of the intricate details of working with the erector mass with a patient in prone
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 50: Understand the Limits Prior to Usage
Переглядів 19514 днів тому
Here we discuss the usefulness of actually examining research to understand the limitations it presents prior to using it as an explanation for any manual therapy intervention
Osteopathic Treatment Concepts Demonstrated: Direct Barrier Passive Treatment Details 1
Переглядів 21521 день тому
Here we demonstrate some small and important details about making direct barrier osteopathic treatment effective
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 49: The Power of Parsimony
Переглядів 1721 день тому
Here we use the abstract from an experiment based article in the International Journal of Osteopathic Medicine (www.journalofosteopathicmedicine.com/article/S1746-0689(24)00010-5/abstract) to discuss the principle of parsimony and how important it is for both osteopathic practice and osteopathic education
Osteopathic Treatment Concepts Demonstrated: Patient Active Simplified 2
Переглядів 461Місяць тому
Here we demonstrate how the heuristic of Relational Motion can make patient active treatment approaches work in the shoulder girdle
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 48: Ideology and Regulation
Переглядів 27Місяць тому
Here we once again discuss the issues with having and idea at the top of a hierarchy, especially one without appropriate sensitivity to shared reality. We also discuss regulatory frameworks in the osteopathic profession and possible pros and cons with them.
Osteopathic Treatment Concepts Demonstrated: Patient Active Simplified 1
Переглядів 171Місяць тому
Here we demonstrate how the heuristic of Relational Motion can make patient active treatment of the neck easier
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 47: Education Delivery is not an Administrative Task
Переглядів 30Місяць тому
Here we look at, and discuss, the CEN (European Standards) Document for education delivery in osteopathy
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip External Rotation
Переглядів 77Місяць тому
Here we discuss areas of consideration for assessment and treatment of hip external rotation
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 46: Reductionism will Help Osteopathy Understand Itself
Переглядів 37Місяць тому
Here we discuss reductionism, complexity, the philosophy of science, cognitive load theory, the barrier concept, normal human variability, conscious cognitive processing capacity, and how these all come together to build a picture that, at the current time, osteopathy is full of too many erroneous assumptions and needs to leverage reductionism to minimize them
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Internal Rotation
Переглядів 61Місяць тому
Here we discuss areas of consideration for assessment and treatment of hip internal rotation
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 45: Far Transfer and the Philosophy of Science are Still Sexier than EBP
Переглядів 182 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 45: Far Transfer and the Philosophy of Science are Still Sexier than EBP
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Adduction
Переглядів 382 місяці тому
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Adduction
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 44: Walking Through the Abstract
Переглядів 222 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 44: Walking Through the Abstract
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Abduction
Переглядів 612 місяці тому
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Abduction
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 43: Evidence Based Practice with Weak Evidence?
Переглядів 322 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 43: Evidence Based Practice with Weak Evidence?
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Extension
Переглядів 562 місяці тому
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Extension
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 42: Forget Critical Thinking, Far Transfer is Sexier
Переглядів 292 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 42: Forget Critical Thinking, Far Transfer is Sexier
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Flexion
Переглядів 673 місяці тому
Osteopathic Considerations: Hip Flexion
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 41: Search Right
Переглядів 453 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 41: Search Right
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 40: Dear Osteopathy You, Can Do a Better Job Testing Learners
Переглядів 413 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 40: Dear Osteopathy You, Can Do a Better Job Testing Learners
Osteopathic Considerations: Finger Movements
Переглядів 3123 місяці тому
Osteopathic Considerations: Finger Movements
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 39: From a Byte of Information to Practice Management
Переглядів 313 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 39: From a Byte of Information to Practice Management
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 38: Dr. Sandra Monteiro Round 2
Переглядів 583 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 38: Dr. Sandra Monteiro Round 2
Osteopathic Considerations: Wrist Deviation
Переглядів 813 місяці тому
Osteopathic Considerations: Wrist Deviation
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 37: EE Tucker Said Don't Hurt Them
Переглядів 154 місяці тому
Osteopathic Lyceum Podcast 37: EE Tucker Said Don't Hurt Them

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @mowa99
    @mowa99 День тому

    Nice

  • @elizabethkormanik479
    @elizabethkormanik479 15 днів тому

    Excellent demo Sam! Great to have this to review, thank you 🙏

  • @user-yz8ri9sr9f
    @user-yz8ri9sr9f Місяць тому

    Great job Sam!

    • @sjam1981
      @sjam1981 Місяць тому

      Thank you very much!

  • @TheStizzel
    @TheStizzel Місяць тому

    First principle :-)

  • @user-yz8ri9sr9f
    @user-yz8ri9sr9f Місяць тому

    Love that you mentioned my thesis topic in this video!

    • @sjam1981
      @sjam1981 Місяць тому

      You are doing great work on it!

  • @StephanieJarman
    @StephanieJarman 4 місяці тому

    What about temperature? I find my running is improved when my muscles are warm - Is the treatment space temperature a factor? What would the ideal temperature be?

    • @sjam1981
      @sjam1981 4 місяці тому

      It is rare that a practitioner would purposely make a room warm or cold but, for many, a temperature in either direction could make them uncomfortable. With respect to physical performance, very very generally being warm has benefits while endurance based activities there can be a point where excessive heat makes one pay a price

    • @StephanieJarman
      @StephanieJarman 4 місяці тому

      Thank you for replying, I appreciate your explanation. When you were speaking about identifying pain, encouraging noting what part of the treatment elicited pain and making suggestions on ways to mitigate pain, I thought warmth would be useful. My experience is that warmth generally has relaxing properties. I feel like a relaxed patient would be less likely to exaggerate imagined pain resulting in offering resistance and ridigity. Reading your response that is not correct or correct enough to adopt into pain mitigation strategies

    • @sjam1981
      @sjam1981 4 місяці тому

      @@StephanieJarman it may be a possible help for some individuals however, people vary quite a bit so the thing that very few need or want can be addressed when needed. Preferences are also not always clinically useful (aka what someone likes may not be clinically important or relevant at certain points).

  • @zoobdo
    @zoobdo 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for the continuing content you provide a unique insight into manual therapy on youtube!

    • @sjam1981
      @sjam1981 5 місяців тому

      Thank you very much for the kind words!

  • @geraldmatthewwebb4538
    @geraldmatthewwebb4538 6 місяців тому

    Do you ever teach in person?

    • @sjam1981
      @sjam1981 6 місяців тому

      In-person teaching is something I do. Feel free to look at the website (osteopathiclyceum.com) for a bit more info

  • @user-yo5dn3vl6x
    @user-yo5dn3vl6x 6 місяців тому

    You're incredible! I'm loving these videos. Do you post videos where you're explaining in detail what you're doing

  • @arshspinecare
    @arshspinecare 7 місяців тому

    God bless you❤

  • @arshspinecare
    @arshspinecare 7 місяців тому

    Thank you so much for your valuable knowledge❤

  • @ZENSIBLE
    @ZENSIBLE 7 місяців тому

    I love your Videos! More People need to be aware that Not All Osteopaths rely on HVLA. Like Chiros in General Do so. There's so much More to Osteopathy than the public in general realize! Keep up the Great work 👏🏿 👏🏿 👏🏿

  • @RideBound
    @RideBound Рік тому

    Osteopathy is meant to be learned through anatomical study and apprenticeship. While I appreciate the attempt of some of the old guard to elaborate on phenomenon through ideas, I draw the line at being forced to memorize and regurgitate these plausible but unfounded ideas. At best, these ideas are unnecessary, clinically useless, and turns people away from the practice- but at worst they prevent osteopaths from improving our practice, as you mentioned. Huge problem with osteopathic examination in the US as we are forced to learn many of the models you mentioned.

    • @sjam1981
      @sjam1981 Рік тому

      Thank you kindly for sharing the frustration from your educational experience. I will continue to share how these claims were built in a faulty way while also acknowledging that there are stable observations of positive outcomes from interacting with identifiable motion dysfunctions.

  • @melissab8411
    @melissab8411 Рік тому

    the problem with reviews...as someone writing one.... is they are incredibly restrictive as you say, and miss a huge amount of evidence. a lack of published papers does not mean a lack of effect and it is too bad people don't always understand that. the research world needs to get more in line with rehabilitative clinical practice. thanks for the vid

    • @sjam1981
      @sjam1981 Рік тому

      Thank you for the comment! As a written addition I'll suggest that the general state of available literature is also a challenge. If a field has a body of literature that only asks one form of question then the other forms aren't available. I will continue to argue that the profession of osteopathy would greatly benefit from a more functional understanding of the philosophy of science so that all forms of inquiry will be effectively available instead of the narrow set currently used.