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presented by James M. Elliott, PT, PhD, FAPTA and David M. Walton, PT, PhD
Financial: James M. Elliott receives compensation from MedBridge for the production of this course. He is the coauthor of Musculoskeletal Pain: Assessment, Prediction and Treatment and is involved with a variety of NIH projects.
Nonfinancial: James M. Elliott has no competing nonfinancial interests or relationships with regard to the content presented in this course.
Financial: David M. Walton receives compensation from MedBridge for the production of this course. He is the coauthor of Musculoskeletal Pain: Assessment, Prediction and Treatment and is an employee at Western University Canada.
Nonfinancial: David M. Walton has no competing nonfinancial interests or relationships with regard to the content presented in this course.
Satisfactory completion requirements: All disciplines must complete learning assessments to be awarded credit, no minimum score required unless otherwise specified within the course.
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James M. Elliott, PT, PhD, FAPTA
James completed his PhD at the University of Queensland, Australia (UQ) in 2007 and a post-doctoral fellowship (2008-2010) at UQ. The focus of his interdisciplinary laboratory is to quantify altered spinal cord anatomy and whole-body skeletal muscle degeneration as potential markers of recovery following spinal trauma. He has been successful as an independent investigator as…
Read full bioDavid M. Walton, PT, PhD
David Walton (@uwo_dwalton) completed his BScPT in physical therapy at the University of Western Ontario in 1999, an MSc in neuroscience in 2001, and a PhD in health and rehabilitation science from Western in 2010. Following a combined 10 years of clinical practice, he is now an associate professor in the School of Physical Therapy…
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1. Head and Neck Trauma in a Historical Context
Place clinical practice in the context of trauma and power, and consider mechanisms of how prior trauma can manifest in unanticipated ways when providing rehabilitation for current neck dysfunction, including the intersection between trauma, pain, and physical and mental health.
2. Principles of Trauma- and Violence-Informed Care
This chapter presents and provides brief demonstrations of the key principles of trauma- and violence-informed care.
3. Toward Trauma-Informed Treatment for Neck Dysfunction
This chapter outlines an approach to treatment of neck pain that acknowledges the messiness of human experience and creates space for authentic empowerment and patient-partnered care, considers how responsiveness and reflexivity can be centered in rehabilitation practice, and applies these tools to current practices for neck pain management.
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