Jared K. Powell

ORCID: 0000-0003-2495-5322
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Shoulder Injury and Treatment
  • Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation
  • Shoulder and Clavicle Injuries
  • Orthopedic Surgery and Rehabilitation
  • Medical research and treatments
  • Health Sciences Research and Education
  • Stress and Burnout Research
  • Occupational Therapy Practice and Research
  • Sports injuries and prevention
  • Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills
  • Innovations in Medical Education
  • Nerve Injury and Rehabilitation
  • Nursing Roles and Practices

Bond University
2022-2024

Abstract Objective There is no established consensus for screening the spine in patients with shoulder pain. The aim of this study was to explore role pain and generate a set recommendations assessing potential involvement Methods A modified Delphi conducted through use an international physical therapist’s expert panel. Three domains (clinical reasoning, history, examination) were evaluated using Likert scale, defined as Aiken Validity Index ≥0.7. Results Twenty-two therapists participated....

10.1093/ptj/pzae133 article EN Physical Therapy 2024-09-06

Abstract Background Exercise therapy is a popular non‐surgical treatment to help manage individuals with rotator cuff‐related shoulder pain (RCRSP) and recommended in all clinical practice guidelines. Due modest effect sizes, low quality evidence, uncertainty relating efficacy, mechanism(s) of benefit, exercise as therapeutic intervention has been the subject increasing scrutiny. Aims The aim this critical review lay out where purported uncertainties for RCRSP exist by exploring relevant...

10.1002/msc.1879 article EN cc-by Musculoskeletal Care 2024-04-02

Rotator cuff-related shoulder pain (RCRSP) is the most common form of pain. Exercise therapy a first-line recommended treatment for RCRSP. However, causal mechanisms underpinning benefits exercise RCRSP are not well understood. Moreover, how individuals with lived experience believe helped or did help them unknown. This study aimed to gain insights into influenced their and identify clinical conditions that promoted inhibited beliefs.This qualitative was underpinned by critical realist...

10.1093/ptj/pzad088 article EN cc-by Physical Therapy 2023-07-11

Synopsis Progressive resistance exercise, in isolation or combination with other noninvasive therapies such as therapeutic touch, is the first-line approach to managing nontraumatic rotator cuff–related shoulder pain (RCRSP). Resistance exercise may be effective for people RCRSP secondary improving mechanical features of shoulder, including strength, kinematics, and muscle timing activation. However, strength gains are often small clinically unimportant when measured during clinical trials....

10.2519/jospt.2021.10199 article EN Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy 2021-04-01

This cross-sectional international survey explored the beliefs of physiotherapists regarding possible mechanisms benefit exercise for rotator cuff-related shoulder pain (RCRSP). Clinical practice guidelines recommend use as a primary treatment to help people with RCRSP, but explanations provided patients by its mechanism effect is unknown.Registered were surveyed about 'how and why' they believe provides clinical RCRSP. Information was also gathered commonly used types preferred diagnostic...

10.1002/msc.1699 article EN Musculoskeletal Care 2022-09-11

SYNOPSIS: This Viewpoint provides practical guidance for early-career musculoskeletal clinicians who are navigating the complexities of clinical practice. Key themes embracing uncertainty, seeing and treating whole person, avoiding judgemental mindsets, shared decision-making, focusing on building strong therapeutic relationships finding a work-related niche that resonates with one’s own passions strengths. We encourage to consume information carefully in an era social media health...

10.2519/jospt.2024.12676 article EN Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy 2024-09-17
Coming Soon ...