"South Florida Physical Therapy is guided at all times by the values of compassion and respect for the dignity of every person. Our mission is to serve the people of this community through providing high quality, cost effective health services.

Our goal is to remain on the leading edge of medical advances in rehabilitative treatment and injury prevention."

-Daniel Deane, P.T., M.S.
eHEALTH NEWSLETTERS
Using Physical Therapy for a Safer Run - 07/26/2010
Can Exercise Prevent Falls? - 07/12/2010
Concussions Call for Caution - 07/08/2010
Weight-bearing Following Total Knee Replacement - 06/30/2010
Should You Lose the Shoes? - 06/25/2010


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Physical therapists have the rewarding opportunity to make a positive difference in the quality of people's lives. Their work involves extensive contact with people-with both patients and other health care professionals.

Physical therapy takes a personal and direct approach to meeting an individual's health needs and wants, whether a patient's goal is walking independently or breaking a high-jump record. Along with the patient and other health care practitioners, the physical therapist shares the hard work and commitment needed to accomplish each individual patient's goals. For people with health problems resulting from injury or disease, the physical therapists assists in the recovery process to make them stronger, relieve their pain, and help them to regain use of an affected limb or to relearn such activities of daily living as walking, dressing, or bathing. Because recovery does not end for patients as soon as they are out of the physical therapist's direct care, physical therapists must teach patients and their families what to do so that healing continues through self-care at home.

Physical therapists also seek to keep people well and safe from injury. They do this by teaching the importance of fitness and showing people how to avoid hurting their bodies at work or play. By designing and supervising individualized conditioning programs, physical therapists promote optimal physical performance and help health-conscious people to increase their overall fitness level and muscular strength and endurance.

A Variety of Responsibilities and Settings
Physical therapists are respected members of the health care team. They work with other health care providers, such as physicians, occupational therapists, rehabilitation nurses, dentists, psychologists, social workers, podiatrists, and speech pathologists and audiologists.

Although a large number of physical therapists work in hospitals, now more than 70 percent can be found in private physical therapy offices, rehabilitation centers, community health centers, nursing homes, home health agencies, corporate or industrial health centers, sports facilities, research institutions, schools, pediatric centers, and colleges and universities. Some physical therapists work as employees in these settings, while others are self-employed as owners or partners in private practices. Indeed, settings, employment arrangements, career responsibilities, and career opportunities depend on the interests and skills of each practitioner.

The Physical Therapist Assistant
Physical therapist assistants work under the supervision of a physical therapist. Their duties include assisting the physical therapist in implementing treatment programs according to the plan of care, training patients in exercises and activities of daily living, conducting treatments, using special equipment, administering modalities and other treatment procedures, and reporting to the physical therapist on the patient's response.

Physical therapist assistants must complete a 2-year education program, usually offered in a community or junior college. The course of study includes 1 year of general education and 1 year of technical courses on physical therapy procedures and clinical experience. Graduates receive an associate's degree.

Licensure or registration is not required in all states for the physical therapist assistant to work. The states that require licensure stipulate specific educational and examination criteria. Complete information on practice acts and regulations can be obtained from the state licensing boards.