venta: (Default)
venta ([personal profile] venta) wrote2016-03-22 06:41 pm

Put your hands on your hips. Bring your knees in tight.

A quick request for data points (or actual genuine knowledge, that would also work ;)

I've started getting physio for the duff knees (of which more later). I'm pretty sure that, when I was a kid and there was always someone in my class with a pot arm (usually for reasons of a falling-off-bike nature), no one was offered physio afterwards. A friend tells me that he did not get physio for a broken leg in the late 80s. A colleague who fractured both her arms a couple of years ago did.

So... is it that NHS treatment of injuries has moved on and decided that yes, physio is a bloomin' useful part of recovery? Or is it just that physio isn't offered to kids, on the grounds that they're bound to start running about as soon as physically possible?
ext_8151: (moffedille)

[identity profile] ylla.livejournal.com 2016-03-22 07:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Or that it's really useful for e.g. a broken elbow and doesn't make a lot of different for e.g. a clean break in the middle of a long bone? I don't know the answer, though.

[identity profile] venta.livejournal.com 2016-03-22 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)

That is an interesting point I hadn't considered!