Bas and Barrett I respect both of you and your thoughts, thanks for your input.
However I don't think the parachute analogy is a good one, because I can test for placebo effects of wearing a parachute vs actually opening one, and multiple sizes of parachutes to determine which if any are effective at preventing death jumping out of a plane. I can't test anything realted to SC in any setting to know if I'm doing anything, catalyzing anything, more than placebo.
All I'm asking, why is this method better or more defensible than ginger doing CM, travell releasing trigger points, flynn's HVLAs, or Barnes doing CS. All of these examples claim they decrease protective motor output and encourage freedom of movement following. It seems SC and ideomotion thoery as it applies to treating pain gets a pass when others do not.
In regards to practices: I would think patients in a SNF would benefit from effort, sweat, motivation, and goal setting to help them transition home. Wondering why that is more wrong vs utilizing SC in a SNF.
However I don't think the parachute analogy is a good one, because I can test for placebo effects of wearing a parachute vs actually opening one, and multiple sizes of parachutes to determine which if any are effective at preventing death jumping out of a plane. I can't test anything realted to SC in any setting to know if I'm doing anything, catalyzing anything, more than placebo.
All I'm asking, why is this method better or more defensible than ginger doing CM, travell releasing trigger points, flynn's HVLAs, or Barnes doing CS. All of these examples claim they decrease protective motor output and encourage freedom of movement following. It seems SC and ideomotion thoery as it applies to treating pain gets a pass when others do not.
In regards to practices: I would think patients in a SNF would benefit from effort, sweat, motivation, and goal setting to help them transition home. Wondering why that is more wrong vs utilizing SC in a SNF.
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