Academic literature on the topic 'Emergency physiotherapy'

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Journal articles on the topic "Emergency physiotherapy"

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Fedorovich, Claudia, and Marguerite T. Littleton. "Chest Physiotherapy." Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing 9, no. 2 (March 1990): 68–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00003465-199003000-00002.

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Salt, Emma. "Effectiveness of Musculoskeletal Emergency Physiotherapy Practitioners." Open Journal of Therapy and Rehabilitation 04, no. 03 (2016): 146–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojtr.2016.43013.

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Kempson, S. M. "Physiotherapy in an accident and emergency department." Accident and Emergency Nursing 4, no. 4 (October 1996): 198–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0965-2302(96)90081-8.

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Nall, Cathy. "Primary care physiotherapy in the Emergency Department." Australian Journal of Physiotherapy 55, no. 1 (2009): 70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0004-9514(09)70072-8.

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Hackett, Claire, Jemima Boyd, Jared Bruning, Tamara Lazzarin, Kate McCleary, Marnie McGorm, Lauren O'Connor, et al. "Physiotherapy at night: An audit of after-hour physiotherapy services." Australian Critical Care 35 (2022): S22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aucc.2022.08.078.

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Sheppard, Lorraine A., Sophie Anaf, and Jane Gordon. "Patient satisfaction with physiotherapy in the emergency department." International Emergency Nursing 18, no. 4 (October 2010): 196–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ienj.2009.11.008.

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Escobio-Prieto, Isabel, Raquel Sobrino-Sánchez, José Antonio Mingorance, Manuel García-Marín, Antonio Matas-Terrón, and Manuel Albornoz-Cabello. "Analysis of the Satisfaction Degree of Students at Spain’s Physiotherapy Universities in Relation to Online Teaching during the COVID-19 Pandemic." Sustainability 13, no. 24 (December 9, 2021): 13628. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su132413628.

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Student satisfaction is a crucial aspect in the quality assessment of higher education. The aim of the present study was to assess the degree of satisfaction among students in the Faculties of physiotherapy throughout Spain concerning online teaching during the State of Emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This was a quantitative study with a cross-sectional observational design. The online questionnaire DISFISCOVID was distributed to 24 physiotherapy faculties across Spain. A sample of 348 physiotherapy students from 14 Spanish universities completed the questionnaire. It showed high reliability evidence, achieving Cronbach’s alpha indices higher than 0.870, alongside a McDonald’s ωH of 0.876. On the whole, students were not satisfied with online learning during the State of Emergency, considering it unsuitable for their learning in either the theoretical or practical field of subjects in the degree of physiotherapy. In conclusion, the perception of physiotherapy students concerning the teaching they received, as far as practical contents and assessment methods are concerned, was not very satisfactory in those Faculties in which online learning platforms were not being used beforehand, and was more satisfactory when teaching was carried out in-person in the classroom.
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Sar, Zübeyir, Mine Gülden Polat, Bahar Özgül, Onur Aydoğdu, Burcu Camcoğlu, Ahmet Hakan Acar, and Saadet Ufuk Yurdalan. "A Comparison of Three Different Physiotherapy Modalities Used in the Physiotherapy of Burns." Journal of Burn Care & Research 34, no. 5 (2013): e290-e296. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/bcr.0b013e3182789041.

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Morris, C. D., and S. J. Hawes. "The value of accident and emergency based physiotherapy services." Emergency Medicine Journal 13, no. 2 (March 1, 1996): 111–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/emj.13.2.111.

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McKiernan, Sharmaine, Pauline Chiarelli, and Helen Warren-Forward. "Diagnostic ultrasound use in physiotherapy, emergency medicine, and anaesthesiology." Radiography 16, no. 2 (May 2010): 154–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radi.2009.12.004.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Emergency physiotherapy"

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Dunford, Fiona. "Determining differences between novice and expert physiotherapists in the emergency on-call environment a vignette-based study : a thesis submitted to Auckland University of Technology in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Health Science (MHSc), 2007." Click here to access this resource online, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10292/368.

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Emergency on-call duties have been highlighted as a key stress factor in newly qualified physiotherapists whose job performance may be affected. The concept of stress relating to on-call work, the general lack of interest or confidence in the respiratory on-call field, and subsequent difficulties with recruitment and retention, pose a difficult problem for managers of services responsible for the maintenance of a competent workforce and a high standard of service provision. Differences in novice and expert physiotherapists’ patient management and clinical reasoning strategies have been previously examined in orthopaedic, neurology, domiciliary and cardiorespiratory fields. However, no such investigations have been undertaken in the field of emergency on-call. The purpose of this study was to determine if differences existed between novice and expert physiotherapists who had by definition differing levels of context-related experience within the emergency on-call environment. This study also aimed to consider what factors may influence their physiotherapy intervention for an acute cardiorespiratory patient. A purpose-designed vignette-based postal questionnaire was administered to 26 emergency on-call providers in New Zealand. The questionnaire sought demographic data, investigated participants’ attitudes towards emergency on-call service provision and presented a vignette-based clinical scenario which asked questions throughout an evolving clinical case scenario. Analysis was performed using the computer software package for social sciences, SPSS for Windows (version 14), results were analysed using descriptive statistics, and significance testing was performed using non-parametric methods. A good response rate was achieved (78.8%; n = 56). Statistically significant differences between novices and experts were determined in scores for confidence, stress, and support required, also in the factors affecting stress levels. Novices are less confident (p = < .0001), more stressed (p = < .001) and require more support than experts (p = < .001). Factors which influenced both novice, and to a lesser extent, expert stress levels when working as emergency on-call physiotherapists, were established. A relationship was determined between confidence and level of support required (r = -.65; p = < .001); confidence and amount of stress felt (r = -.58; p = < .001); and support required and stress felt (r = .47; p = < .001). Some differences were demonstrated between novice and expert physiotherapists in their answers to a clinical case scenario. Although these were not statistically significant, a trend was noted which may reflect the different clinical reasoning strategies of these physiotherapists. There is a need for novices to gain the type of experience which includes independent problem solving and guided reflection; the use of vignette-based case studies may be one method which could be further exploited. The profession is responsible for the provision of better ways to meet the needs of our future emergency on-call workforce. If this is not achieved, other professional groups will be required to fill the gaps and physiotherapy; particularly cardiorespiratory physiotherapy will lose out.
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Pinto, Frederico Jorge de César Ramos. "Chest Physiotherapy in Bronchiolitis in the Emergency Room and ambulatory Setting." Doctoral thesis, 2021. https://hdl.handle.net/10216/134263.

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Pinto, Frederico Jorge de César Ramos. "Chest Physiotherapy in Bronchiolitis in the Emergency Room and ambulatory Setting." Tese, 2021. https://hdl.handle.net/10216/134263.

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Anaf, Sophie. "Physiotherapy's role in emergency department settings: a qualitative investigation of emergency stakeholders' perceptions." Thesis, 2008. https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/1990/1/01front.pdf.

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The principal aim of the research was to explore the varying perceptions of what physiotherapy can offer the emergency department system based on the opinions of doctors, nurses, physiotherapists and patients in that system, and opinions of the community health sector. In conjunction with existing literature and the research findings, conceptual models of emergency department (ED) physiotherapy were developed to illustrate appropriate clinical practice and integration of the position within the emergency department system. Two overarching aims were to: identify different stakeholders’ expectations and interpretations of ED physiotherapy; and have stakeholders consider how physiotherapy contributes to the emergency department system. The main objective was to formulate conceptual models of physiotherapy’s integration into the emergency department system based on these varying perspectives. This study employed an interpretivist-systems theory-case study methodology; a unique direction for physiotherapy research. The qualitative data sources were continually aligned within a broader ‘systems’ framework. The participants represented individual elements in the emergency department system. General systems theory, combined with principles of Soft Systems Methodology, appropriately highlights pragmatic components of the research, such as what the physiotherapy role encompasses and how it influences emergency department service delivery. It is also sensitive to the meaning of social, cultural and political undercurrents embedded in participants’ responses; acknowledging diverse world views and respecting the value of different voices in the research, even if they differed from the researcher’s own world view. Case study method added structure to the conduct of the research, making it further amenable to qualitative data techniques. Data collection used a variety of qualitative approaches including surveys of patients (N=80), questionnaires for community health professionals (N=35) and in-depth interviews with emergency department staff (N=12). The Townsville Hospital, Queensland, and the Austin Hospital, Victoria, were the two cases under investigation, the former having no official full-time ED physiotherapy service and the latter having used physiotherapy to treat acute patients in the department for over seven years. The varied dataset provides one of the most comprehensive qualitative perspectives on emergency department physiotherapy to date. Components of research rigour were meticulously considered and findings were intermittently realigned to systems theory principles to provide fresh insight into ED physiotherapy’s professional contribution. Stakeholders’ perceptions were considered from a systems theory view, professional practice perspective and in the sphere of the broader health system. Three categories of conceptual models were built based on agreed features of ED physiotherapy across the stakeholders and two cases. The models, as abstractions, highlight appropriate integration of physiotherapy within the emergency department; core clinical competencies; and suitable ownership of ED physiotherapy to preserve its identity and accountability within the emergency system. The participants’ voices dominate the research, creating a rich, nuanced view of ED physiotherapy as an Australian practice. The conceptual models attempt to unify these voices. The thesis is advantageous to the physiotherapy profession by not isolating opinion to a physiotherapy-only perspective and encouraging future discourse to overcome barriers, potential conflict and misconceptions of physiotherapy practice so that ED physiotherapy is better understood and appropriately implemented.
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Books on the topic "Emergency physiotherapy"

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Beverley, Harden, ed. Respiratory physiotherapy: An on-call survival guide. 2nd ed. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, 2009.

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Grundy, David. ABC of spinal cord injury. 2nd ed. London: BMJ Pub. Group, 1993.

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Emergency Physiotherapy: On Call Survival Guide (Physiotherapy Pocketbooks). Churchill Livingstone, 2004.

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Beverley, Harden, ed. Respiratory physiotherapy: An on-call survival guide. 2nd ed. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, 2009.

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ABC of Spinal Cord Injury (ABC). 2nd ed. British Medical Association, 1993.

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Whitaker, Iain S., Kayvan Shokrollahi, and William A. Dickson, eds. Burns (OSH Surgery). Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199699537.001.0001.

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Burn injuries are recognized as a major health problem worldwide, causing morbidity and mortality in individuals of all ages. Written in the concise, easy-to-navigate Oxford Handbook style, this new book outlines the assessment, management, and rehabilitation of burns patients. With contributions from international experts, this handbook covers all aspects of burn patient care, from first aid to reconstructive techniques and physiotherapy. This new, pocket-sized title is an invaluable resource for all those who come into contact with burns patients, from accident and emergency doctors to allied health professionals, as well as specialists and trainees in burns units. Filling an important niche in the market for an accessible quick-access guide for those first on the scene, The Oxford Specialist Handbook of Burns is a comprehensive and detailed new title on all aspects of burn care.
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Book chapters on the topic "Emergency physiotherapy"

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Marti, J. D., G. Ntoumenopoulos, and A. Torres. "Physiotherapy Update for the Adult ICU Patient." In Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2013, 833–46. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-35109-9_65.

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Körükcü, Öznur, and Kamile Kabukcuoğlu. "Health Promotion Among Home-Dwelling Elderly Individuals in Turkey." In Health Promotion in Health Care – Vital Theories and Research, 313–27. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-63135-2_22.

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AbstractAlthough the social structure of Turkish society has changed from a broad family order to a nuclear family, family relations still hold an important place, where traditional elements dominate. Still, elderly people are cared for by their family in their home environment. Thus, the role of family members is crucial in taking care of elderly individuals. In Turkey, the responsibility of care is largely on women; the elderly’s wife, daughter, or daughter-in-law most often provides the care. Family members who provide care need support so that they can maintain their physical, psychological and mental health. At this point, Antonovsky’s salutogenic health model represents a positive and holistic approach to support individual’s health and coping. The salutogenic understanding of health emphasizes both physical, psychological, social, spiritual and cultural resources which can be utilized not only to avoid illness, but to promote health.With the rapidly increasing ageing population globally, health expenditures and the need for care are increasing accordingly. This increase reveals the importance of health-promoting practices in elderly care, which are important for the well-being and quality of life of older individuals and their families, as well as cost effectiveness. In Turkey, the emphasis on health-promoting practices is mostly focused in home-care services including examination, treatment, nursing care, medical care, medical equipment and device services, psychological support, physiotherapy, follow-up, rehabilitation services, housework (laundry, shopping, cleaning, food), personal care (dressing, bathroom, and personal hygiene help), 24-h emergency service, transportation, financial advice and training services within the scope of the social state policy for the elderly 65 years and older, whereas medical management of diseases serves elderly over the age of 85. In the Turkish health care system, salutogenesis can be used in principle for two aims: to guide health-promotion interventions in health care practice, and to (re)orient health care practice and research. The salutogenic orientation encompasses all elderly people independently of their position on the ease-/dis-ease continuum. This chapter presents health-promotion practices in the care of elderly home-dwelling people living in Turkey.
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Sullivan, Kate, Julie Reeve, Ianthe Boden, and Rebecca Lane. "Physiotherapy Following Emergency Abdominal Surgery." In Actual Problems of Emergency Abdominal Surgery. InTech, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/63969.

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Vijay, S., V. Arthi, and Mithun Kuriakose. "Emergency Sports Assessment and First Aid." In MCQs in Sports Physiotherapy (With Explanatory Answers), 6. Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers (P) Ltd., 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5005/jp/books/11138_2.

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Karunaratne, M. D. A. I., D. C. Rajakulathunga, J. S. S. Jayalath, and S. N. Silva. "Using Facebook™ as a Platform for Remote Patient Care to Address Rehabilitation Needs in a Resource-Limited Environment During a Crisis." In MEDINFO 2021: One World, One Health – Global Partnership for Digital Innovation. IOS Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/shti220256.

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The Covid 19 Pandemic affected Physiotherapy Clinics as much as it did all Clinical Services Provisions all over the world. This paper discusses a model where Facebook social media platform was successfully used as an emergency platform to deliver clinical services to the clients of a Physiotherapy Clinic in a Developing Country, during the Covid 19 pandemic.
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Wyatt, Jonathan P., Robert G. Taylor, Kerstin de Wit, Emily J. Hotton, Robin J. Illingworth, and Colin E. Robertson. "Wounds, fractures, and orthopaedics." In Oxford Handbook of Emergency Medicine, 408–518. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198784197.003.0009.

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This chapter in the Oxford Handbook of Emergency Medicine investigates wounds, fractures, and orthopaedics in the emergency department (ED). It reviews classification and assessment of skin wounds, puncture wounds, and foreign bodies, and discusses wound cleaning, closure, aftercare, infected wounds, bites and stings, tetanus, and needlestick injury. It explores fractures, including open (compound) fracture and dislocation (and subluxation), casts and their problems, and osteoporosis, as well as soft tissue injury, physiotherapy in the ED, and fracture clinic and alternatives. It describes different areas of fracture and injury in detail, including hand, thumb, scaphoid, and carpal injury, Colles’ fracture, Smith’s fracture, Barton’s and reverse Barton’s fracture, wrist injury, forearm fracture, elbow injury, humeral fracture, shoulder dislocation, clavicle injury, neck injury, facial wounds, pelvic fracture, hip dislocation, sacral and coccygeal fracture, femur fracture, knee injury, tibial and fibular shaft fracture, pretibial laceration, calf and Achilles tendon injury, ankle injury, foot fracture and dislocation, toe injury, low back pain, arthritis, and eponymous fractures.
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Gavrilova, Marina L., Ferdous Ahmed, A. S. M. Hossain Bari, Ruixuan Liu, Tiantian Liu, Yann Maret, Brandon Kawah Sieu, and Tanuja Sudhakar. "Multi-Modal Motion-Capture-Based Biometric Systems for Emergency Response and Patient Rehabilitation." In Research Anthology on Rehabilitation Practices and Therapy, 653–78. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-3432-8.ch032.

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This chapter outlines the current state of the art of Kinect sensor gait and activity authentication. It also focuses on emotional cues that could be observed from human body and posture. It presents a prototype of a system that combines recently developed behavioral gait and posture recognition methods for human emotion identification. A backbone of the system is Kinect sensor gait recognition, which explores the relationship between joint-relative angles and joint-relative distances through machine learning. The chapter then introduces a real-time gesture recognition system developed using Kinect sensor and trained with SVM classifier. Preliminary experimental results demonstrate accuracy and feasibility of using such systems in real-world scenarios. While gait and emotion from body movement has been researched in the context of standalone biometric security systems, they were never previously explored for physiotherapy rehabilitation and real-time patient feedback. The survey of recent progress and open problems in crucial areas of medical patient rehabilitation and rescue operations conclude this chapter.
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Gavrilova, Marina L., Ferdous Ahmed, A. S. M. Hossain Bari, Ruixuan Liu, Tiantian Liu, Yann Maret, Brandon Kawah Sieu, and Tanuja Sudhakar. "Multi-Modal Motion-Capture-Based Biometric Systems for Emergency Response and Patient Rehabilitation." In Advances in Medical Technologies and Clinical Practice, 160–84. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7525-2.ch007.

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This chapter outlines the current state of the art of Kinect sensor gait and activity authentication. It also focuses on emotional cues that could be observed from human body and posture. It presents a prototype of a system that combines recently developed behavioral gait and posture recognition methods for human emotion identification. A backbone of the system is Kinect sensor gait recognition, which explores the relationship between joint-relative angles and joint-relative distances through machine learning. The chapter then introduces a real-time gesture recognition system developed using Kinect sensor and trained with SVM classifier. Preliminary experimental results demonstrate accuracy and feasibility of using such systems in real-world scenarios. While gait and emotion from body movement has been researched in the context of standalone biometric security systems, they were never previously explored for physiotherapy rehabilitation and real-time patient feedback. The survey of recent progress and open problems in crucial areas of medical patient rehabilitation and rescue operations conclude this chapter.
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Rawlins, Jeremy, and Isabel Jones. "Adult thermal burns." In Oxford Textbook of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, edited by Jeremy Rawlins, 155–78. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199682874.003.0242.

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Adult burn injuries are heterogeneous in their aetiology and in their severity, and in the many ways in which they affect the burns patient. Treatment should be initiated promptly, ensuring that other life-threatening injuries are dealt with, and that expert burn care is delivered to the patient. First aid followed by emergency management of the patient, fluid resuscitation, and specialist wound care ensures the patient is given the very best opportunity for full recovery and survival. The burn wound may be managed non-surgically, but for deeper and more severe injuries, surgical debridement and wound cover with grafts, cell suspensions, dermal matrices, or flaps is required. Areas of special attention include the face, hands, and perineum—all functionally and aesthetically important, and each with specific dressing needs and surgical techniques that optimize good outcomes. Scar management and physiotherapy are crucial components of adult burn care, with many therapies applied concurrently to ensure good functional and aesthetic recovery. For those patients with ongoing scar and contracture difficulties, scar therapies and reconstructive burns surgery offer the chance of better function and appearance even many years after the original burn. The journey to recovery would not be complete, however, without important psychosocial input for the burns patient, as the psychological scars are often just as painful as the physical ones.
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Guerrero, Alma Viviana Silva, and Wendy Lowe. "Feeling good about yourself? An exploration of FitBit “new moms community” as an emergent space for online biosociality." In Mobilizing Knowledge in Physiotherapy, 113–27. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367855338-9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Emergency physiotherapy"

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Brewin, Karen, Elizabeth Hardingham, Greg Mavin, David Rowe, Suzanne Saxton, and Michael Simpson. "SC27 Saving trevor: emergency physiotherapy." In Abstracts of the Association for Simulated Practice in Healthcare 9th Annual Conference, 13th to 15th November 2018, Southport Theatre and Convention Centre, UK. The Association for Simulated Practice in Healthcare, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjstel-2018-aspihconf.50.

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Freitas, Debora, Miriam Moorcroft, Ian Sinha, and Julie Grice. "330 The impact of a rapid access physiotherapy service in a paediatric emergency department on patients diagnosed with asthma or viral induced wheeze." In RCPCH Conference Singapore. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjpo-2021-rcpch.181.

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Vieira, Luciana, Chris Burtin, Ludmilla Figueiredo, Rodrigo Garbero, Joana Castro, and Alexandre Luque. "Cost-analysis of a physiotherapy program, focused on early mobility and managed protocols of non-invasive ventilation and weaning from mechanical ventilation, in a clinical emergency department." In ERS International Congress 2016 abstracts. European Respiratory Society, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/13993003.congress-2016.oa4815.

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