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Common Pelvic Health Conditions Treated by Physiotherapists
This article provides a clinical overview of the most common pelvic health conditions treated in physiotherapy practice, including urinary incontinence, pelvic organ prolapse, bowel dysfunction, postpartum concerns, and sexual dysfunction.


Integrating Your Home Exercise Platform with Epic: Why Physitrack Is the Right Choice
Epic powers 38% of U.S. health systems but not all HEP integrations are equal. See how Physitrack's structured data sync stacks up against MedBridge's text-note writeback, and what it means for your RTM billing and clinical workflows.

Remote Treatment: Why Treating Your Patients at Home Increases Outcomes
Patients spend just one hour a week in your clinic, the other 167 determine their recovery. This article explores how combining structured Home Exercise Programs (HEP) with Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (RTM) extends your clinical reach into patients' daily lives, improving adherence, outcomes, and revenue.






Thyroid Health, Rehabilitation, and Recovery: The Role of Physical Activity
Thyroid dysfunction affects energy, strength, and recovery — but structured exercise can help. This article explores how physical activity supports hormone regulation, reduces fatigue, and guides rehabilitation for patients with hypothyroidism or thyroid cancer.



Awareness in Physiotherapy: Definition, Importance, and Strategies for Clinical Practice
Patient awareness isn't just useful, it's a clinical necessity. This article covers why informed patients recover better, adhere more, and how physiotherapists can build awareness through seven evidence-based strategies.

Breast Cancer Patients and Physiotherapy
Breast cancer treatment saves lives, but often leaves lasting physical challenges. This article covers the most common post-treatment impairments and the evidence-based physiotherapy interventions that help patients recover function, manage symptoms, and live well.




Plyometric Training in Rehabilitation
Plyometric training is a powerful tool in rehab when used at the right time, with the right patient. It helps restore explosive movement and confidence, especially in return-to-sport scenarios. Start low, progress gradually, and always use your clinical judgment to guide safe, effective rehab.
