Dr Lucas M. Seuren Talk 2022

From emcawiki
Revision as of 15:29, 27 May 2022 by SeanHughes (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Announcement |Announcement Type=Seminar |Full title=Dr Lucas M. Seuren Talk 2022 |Short title=Seuren Talk 2022 |Short summary=Dr Lucas M. Seuren of University of Oxford is g...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Seuren Talk 2022
Type
"Seminar" is not in the list (Conference, Training, Workshop, Symposium, Data session, Special issue, Other, Job, Seminar or talk) of allowed values for the "AnnType" property.
Categories (tags) Uncategorized
Dates 2022/06/09 - 2022/06/09
Link https://bit.ly/3MVHqWd
Address University of York
Geolocation 53° 56' 46", -1° 3' 6"
Abstract due
Submission deadline
Final version due
Notification date
Tweet Dr Lucas M. Seuren of University of Oxford is giving a talk titled "Making Sense of the Patient’s Body in Physiotherapy by Video" Thursday, 9th June, 2022 from 2:30-4pm (UK time) on Zoom
Export for iCalendar

Dr Lucas M. Seuren Talk 2022:


Details:

The Centre for Advanced Studies in Language & Communication (CASLC) at the University of York is delighted to present a talk by… Dr Lucas M. Seuren, University of Oxford Title: Making Sense of the Patient’s Body in Physiotherapy by Video

Date: Thursday 9th June 2022 Time: 2.30pm-4.00pm (UK time) Place: Zoom. If you’re on the CASLC or CASLC-guest mailing list, you will receive a zoom link via google calendar. If you’re not on our mailing list, you can register for the talk by using the following link: https://bit.ly/3MVHqWd If you’re unable to use the online registration form, please contact: merran.toerien@york.ac.uk.

Abstract In order to diagnose and monitor a patient’s condition, patients and clinicians routinely have to establish how the patient’s body feels or should feel for the patient, the sense through which they establish the location, movement, and actions of the patient’s body. These experiences are inherently internal for the patient.

Since the outbreak of COVID-19, physiotherapy services have routinely started to use video consultations to monitor and assess patients. This poses a new challenge to participants. Patients still do exercises and physical assessments, but accurate assessment cannot be supported through physical touch. They have to rely on other means to establish the patient’s experiences of their body. This paper explores how patients and physios rely on the physio’s professional vision and the patient’s body awareness (or proprioception) to establish the patient’s abilities (e.g., strength, flexibility, skills) and feelings (e.g., pain, stretch) in the context of monitoring and assessment, and instructing the patient in new exercises.

The paper is part of an NIHR-funded project: Supporting Consultations in Remote Physiotherapy. Analysis is based on 15 video-recorded video consultations, collected across two NHS Trusts in three specialist physiotherapy settings: long-term pain, neurorehabilitation, and orthopaedics.


Presenter’s Bio: Lucas Seuren is a post-doctoral researcher affiliated with the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences at the University of Oxford. He investigates the interactional organisation of video consultations in secondary care in the UK NHS, with a particular interest in how participants accomplish physical assessments and exercises remotely.