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Seven Questions for a Physical Therapist

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Seven Questions for a Physical Therapist

Dec 03, 2024

On this episode of Seven Questions for a Specialist, we speak with Randy Carson, a physical therapist at Ï㽶ÊÓƵ of Utah Health. What are some of the best and worst things you can do for your body? What does everyone need to know about physical therapy? And how many massages should you expect during therapy?

    Interviewer: All right, it's time for "Seven Questions for a Specialist". Today it is physical therapist Randy Carson. Are you ready? I'm going to ask you seven questions. Just answer them as quickly as you can.

    Randy: Yeah.

    #1: What's the Best Thing I Can Do for Optimal Body Function?

    Randy: Exercise.

    #2: What's the Worst Thing I Can Do?

    Randy: Eat poorly.

    #3: Why Is Physical Therapy So Awesome?

    Randy: I think it's so awesome because we still have a lot of one-on-one time with patients, where that's pretty rare in the healthcare industry.

    #4: What Can Physical Therapy Do That Most People Are Unaware Of?

    Randy: That's a good question. In my area, there's probably not a lot. I will say a misconception is that we give a lot of massages.

    Interviewer: It's not the case?

    Randy: I'm going to turn your question around. That's not the case.

    #5: What Exercise Should Everyone Do? Is There Some Exercise That Everybody Should Do?

    Randy: Absolutely. Everyone should walk and walk a lot.

    #6: What's the Most Common Question You Get Asked When Somebody Finds Out What You Do?

    Randy: It usually has to do with shoulder or knee pain and a lot of knee pain when I run.

    Interviewer: And they want to know what you can do about it.

    Randy: Yes.

    Interviewer: What can you do about it, by the way?

    Randy: Well, you should definitely get in shape so that you can run instead of trying to run to get in shape.

    #7: Why Did You Specialize In Physical Therapy?

    Randy: It's kind of a funny story. Way back when I was in 7th grade, I decided I wanted to be a PT after watching a news special on someone with a spinal cord injury who learned how to walk again. I decided way back then to do it, and I never turned back. That's the area of the field that I work in 23 years later.

     

    updated: December 3, 2024
    originally published: July 11, 2017

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