STROKE Instructional Courses
WED, 8 OCTOBER
LOCATION: Metro Toronto Convention Centre
ACRM Instructional Courses are PERFECT for busy local clinicians, patients, researchers — anyone who CRAVES the latest research. ACRM brings 23 half-day Instructional Courses to TORONTO on various hot topics in rehabilitation research. Here are the STROKE courses:
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These intensive workshops provide outstanding educational value.
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Continuing Education credits included. Choice of 11 disciplines.
MORNING COURSE
Wednesday, 8 OCT // 8:00 PM – 12:00 PM
IC #5) Functional Electrical Stimulation for Gait: A Clinical Update in Neurorehabilitation #1171
Faculty: Michael W. O’Dell, MD, New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York, NY; Kari Dunning, PhD, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH; Keith McBride, DPT, Bioness, Inc., Valencia, CA; Candy Tefertiller, MPT, ATP, NCS, Craig Hospital, Denver, CO
Diagnosis/Area of Practice: STROKE / cross-cutting
Focus: Clinical practice (assessment, diagnosis, treatment, knowledge translation/EBP)
WHO should attend?: Clinicians
This course will provide an update on recent evidence examining the clinical effects of functional electrical stimulation on recovery and gait in persons with stroke, multiple sclerosis, and spinal cord injury. The speakers will address various aspects of FES, including its physiological basis, orthotic versus therapeutic effects, and evidence for clinical effectiveness.
Learning Objectives
To support the attainment of knowledge, competence, and performance, the learner should be able to achieve the following objectives:
- Discuss the effects of lower extremity functional electrical stimulation on the peripheral and central nervous systems
- Outline recent clinical evidence for the effectiveness of FES to enhance gait in persons with selected neurological disease and injury.
- Distinguish an orthotic versus a therapeutic effect of FES on gait in persons with neurological disease and injury.
OR REGISTER by PHONE call +1.703.574.5845
For assistance: memberservices@ACRM.orgAFTERNOON COURSE
Wednesday, 8 OCT // 1:00 PM – 5:00 PM
IC #15) Mental Practice for Movement After Stroke: An Instructional Course for Clinicians #1229
Faculty: Stephen Page, PhD, MS, MOT, OTR/L, FAHA, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH
Diagnosis/Area of Practice: STROKE
Focus: Clinical practice (assessment, diagnosis, treatment, knowledge translation/EBP)
Who should attend?: Clinicians
Stroke remains a leading cause of disability, with stroke induced hemiparesis remaining a primary reason for the disability exhibited by survivors. Mental practice is a noninvasive, easy to use, clinically practical approach shown to significantly reduce affected limb impairment. This course describes the theory, evidence, and clinical application of this technique in people with stroke. Attendees will also learn the outcome measures that are commonly used to optimally measure efficacy and monitor progress.
Learning Objectives
To support the attainment of knowledge, competence, and performance, the learner should be able to achieve the following objectives:
- Describe the inclusion criteria that a patient must meet to benefit from mental practice and action observation
- Describe and apply outcome measures to measure mental practice and action observation efficacy in stroke patients
- Describe the clinical protocols that should be followed to optimize efficacy of mental practice and action observation
RATES USD
Purchase BOTH morning and afternoon courses and save:
$160: two courses ACRM Members; $210 both courses Non-members USD
Single course: $100 ACRM Member; $150 Non-member USD
Purchase a third course held Saturday Post-Conference and save more. Saturday courses CLICK HERE
OR REGISTER by PHONE call +1.703.574.5845 For assistance: memberservices@ACRM.org SEE ALL ACRM Instructional courses at-a-glance: