01 Aug
NZJP Vol. 51 Number 2
Highlights in this issue of NZJP include:
- Artificial Intelligence and the future of clinical care
- NZ primary care-based physiotherapists’ awareness, knowledge, and management of long COVID
- Volunteer-led community-based exercise programme in COPD
- Sports-related concussion coding in New Zealand
- Feasibility of inpatient ballistic strength training
- Distal radius fractures. Who is referred?
- Development of APP roles in New Zealand
- Childhood chronic pain in physiotherapy settings
- Gender disadvantage in physiotherapy
Read Online
Read individual articles:
- Artificial intelligence and the future of clinical care
Mangor Pederson - Awareness, knowledge, and management of long COVID amongst a cohort of primary care-based physiotherapists in New Zealand
Sarah Rhodes, Ella Waite - Volunter-led community-based exercise programme impact on health outcomes in patients with chronic pulmonary disease in New Zealand
Helen Marshall, Tyler Goodall, Deborah Callahan, Andrew Halim, Peter Olsen, Maria Choukri, David Chen - The accuracy of coding for sports-related concussion in New Zealand: An observational study
Logan Poloai, Mark Fulcher, Duncan Reid - Feasibility of ballistic strength training to improve mobility of inpatients with traumatic brain injury
Izel Gilfillan, Diphale J. Mothabeng, Annelie van Heerden - Conservatively treated distal radius fractures. Who is referred?
Johanna Buick - Drivers and barriers to the development of musculoskeletal advanced physiotherapy practitioner roles in New Zealand
Leena Naik, Duncan Reid, Steve White, Stephen Neville - A developmental perspective of influences on the onset and early trajectory of chronic pain in children attending physiotherapy in primary health care settings: An integrative review
Amanda Meys, Margaret Jones - Gender disadvantage in physiotherapy
Julie Cullen