Welcome to the NEW Advanced Hand Therapy Course for Occupational and Physical Therapists! Has it been a while since you have upgraded your splinting skills? Our latest course will help you refresh and upgrade your skills and expose you to some new and innovative splinting materials that might make your practice easier than the sticky rubbery thermoplastics we used to rely on years ago. Did you know that some splinting materials even float now!
February 23 2024 9:00am-3:00pm
Location: TBD (Ottawa, ON)
Deadline for Registration – February 2nd
The E-HIS Advanced Hand Splinting course reviews the steps for assessing and splinting the following hand conditions:
- Radial Nerve Palsy – Dynamic Splinting
- MCP/PIP Contractures – Static progressive splinting
The course is designed to help therapists enhance their hands-on skills in fabricating static splints with various thermoplastic materials.
Course Objectives include:
- A review of hand anatomy and physiology
- learn a hand evaluation
- understand the use and application of various thermoplastics
- understand the reasons for splint positioning and treatment duration
- be able to fabricate dynamic and static progressive splint
- be able to analyze the effectiveness of the splint through the clients treatment progression
Instructor: Heidi Watson (BSc, MOT)
Heidi interned with the HSC outpatient hand therapy department in Winnipeg, Manitoba where they specialize in numerous hand conditions including post-surgical cases. Since then she has completed 9 years of outpatient hand therapy with adult and geriatric populations with the SHA. Since then, she has been passionate about helping other therapists build their hand therapy skills post-graduation since splinting is a hands-on skill requiring additional hours of practice and use to maintain competency. The purpose of this basic hand therapy course is to introduce therapists who may not splint full time in their practice and increase exposure to new innovative splinting materials.
The course is a safe entry-level beginner course where therapists can try their hand with old and new splinting materials. All skill levels are welcome.