Rehabilitation & Other Therapies
Aquatic therapy program
Aquatic therapy has many advantages. It increases mobility, muscle
strength, body awareness, relaxation and cardiovascular endurance, and
improves coordination, balance and respiration. It also decreases the
frequency of muscle spasms and pain.
Aquatic therapy is especially effective for patients after surgery or
injury because it allows for earlier weight-bearing activities, which lead
to less pain and a faster recovery.
Several properties of water are integral to the effectiveness of aquatic
therapy:
- Buoyancy - A person submerged to the neck weighs
1/10th of their regular body weight, allowing for increased mobility and
reducing joint stress
- Hydrostatic pressure - This reduces the swelling of
joints and tissues, and is particularly important for minimizing the
pain of chronic joint or muscle conditions from recent injuries
- Water surface tension - This creates resistance for
limbs partially submerged, allowing the patient to gradually strengthen
weak muscles
- Resistance - Water increases resistance against
movement by 600 - 700 times that of air, increasing the potential for
muscle strengthening.
Experienced staff
Aquatic therapists are Physical and Occupational Therapists with special
post-degree training in the unique properties of aquatic therapy.
Individualized treatment
We provide care for patients with the following conditions:
- Sprains Pre-operative Strains
- Post-operative pain
- Contusions
- Reflex sympathetic dystrophy
- Tendonitis
- Proprioceptive deficits
- Bursitis
- Degenerative diseases
- Fractures
- Low endurance Arthritis
- Neurological conditions
Comprehensive care provided
Our therapists have advanced training in aquatics.
Aquatic therapists work 1-on-1 with clients to provide a rehabilitation
program individualized for:
- Balance problems
- Multiple sclerosis - To aid patients in maintaining
and possibly improving their strength and muscle control
- Post stroke care - To help patients regain basic
life skills and lost function
- Prolonged immobilization - To assist patients in
relearning balance and control after a prolonged period of inactivity or
immobilization
- Post surgical rehabilitation
- Post hip fracture - Allows patients to work on
building and strengthening techniques in a controlled weight environment
- Post knee injury surgery - Reduces swelling and is
ideal for working on range of motion exercises
- Post shoulder surgery - Provides resistance for
building strength and range of motion
- Post spine surgery - Allows patients to build up to
full weight-bearing exercises by providing an environment where they
experience only 10% of their actual body weight
- Ankle surgery - Allows pts to build up to full
weight bearing exercises. Reduces swelling and improves range of
motion and strength
- Fibromyalgia/arthritis
- Exercise program - A controlled environment helps
alleviate the constant, chronic pain associated with this condition and
encourages activity to counter degeneration caused by inactivity
- General deconditioning
Assists patients in regaining strength in an environment where
body weight is minimized as gravity is countered by the person's
buoyancy