I wanted to take a moment write about a first time experience I had on multiple levels. My father, Matt and myself were recently asked to give a presentation on the importance of exercise with arthritis for the Arthritis Foundation's 2009 Women's Health Summit. There were multiple speakers in different rooms with various background ranging from the Chief of Geriatrics at a nationally ranked hospital to the nutritional advice presented by an RD.
As I mentioned, this was my first of many: this was my first public presentation for GCMC, this was my first time speaking in front of an elderly population, this was my first time working with the Arthritis foundation, this was my first time presenting along side MD's and DO's, and this was my first time bring our message of "Life is Movement" to a larger, non-athletic audience. And for all of those reasons I was slightly nervous. We have conveyed our ideas to many types of athletes with great reception; however, I have never tried to communicate our message to those indifferent to exercise.
I thought that my biggest problem would be my message being lost in translation to an indifferent crowd, but the real challenge wound up being much more primitive. When given the choice of which presentation to attend, the vast majority was more interested in attending a lecture on which medication they could use to manage the pain then to listen to about how maintaining a quality of life is two-sided contract. As health professionals at a movement center, our end of the contract is to get them moving again and their end is to actually take responsibility for their health and not to accept a defeatist mentality. What I found was that people are much more inclined to wave the white flag then to fight for their quality of life.
It is sort of ironic in a way, I did include in my presentation how nearly a third of those with arthritis live completely sedentary lives. I knew that the problem was a misconception that movement was the problem and that exercise would only hurt them, when in fact even Harvard has recently published that one to two hours of moderate exercise can prevent pain from osteoarthritis all together.
So I guess that my point is we have more of an up hill battle than I expected. The good news is that those that chose to listen to our presentation were very receptive to our concepts. They very much understood what I said and felt that we understood their battles. Now what is left is for us to really push the concept of exercising to reduce or eliminate pain. We have lived in a sick care nation for a very long time. We have conditioned the aging population to accept defeat: loss of hearing, loss of memory, loss of vision, loss of balance, loss of strength, loss of driving, ect. It is time to take the focus away from pain and towards performance.
At GCMC we acknowledge that everyone has a goal and desired level of performance. That can mean you want to run an ultra-marathon or that could mean you want to walk pain-free around the mall. The point is we are all training for something and that, at the very least, we are training for life.
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Arthritis Foundation's 2009 Women's Health Summit
Labels:
aging,
arthritis,
back pain,
gcmc,
giacalone,
john giacalone,
low back pain,
movewelllivewell,
osteoarthritis,
self-esteem
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Very well written, I been saying it for a long time myself. People have to get up and move thruogh the pain in order to feel better and raise the quality of life. It is instilled in us at a very young age to take a pill for what ails you, but not hit the mat for 20 minutes and move through the discomfort. I'm not suprised that more people went to the "Lets take a pill" room then to the "How to help yourself through exercise" room..We do have a long uphill battle, but if we just reach 1% we have made a difference. The more drugs that are put on the market the more confusing it will become. It appears to me (I'm not sure if anyone else has noticed), as the FDA ok's these drugs for market the side effects are increasing. I believe wholeheartedly that at this point its all about getting them out there regardless, even if it kills half the population... We are on the right track, now we just have to bring it to the people... Good Work Johnny :)
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