My clinical rotation for the fall semester of my junior year is with the King’s College Men’s soccer team. As an athletic training student, I hold a lot of responsibilities regarding the prevention, evaluation, diagnosis, management, and treatment of these student athletes. Most of my daily activities can be separated into three groups, the pre-practice, pre-game, during the activity, and post- practice and post-game. Along with knowing human anatomy, other important characteristics of an athletic trainer are having good communication skills, learning how to properly document medical information, and always be keeping up-to- date with medical portals such as pyramed. Before the athletes arrive for practices and games, I start off by getting the team a few water coolers and water bottles set up at their designated practice area in order for the players to be properly hydrated. After filling up the water, I always check to make sure the gator is properly equipped with an AED, splints, and a fully stocked medical kit. Shortly after, the soccer team starts to arrive. Once the athletes arrive, the next step is …show more content…
Throughout my athletic training career communication is going to be a key factor in not only the prevention, diagnosis, management, and treatment aspects of athletic training, but also helping recognize when athletes just don’t seem like themselves, which may signal that they do not feel right. As an athletic trainer I will also have to have the ability to communicate with other health care professionals such as physicians and physical therapists on a daily basis. Using pyramed portal throughout the semester will help become more organized when dealing with a patient’s medical history, which goes hand in hand with becoming
The athletic training profession as we know it today first came into existence during the late nineteenth century with the establishment of intercollegiate and interscholastic athletics in the United States. (Prentice, 2014) Prior to this, early civilization athletics were unorganized. Although they were unorganized, there is information that suggests that Greek and Roman civilizations featured people who assisted athletes in reaching their peak physical condition. The evolution of intercollegiate athletics after World War I led to a new demand to prevent and manage athletic injuries. (Prentice 2014)
When using outdoor and indoor facilities, it is important to performed scheduled inspections to insure safety for the student athletes, coaches and spectators. Although every sport have a different safety need as it pertains to facilities. That’s why it is important for facilities to have an inspection before the spectators are allowed in the venue. Coaches must also be aware of the athletics health when it pertains to heat exhaustion. Coaches also have a duty to protect the students from injury with the proper equipment. If there is a sport that has a greater risk of injury the then there should be a higher need for equipment protection. When it pertains to football each player must have shoulder pads, helmet, mouth piece, thigh pads and knee pads.
Helping Athletes To Safely Reach Their Peak Performance: Athletic Training Degree (1197 Words) Are you passionate about sport and enjoy working with people? Would you like to help athletes reach their full potential while spending your days working in an unconventional work environment? If so, an athletic training degree could be just what you need to set things in motion for a rewarding career as a certified athletic trainer. A lot of hard work and dedication goes into training for any type of sport and as a trainer you’ll be able to help athletes achieve their goals. Becoming a certified athletic trainer can enable you to become one of the driving forces behind successful athletes.
An athletic trainer is a certified and licensed health care professional who practices in the field of sports medicine. Employment of athletic trainers is anticipated to grow 21 percent from 2014 till 2024. As people become more aware of sports-related injuries at a young age, demand for athletic trainers is expected to increase. Growth in an increasingly active middle-aged and elderly population will most likely lead to an increased percentage of athletic-related injuries.
Athletes ask a lot of their body’s majority of the year, but during preseason the athlete’s body can be pushed to its limits. Many coaches will try to get as many and as much out of their practices during the allotted time period. While coaches have the best intentions in mind in making their team the most successful they possibly can, this can result in them losing sight of the health of their athletes. Preseason can be a psychologically and physically taxing time for athletes and athletic trainers should do their part in making sure that they are not being pushed past the limits of what is considered to be healthy (di Fronso, Nakamura, Bortoli, Robazza, and Bertollo, 2013). Preseason is a very physically enduring time of year and athletic trainers
Athletic trainers specialize in preventing, diagnosing, and treating muscle and bone injuries and illnesses. Athletic trainers need at least a bachelor's degree. Nearly all states require athletic trainers to have a license or certification; requirements vary by state. The median annual wage for athletic trainers was $44,670 in May 2015.Employment of athletic trainers is projected to grow 21 percent from 2014 to 2024, much faster than the average for all occupations. As people become more aware of sports-related injuries at a young age, demand for athletic trainers is expected to increase.
I am interested in the profession of athletic training because this profession would allow me to work with athletes to help them recover so they could continue their passion in sports. During my first year in college I wanted to become physical therapist because I would like to use science to develop exercises to treat injuries. My first time seeing an athletic trainer working was during my tryout with the Chicago Fire Soccer team. Seeing the athletic trainer running around helping players in need by using medical science to evaluate injuries encouraged me to seek a profession in medical field that involves working with athletes. What motivated me the most to pursue athletic training is the importunity to help people in need because that
Sports today are more common than before in previous years. Having a job in the athletic field requires more to it than just understanding the basics of sports. People are more active which helps play a big role in the athletic field because it requires everyone to be more aware of injuries, and learn how to prevent, treat, and diagnose an injury. Athletic trainers do not only help athletes but people who are physically athletic learn how to prevent injuries and stay healthy and fit. Not every day does one encounter the difficulties that an athletic trainer does dealing with small injuries to injuries that keep athletes out of the sports they love for months even years, to even trying to help athletes that do not want to listen .Training
In the field of athletic training, music can be used for psychological purposes, and athletic trainers are now entering performing arts for injury prevention and rehabilitation. As athletic trainers have been emerging in the performing arts area within the last 25 years, they can play an important role in the lives of dancers. Music can be found in the injury prevention and rehabilitation of dancers and has psychological benefits for athletes. Athletic trainers often use SOAP notes as the basic outline for diagnosing an issue that an athlete or dancer may have. The purpose is to get the history of the dancer’s medical issues.
Every student-athlete knows the risk-factors that come with playing any sport. According to Luke Gessel, there were approximately 300,000 brain injuries that were related to sports activities (Gessel, 2007). When an athlete experiences multiple concussions, it can cause the end of one’s career as well as lead to other long-term issues. Sports are a major component of any college. Collegiate sports draw in future recruits, sponsorships, and numerous other aspects that bring money to the table. These sports activities can vary from college to college and each sport has its own protocol towards the prevention and treatment of sport-related injuries. It is the responsibility of the team doctor to manage injuries that a student-athlete suffers.
Throughout the states, questions and doubts about players safety have arisen. Despite the worries, statistics show the amount of injuries are not abundant enough to call out football as “Too Dangerous”. According to the study, published in the August 2007 issue of The American Journal of Sports Medicine, four out of every 1,000 high school football exposures resulted in an injury. The most common injuries were knee and or ankle related, stating also how the position in which most of these injuries occur were to running backs and to linebackers. “While football does have a high rate of injuries, injuries don’t have to be just part of the game,” said Christy Collins, MA, research associate in CIRP at Children’s Hospital and co-author of the study. “There are ways to reduce the number and severity of football injuries
Interferential current (IFC) electrical stimulation is vastly used in the physical therapy and athletic training settings to control pain. This can be done via the gate control theory or opiate release mechanism and on the sensory or motor level depending on the parameters set. IFC is commonly thought of when trying to reduce acute pain in athletes, but there have also been studies using this modality for chronic pain in individuals. As an athletic trainer, it is important to determine whether IFC can effectively control or limit chronic pain in order to decide how to implement successful treatment to athletes who have chronic orthopedic conditions such as persistent low back, or knee pain.
Second, one must get the visitor’s sidelines ready. You simply need two Gatorade water coolers, and fill them halfway up with ice. Next, transfer them onto the gator. You now need to grab another small cooler, and fill it with ice; this will be your injury ice. Then, grab the injury ice, and a grey table, and put it in the back of the gator. After everything is filled with ice, get on the gator, drive around the corner, and fill up the two Gatorade coolers up with water. Lastly, drive onto the opposing teams sidelines, and set the table up on the 50 yard line, up against the wall. Transfer the two coolers onto the table, and put the injury ice under the table. You have now completed setting up the visitor’s side for a home game.
Suddenly I was in my school’s health center, surrounded by football players, each more muscular and coordinated than I, and each with a much more plausible reason for their injury. The observation left me smiling.
Office visit and station based preparticipation examinations offer both advantages and disadvantages for clinicians and those seeking medical care. A very important benefit that is often associated with office visit examinations is that it provides greater privacy for the patient or athlete while fostering a one-to-one working and personal relationship between the athlete and physician (Cuppett & Walsh). However, this type of preparticipation examination is often expensive and not covered by health insurance, leaving many seeking athletes unable to financially accommodate such visits (Cuppett & Walsh). In addition, physicians examining the athletes during such examinations are often unaware of the physical as well as mental demands of the sport in which the athlete is participating in (Cuppett & Walsh).