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physical medicine and rehabilitation
(redirected from physiatry)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

physical medicine and rehabilitation

 or physiatry or physical therapy or rehabilitation medicine

Medical specialty treating chronic disabilities through physical means to help patients return to a comfortable, productive life despite a medical problem. Its objectives are pain relief, functional improvement or maintenance, training in essential activities, and functional testing of areas such as strength, mobility, breathing capacity, and coordination. Physical medicine may use diathermy, hydrotherapy, massage, exercise, and functional training. The last can mean learning to work with a guide dog or a prosthesis or learning new ways to carry out everyday activities with a limb missing, sometimes by using assistive devices. Physician specialists head rehabilitation teams including a physical therapist, rehabilitation engineer, rehabilitation nurse, psychological counselor, and sometimes a respiratory or speech therapist. See also occupational therapy; orthopedics.


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On June 13, 2005, the Interagency Committee on Disability Research and the Interagency Subcommittee on Medical Rehabilitation sponsored a conference attended by representatives from the physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, physiatry, and medical neurology disciplines.
Other pain practitioners come from psychiatry, psychology, neurology and, in smaller number, physiatry - the diagnosis and treatment of muscular disorders.
We have Clinic Advisory Board vacancies in these specialities: coaching, neurology, cardiology, obstetrics/gynecology, physiatry, orthopedics, primary care sports medicine, pharmacology, and podiatry.
 
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