Force plates 101 featuring ForceDecks (Force plates educational series)
/in News & Announcements, Uncategorized /by VALDIn the first installment of VALD Health’s Force plates educational series, we look at the basics of using force plates. We wanted to provide a free resource for health professionals who are looking to begin their force plates journey, and who better than Phil Grahm-Smith, Co-Founder of ForceDecks to help guide you through some tips.
Learn the basics of using force plates
In this webinar, Phil Graham-Smith (Co-Founder of ForceDecks, and Head of Biomechanics and Innovation at Aspire Academy), walks us through:
• Basic principles of measuring with force plates
• Using force plates with general population clients
• Important considerations for setting up and testing with force plates
• Common mistakes with new force plates users
• Common phases and metrics
Did you enjoy this webinar? Watch part two and three
Part 3: Force plate analysis following ACL reconstruction
Interested in leveling up your force plate tech? Say hello to ForceDecks Mini.
OrthoSouth deploys VALD technology for baseline testing on over 2000 athletes in the Mid-South
/in Uncategorized /by VALDSnapshot
OrthoSouth deploys athletic trainers to twelve area schools with approximately 2000 athletes. As part of their outreach program, they offer baseline testing for four major sports basketball, football, baseball, soccer and some others for baseline testing and objective data collection. This data is compared to GPS data and is used to monitor fatigue, determine game/practice readiness and assess return to play level.
D. Martin Scruggs II, LAT, ATC, CSCS, C-PS, CES, PN1, ITAT is the Director of Sports Medicine Outreach at OrthoSouth. In this case study, Martin Scruggs shares his experience with using the VALD technology systems as part of OrthoSouth’s outreach program.
How the outreach program works
Memphis-based orthopedic group, OrthoSouth, commenced their outreach program in 2009. Since then they have developed a legacy of providing a renowned athletic training service to schools across the Mid-South.
Martin Scruggs is the Director of Sports Medicine Outreach at OrthoSouth and oversees the running of the program across twelve schools. “OrthoSouth has three divisions branded together. Our division has seventeen athletic trainers employed. We have twelve different schools we work, one college and the rest are high schools. Some schools have multiple athletic trainers employed and some just have one.” said Scruggs.
The program is designed to ensure ROI with the ultimate goal of OrthoSouth being the provider of choice. “We have contracts with the schools that help to offset costs. We hope to win the right to be the provider of choice for the athletes and the community we work in. But obviously, there are factors such as previous relationships, insurance, and such that also affects this process.” said Scruggs.
Using an athlete’s baseline data
OrthoSouth collects data pre-injury to determine norms and predict injury risk. “We are trying to see if the athlete is more at risk for potential injury. We are collecting data to see what the norms are for these groups of athletes. There is data in the literature to speak of older and more mature athletes but not always for this age group. We use the data to look at bilateral inefficiency and possible risk of injury. We also use HumanTrak data to look at changes with athletes who have a possible concussion.” said Scruggs.
The information is used to better inform decision making and improve training programs. “By collecting this data, I am able to go to the coaches and folks that make the changes, strength coaches, etc, and show a potential increase for injury. I can show bilateral weaknesses and more. It is great to assist in creating actual change that could be needed.” said Scruggs.
VALD technology battery of tests
OrthoSouth uses four of VALD’s technology systems in their testing. This includes:
- Humantrak – tandom and semi-tandom stand,
star excursion balance test, sit-to-stand and
standing posture. - Nordbord – Nordic.
- ForceFrame – hip adduction/abduction 60°.
- ForceDecks – CMJ, hop and return, single-leg
land and hold.
Scruggs explains they are in the process of interpreting this data before expanding the tests “we are trying to understand this data first and then will expand the battery of testing.”
Covid-19’s impact on the program
OrthoSouth quickly pivoted to protective gear and taking temperatures when restrictions hit. Further to VALD’s human measurement technologies, OrthoSouth has also implemented TeleHab Exercise Prescription App to remotely monitor athletes. “TeleHab enables us to keep our athletes in the best shape possible, with customised programs for each sport. The athletes can upload video recordings of their workouts so the athletic trainers can give them feedback remotely.” said Scruggs.
Summary
OrthoSouth’s dedication to helping their athletes reach their athletic potential combined with their versatility to implement technology for improved decision making is unique. Scruggs says the future for the program is exciting: “The potential to collect enough data to conduct studies to develop normative data for our athlete population and use it to continually improve their injury prevention efforts is truly groundbreaking.”
Download this case study as a PDF:
Finding the balance between prescribing home exercise programs for adaptation and adherence
/in Uncategorized /by VALDGuest blog by Dr. Sjaan Gomersall, Senior Lecturer in Physiotherapy at The University of Queensland and Clinical Consultant at VALD Performance. Article originally posted to LinkedIn – here.
Exercise is now well accepted as one of the most effective components of rehabilitation, supported by findings from systematic reviews and meta-analyses across a wide range of conditions (O’Keefe et al 2017).
Home exercise programs are a cornerstone management strategy for practitioners working in exercise rehabilitation settings.
While consultations in the clinic provide opportunities for assessment, passive therapies, education, and exercise prescription, it is the time between visits where clients are asked to complete home exercise programs that are crucial to the client’s treatment outcomes.
Exercise professionals are experts in prescribing exercise rehabilitation programs that are effective for eliciting physiological adaptation in the target system to address the client’s impairments.
Informed by exercise prescription guidelines, experience, and best-evidence, exercise professionals prescribe programs of sufficient frequency, intensity, time, repetitions, sets, and loads in order to elicit physiological adaptation in their clients.
However, the intended physiological adaptations will only occur if clients adhere to their home exercise programs.
Why is adherence so hard to achieve?
Adherence is described by the World Health Organisation (WHO; 2003) as “the extent to which a person’s behavior, which could be taking medication, following a diet, and/or executing lifestyle changes, corresponds with agreed recommendations from a health care provider”.
While adherence and compliance can often be used interchangeably, the term adherence has specifically been used here to capture the active role that clients play in their own health care and shared-decision making that underpins the exercise professional and client interactions (Hoffman et al 2020).
Adherence to home-based exercise programs is one of the biggest challenges facing exercise professionals, with average adherence reportedly as low as 30% (Essery et al. 2017).
Adherence is a complex problem that requires a multi-level approach and clients are not solely responsible for their ability to adhere to exercise programs (WHO 2003).
Clients need to be informed, motivated and skilled in order to carry out their home exercise programs, and too often practitioners may run out of time or make assumptions about their client’s motivation or skills, particularly outside of the clinical setting and their ability to transfer any skills taught in the clinic into their unsupervised, home environment.
Promoting adherence requires client-centered and individually tailored strategies to enable clients to adhere to home exercise programs and achieve optimal health-related outcomes.
A combination of evidence-based prescription for physiological adaptation and best-practice strategies to promote adherence is most likely to result in the best possible client outcomes.
What does this look like in practice?
There are many strategies that have been developed and tested with the aim of improving adherence to home exercise programs, as well as a large body of research that has explored the predictors, barriers, and facilitators of adherence in this context.
One example is the use of action planning, which involves prompting your client to make a detailed plan about how and when they will carry out their program – on which days of the week, at what time.
Recently, TeleHab and VALD Health conducted a poll on Twitter asking exercise professionals how they schedule exercises when prescribing a strength program.
Over 60% of respondents reported that they prescribe their programs ‘x’ number of times per week, as opposed to specific days per week, every ‘x’ number of days, or whenever possible.
While ‘x’ number of days per week is in line with exercise prescription guidelines, can we do better to promote client adherence?
In this example, incorporating action planning could see exercise professionals taking some time to help their clients create an action plan for when and how they will complete their home exercise program 3 days per week.
Evidence has shown that action planning can help bridge the gap between intentions to complete exercise and actually carrying out the behaviour, without which we won’t see the desired physiological adaptation.
Ask yourself: Have you tried action planning? What other strategies have you used in the clinic to try to promote adherence to your home exercise programs with your clients?
Interested in learning more about exercise adherence and adaptation?
Check out VALD Health’s two-part webinar series aptly titled; ‘Improving exercise adherence’, hosted by Dr. Sjaan Gomersall and Dr. Simon Lack, Physiotherapist at Pure Sports Medicine and Senior Lecturer at the Queen Mary University in London.
To watch part one – click here.
To watch part two – click here.
For more webinar content, sign up for the VALD Health Online Series for free – click here.
References
Bassett SF, 2015. Bridging the intention-behaviour gap with behaviour change strategies for physiotherapy rehabilitation non-adherence, New Zealand Journal of Physiotherapy. 43(3): 105-111. doi 10.15619/NZJP/43.3.05
Essery, R, Geraghty, A, Kirby, Yardley, 2017, Predictors of adherence to home based physical therapies: a systematic review. 39, pp 519-534.
Hoffman, TC, Lewis, J, Maher, C, 2020, Shared decision making should be an integral part of physiotherapy practice, Physiotherapy. 107, pp 43-49.
O’Keefe, M, Hayes, A, McCreesh, K, Purtill, H, O’Sullivan, K, 2017, Are group-based and individual physiotherapy exercise programmes equally effective for musculoskeletal conditions? A systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ Sports Medicine. 51; pp 126-132.
World Health Organisation (2003), Adherence to long-term therapies: Evidence to action. Geneva, Switzerland.

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- Resources and system implementation
- Data interpretation
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