Yeah I realize that however musculoskeletal is the area that interests me the most out of all of them.
Yeah I realize that however musculoskeletal is the area that interests me the most out of all of them.
Hi,
well in that case, you will most likely spend your days slaving behind a bench.
I would guess the percentage of massage rather to 10%.
Physically demanding in MSK is that you work standing up for most of the day and have to get into some awkward positions at times.
As stated above, be prepared that MSK makes up for only a small part of the Physio degree - a bit more if you put Orthopaedics and Trauma into the equation.
We do not lift - transferring patients (if that is what you are thinking of) is a technique that requires skill and practice not so much size or strength.
I have been working for more than 20 years and do not have hand issues, others do. Depends on your work area and the approaches you use.
Gov vs Private - that's about right. Better money in private but far more stress and higher patient per hr ratio. No weekend rota and emergency call outs in private- although, that again increases the income in hospitals. A hospital job gets you to move around a lot more and you work in a team. You will learn what you prefer.
Who knows - maybe after a 3 year degree, if your interest in biomeds persists, you'll end up in Respiratory.
Good luck,
Fyzzio
Thanks for the reply
So allot of paper work too? I've been ringing up local physio's, going down and having a chat and some say its pretty though whilst others say its not too bad after a while. However I was having a chat with one today and she said that more and more physio schools are opening up and its gotten harder to get a job in nsw.
Is the gov to private split 50/50 or is it biased to mainly private?
What do you mean by split?
Workforce? last NZ Statistics note: main employer: Hospital 32%, Private Practice 58%
And yes, there is lots of paperwork. Communication, management, law/ ethics and documentation will take up a considerable part of your studies, too.
Cheers.