1. What is your EQ?
How can an athletic trainer best treat an injury?
2. What is your first answer?
Knowing the anatomy of the injured area
3. What is your second answer?
2. What is your first answer?
Knowing the anatomy of the injured area
3. What is your second answer?
Proper initial diagnosis of the injury
4. List three reasons your answer is true with a real-world application for each.
- If an injury is incorrectly diagnosed the athlete can be treated incorrectly, it can be fatal in the case of a misdiagnosed concussion
- It can result in a quicker return time for an athlete due to a correct diagnosis there is no need for extra rehab that is not necessary
- Proper initial diagnosis will allow for more accurate treatment especially in joints such as the shoulder or knee
5. What printed source best supports your answer?This website gives credible information of diagnosing as well as treating injuries. The website goes into details about certain injury diagnosis signs which includes details about on and off field causes.
http://orthoinfo.aaos.org
6. What other source supports your answer?
Arnheims is a great book because it teaches you methods of how to diagnose and treat certain injuries through test and proven diagnosis methods
Arnheims is a great book because it teaches you methods of how to diagnose and treat certain injuries through test and proven diagnosis methods
Prentice, William. "Arnheim's Principles of Athletic Training: A Competency-Based Approach." McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages; 13 edition. January 18, 2008. Print.
7. Tie this together with a concluding thought.
This answer is one of the main steps needed other than, the actual skill to treat an injury, to help an athlete recover in time. My answers so far have all pointed toward providing proper treatment for an athletes injury.
This answer is one of the main steps needed other than, the actual skill to treat an injury, to help an athlete recover in time. My answers so far have all pointed toward providing proper treatment for an athletes injury.