Summit Healthplex Hosts "Industrial Athlete"
Seminar
Published in The Times-Herald. Reprinted with permission.
Several
medical practices based at The Summit Healthplex recently hosted
an all-day seminar at The Warehouse in Newnan for local corporations
titled, "The Industrial Athlete - A Sports Medicine Approach."
Physicians from Georgia Bone & Joint and Summit Occupational
Medicine joined physical therapists from Georgia Rehabilitation
Center and the director of the Summit Family YMCA to review common
on-the-job medical risks and injuries, ways to analyze and improve
employees' work environments, and procedures for processing and
tracking workers' compensation claims.
The
dozens of corporate attendees, mostly human resources managers from
Coweta, Fayette, Fulton, and Carroll counties, learned risk factors
for injuries to their employees' knees, shoulders, hands, and backs.
Presenters compared the training and performance of manufacturing
and office workers to the physical preparation and game-day performance
of professional athletes. Just as athletes use their bodies to make
a living - strengthening the muscles they need to block, tackle
and throw efficiently and safely - industrial workers can prepare
for the stresses of their daily performance by exercising and learning
the proper ways to move and work.
The
day kicked off with a review by David LaGuardia of The Summit Healthplex
about the seamless quality of medical care available from the ten
medical and health-related practices there. Routine and work-related
physicals, orthopaedic specialists, rehabilitation, medical imaging,
emergency care, surgery, prescriptions, pain management, and fitness
programs are all seamlessly available under one roof. Dr. Barry
Morgan of Summit Occupational Medicine reviewed a responsible company
plan for on-the-job injuries and how the practices at The Summit
help companies manage workers' compensation cases. The orthopaedic
physicians of Georgia Bone & Joint gave specific presentations
on physical risks for workers and injury prevention strategies.
Dr. Jack Powell, III, presented "The Hand at Work," Dr.
Michael Cushing reviewed "The Shoulder at Work," Dr. George
Ballantyne discussed "The Knee at Work," and Dr. Chad
Kessler presented "The Back at Work." The sports medicine
analogy carried the weight of Powell's experience working with Olympic
athletes since the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, as well as the experience
of Cushing, Ballantyne and Kessler as collegiate athletes. In their
practices, all four physicians have extensive expertise treating
athletes and industrial workers of all ages and backgrounds.
After
a lunch catered by Sprayberry's Barbeque, the HR managers heard
from Russell Foley, Mary Dickerson, and Shane Anthony from Georgia
Rehabilitation Center. Foley, a nationally renowned physical therapist
and expert in both industrial and sports care, presented on "The
Continuum of Care" available at GRC and The Summit. Foley reviewed
the responsibilities that employment law places on companies in
the workers' compensation system. He detailed the need for companies
to have in place a way to select candidates able to perform the
physical demands for each job. Dickerson and Anthony, also physical
therapists, explained two programs offered by GRC to employers to
help them evaluate employees and better manage workers' compensation
cases in the event of on-the-job injuries - ErgoSteps and WorkSteps.
The
day finished with a presentation entitled, "Fit for Work, Fit
for Life," by Buddy Evans, executive director of the Summit
Family YMCA. The Summit Y is the fastest growing YMCA in the Metro
area, and Evans presented programs they offer to keep employees
and their families fit and healthy. One of the most popular systems
at the Y is the computerized FitLinxx program that tracks each member's
exercise program, performance and improvements over time.
The
Summit Healthplex is located about one mile east of I-85 on Highway
34. The Summit was established to promote the lifelong health and
wellness of local residents, their families, and local workers.
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