Work Rehabilitation 101: Returning to Your Job Faster With PhysioWorks

Work rehabilitation is a structured process that helps you do exactly that. It bridges the gap between immediate recovery after an injury and your return to work, ensuring you’ve regained the necessary physical capabilities for your specific roles.

Rehabilitating after a significant injury occurs in stages:

Acute Care 

This stage focuses on stabilizing your injury immediately after it occurs. For example, if you broke a bone, acute care would involve setting the bone in a cast.

Initial Rehabilitation

Once your injury has stabilized, you’ll begin your initial rehabilitation, which involves restoring basic movement and function. Think of this stage as the buildings blocks for a successful work rehabilitation.

Work Rehabilitation

When you’ve successfully recovered your general movement and function, you’re ready to begin preparing for your return to work with tailored exercises, job-specific training, and personalized guidance and education. 

Work rehabilitation begins with a comprehensive evaluation of your injury and work-related goals. This step is essential because it helps us design a program that reflects the needs of your job. It also helps us determine which level of intensity will work best for you, as we offer two options at PhysioWorks:

Work Rehabilitation – Conditioning

  • This is a less intensive program designed for jobs that don’t have high physical demands (such as forklift operators).  It typically lasts 2-4 hours in total. 

Work Rehabilitation – Hardening

  • This is a more intensive program designed for jobs with very high physical demands (such as firefighters or construction workers). It typically lasts 4-8 hours in total.

Return-to-Work

When you finish your work rehabilitation program, it’s time to head back to work–but you need to do so safely! We’ll provide a detailed schedule that ensures you gradually reintroduce your work duties (possibly with some modified tasks) to protect you from reinjury.

Provides a Safe Return to Work

This is probably one of the most significant benefits. Our work rehabilitation programs help ensure you are both physically and mentally prepared to resume your duties.​ Returning to work before you’re ready can lead to long-term complications and possibly reinjury, so you want to make sure you’re in top shape.

Helps Prevent Injuries

The education component of our work rehabilitation programs will help you avoid future injuries. Depending on your job, we can guide you through ergonomic adjustments, form corrections, and other strategies to keep you safe on the job.

Builds Your Confidence

An on-the-job injury can definitely throw you off your game. Our programs focus on restoring the specific skills needed for your job in a controlled environment. By the time you’re back on the job site, you’ll know you can do what needs doing.

  • You’re able to participate in the program at least 2 hours a day, 3-5 days a week (the actual time requirements will vary depending on your program).

Ready to Get Started?

If you’ve recently suffered a work injury and think you would benefit from our program, call PhysioWorks today! Our friendly staff can answer any questions, and we’re excited to work with you to get you back on the job!

Exercise of the Month

SEATED LEG EXTENSION

Sit up straight in a chair with your feet flat on the floor. Slowly extend one leg out in front of you until it’s straight, squeezing your thigh muscle. Hold briefly, then lower it back down with control. Alternate legs or complete all reps on one side before switching.
3 Sets, 10 Reps (each leg). (Materials needed: chair)

Ingredients:

  • Combine beef, potatoes, carrots, soup mix, tomato soup, can of water, salt and pepper in Crock Pot.
  • Cook on LOW 8 hours.
  • Add frozen peas and ¼ cup water.
  • Cook on LOW 1 additional hour.
  • Garnish with parsley.

March Word Scramble

Exercise & Mental Health

Exercise and depression. Maintaining an exercise schedule can prevent you from relapsing. It promotes all kinds of changes in the brain, including neural growth, reduced inflammation, and new activity patterns that promote feelings of calm and well-being. It also releases endorphins, powerful chemicals in your brain that energize your spirits and make you feel good. Exercise can also serve as a distraction, allowing you to find some quiet time to break out of the cycle of negative thoughts that feed depression.

Exercise and anxiety. Anything that gets you moving can help, but you’ll get a bigger benefit if you pay attention instead of zoning out. By adding this mindfulness element—really focusing on your body and how it feels as you exercise—you’ll not only improve your physical condition faster, but you may also be able to interrupt the flow of constant worries running through your head.

Exercise and ADHD. Exercising regularly is one of the easiest and most effective ways to reduce the symptoms of ADHD and improve concentration, motivation, memory, and mood. Physical activity immediately boosts the brain’s dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin levels—all of which affect focus and attention. 

Exercise and PTSD and trauma. Evidence suggests that by really focusing on your body and how it feels as you exercise, you can actually help your nervous system become “unstuck” and begin to move out of the immobilization stress response that characterizes PTSD or trauma. Instead of thinking about other things, pay close attention to the physical sensations in your joints and muscles, even your insides as your body moves. Exercises that involve cross movement and that engage both arms and legs—such as walking (especially in sand), running, swimming, weight training, or dancing—are some of your best choices.

Outdoor activities like hiking, sailing, mountain biking, rock climbing, whitewater rafting, and skiing (downhill and cross-country) have also been shown to reduce the symptoms of PTSD.

Staff Spotlight

danny beeman
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Danny Beeman

CEO, MPT, CFCE, PGAP

Work Rehabilitation 101: Returning to Your Job Faster With PhysioWorks
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Karl Lange

PT, CFCE, Clinic Director

Work Rehabilitation 101: Returning to Your Job Faster With PhysioWorks
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Iryna Hrytsyuk

COTA, Industrial Rehabilitation Supervisor, CI

Work Rehabilitation 101: Returning to Your Job Faster With PhysioWorks
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Leah Salius

Administrative Supervisor

Sherlyn
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Sherlyn Dagohoy

Patient Care Coordinator

Jeric-Tumaob-Patient-Care-Coordinator-PhysioWorks-Clinic-Silverdale-WA.jpg
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Jeric Tumaob

Patient Care Coordinator

Work Rehabilitation 101: Returning to Your Job Faster With PhysioWorks
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Michael Kovach

Doctor of Physical Therapy

Work Rehabilitation 101: Returning to Your Job Faster With PhysioWorks
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Jas Kaur

Occupational Therapist

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Christin Hitchcock

Physical Therapist

Cara Thomas
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Cara Thomas

Patient Care Coordinator