by Sue Croft Physiotherapist | May 12, 2017 | Persistent pelvic pain
This is for all my relatives -and their friends and relatives – (and patients) to read who have bouts of stiffness. It really nicely explains various degrees of stiffness. Adam Is a Sports Physio who likes to debunk useless treatments. Enjoy. Source: Stiff, but...
by Sue Croft Physiotherapist | May 1, 2017 | Childbirth, Pelvic Floor Friendly Exercising, Pelvic Floor Muscle Training (PFMT), Pregnancy, Urinary incontinence
I recently was interviewed on two occasions on two different days by two different journalists. I was doing my spiel to them – giving statistics about urinary incontinence; giving the heads up on the prevalence of prolapse; and how many people with pelvic floor...
by Sue Croft Physiotherapist | Apr 25, 2017 | Gynaecological and colorectal repair surgery, Pelvic Floor Muscle Training (PFMT), Prolapse and pessaries
If it’s a phrase I’m really sick of hearing, it’s the one that many of my patients have had said to them by too many health professionals (and some of them are doctors): “There’s no point in having a pessary, pessaries are just for...
by Sue Croft Physiotherapist | Apr 4, 2017 | Bowel Dysfunction, Dyspareunia (painful sex), Men's Health, Persistent pelvic pain, Urinary incontinence
Much of what pelvic health physiotherapists do each day relates to educating women and men in a variety of topics related to the pelvic floor. So people start with varying degrees of knowledge about say, urinary incontinence. Their current knowledge may have been...
by Sue Croft Physiotherapist | Mar 30, 2017 | Childbirth, Children's continence issues, Dyspareunia (painful sex), Persistent pelvic pain, Urinary incontinence
Forty years ago Blondie’s first ever hit, “In The Flesh”, reached number two on the Australian Singles charts after it was played by mistake (instead of “X-Offender”) on the music show “Countdown” in 1977. (Well done Molly!)...