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See Satisfactory Completion requirements in the "CE Credit" tab below for details.
4/5
74 Ratings , 10 Reviews
To receive a certificate of completion for this course you must:
1) Purchase the course or add it to your Summit Subscription
2) Log in to your Summit Account to access the evaluation and post test.
See Satisfactory Completion requirements in the "CE Credit" tab below for details.
Summit Subscriber? Log in to add this course.
Pelvic floor dysfunction is a common yet often overlooked issue that impacts many patients' daily lives, contributing to pain, incontinence, and functional limitations. However, many general clinicians, PTs, and OTs feel underprepared to assess and treat these concerns confidently.
This course provides a clear, practical guide to help clinicians integrate pelvic floor therapy into their existing practice. Attendees will gain evidence-based strategies and assessment tools they can apply immediately to identify pelvic floor dysfunction and implement effective interventions. By the end of the course, clinicians will feel empowered to expand their scope, improve patient outcomes, and address pelvic health with confidence.
Target Audience: Physical Therapists, Physical Therapist Assistants, Occupational Therapists, Occupational Therapy Assistants
2/5
Christine (IL) on Apr 10, 2026
overly broad%3b statements made without evidence or with assumption of knowledge. emphasis on lengthening pelvic floor muscular without education on how to determine hypertonicity or progress in muscle length with stretches (or how to perform stretches, how to isolate different muscles of pelvic floor, etc.). slides do not cover strengthening discussed in the podcast. had hoped for more practical instruction. emphasis was on how therapist doesn't necessarily need to be an expert in pelvic floor health to help patients in this regard, but i came away from the podcast thinking maybe they do%3f
5/5
Justine (TX) on Apr 05, 2026
good, easy to follow.
4/5
Christie (TX) on Mar 31, 2026
the presented sounded as if she was reading a script rather than presenting, and had many long awkward pauses.
4/5
Sean (MS) on Mar 27, 2026
i wonder if the pauses to drink were intentional to encourage hydration%3f lol. it seemed to help me, but might be irritating others...
4/5
Elizabeth (GA) on Mar 26, 2026
keep sexes male or female. it shows a lack of true science (especially when talking about anatomy) to refer to anything outside of what our dna is coded from conception.
4/5
Meredith (MA) on Mar 25, 2026
instructor was a little choppy throughout podcast.
4/5
Brooke (GA) on Mar 24, 2026
some redundancy
4/5
Tracy (RI) on Mar 15, 2026
great general overview
4/5
Jenna (KY) on Mar 03, 2026
good audio
4/5
Nicole (TX) on Mar 02, 2026
good keeping it brief\/concise.
THE npte podcast

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PT & OT Connection Podcast
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