DVIDS - News - Army physical therapist s desire to learn earns her top honors at air assault school dvidshub.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dvidshub.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
An East Tennessee State University professor of physical therapy recently led a multidisciplinary effort to update the clinical practice guidelines for the field of vestibular rehabilitation, published in the Journal
FORT BENNING, GA – “I have a quote on my business card that we sort of coined around here. ‘Fort Benning Georgia, the muscular skeletal center of the universe,’” shared Martin Army Community Hospital Department of Rehabilitative Services Chief Maj. Travis Robbins. “Because Fort Bragg they always call themselves the center of the universe.
“No, BMACH is the center of the universe,” asserted Robbins. “I have found that my roles and the people here at Benning have been the best that I’ve worked with in my 20 years in the Army. And I’ve worked at some great places.”
The 47-year-old admitted he kind of fell into his specialty. And that lucky happenstance has been true for most of his career progression through postings at Walter Reed, Fort Riley and Fort Jackson.
1 Navy Medicine’s priorities are the four P’s: People, Platforms, Performance and Power. Navy Lt. Erin Kocher, a physical therapist assigned to Naval Hospital Twentynine Palms, hits all of the marks. She loves working with people and gains satisfaction from returning them to what they love doing. “It’s really rewarding to get people back to their goals,” she said. “I really love the aspect of working one-on-one with a patient. Getting them back to doing something that they love, whether it’s working out, playing sports, or just being able to play with their children again without pain is hugely rewarding.”