Kinesiotherapist

Sports Medicine

Kinesiotherapists develop and monitor exercise programs to help people regain muscle strength and function lost due to injury or disease. Some kinesiotherapists focus on specific types of patients or conditions, such as people recovering from injuries or those with degenerative musculoskeletal disease.

Kinesiotherapists know all about anatomy and how each part of the body works by itself and in conjunction with other body parts. They guide patients through therapeutic exercise, aquatic therapy, learning to walk, using prosthetics/orthotics and developing a lifelong exercise regimen. They then choose exercises that will achieve specific strength or mobility enhancing goals, without causing the patient pain or further damage. Kinesiotherapists emphasize the psychological as well as physical benefits of therapeutic exercise for rehabilitation.

For each patient, the kinesiotherapist will:

  • Evaluate the person’s mobility, strength and endurance
  • Discuss treatment goals
  • Educate the patient about how the body works and what is causing the impairment
  • Develop an appropriate, targeted treatment plan
  • Guide the patient in performing exercises correctly
  • Monitor progress
  • Modify the plan as needed to achieve specific goals
  • Provide appropriate adaptive equipment and training
  • Provide training for caregivers

In addition to choosing the right exercises, a successful outcome depends on how well the therapist and patient work together. Building rapport and motivating the patient to do the exercises regularly is a key role of the kinesiotherapist.

To be a successful kinesiotherapist, you must be intelligent and honest, practice good judgment and have good interpersonal skills and the capacity to react to emergencies in a calm reasoned manner.

The American Kinesiotherapy Association reviewed this profile.

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  • Average Salary

    $77,998

  • Years Higher Education

    4 - 5

  • Job Outlook

    Very Good