During a recent call with a runner who signed up for a series of phone calls, we were trying to figure out exactly what happened to cause his foot pain.
The way that doctors are taught to think goes something like this: Come up with a particular name called a "diagnosis" and then do a "procedure" that the insurance covers.
Doctors focus on making sure the diagnosis code matches the insurance requirements so they will send a check.
This process does not serve runners well. Runners need to focus on how they got injured...so they do not do it again.
How an injury happened is much more important than what happened.
Does that make sense?
Well, that's what we're talking about today on the Doc On The Run Podcast.
Should I have serial injections for sinus tarsi syndrome
Your goal tells me how chronic your running injury
Are you depressed because of a running injury?
Can collateral toe ligaments be surgically repaired?
Do I keep using compression socks until healed?
2 Reasons for morning pain with a fracture boot
First 3 steps when runners feel a lump in the leg
3 things you should not tell your new doctor
3 mistakes runners make that lead to plantar plate surgery
Is plantar fascia really a ligament?
3 ways a doctor convinces you you need plantar plate surgery
When can you resume pushups with hallux rigidus?
The 3 problems (not 2) solved by boot and crutches
Plantar plate surgery is a failure to act quickly
How self judgment may be slowing your injury recovery
Chronic stress reaction versus acute on chronic stress reaction in a runner
Radiologist and Orthopedic doctor disagree on my stress fracture diagnosis
Difference between MRI vs MRA in runner with ankle injury
2 Ways running shoes cause shin splints
2 reasons toe drifts sideways with plantar plate injury
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