Acute Conversations

APTA Acute Care

We share engaging conversations about acute care physical therapy so you can connect to your profession.

  1. 2D AGO

    Preparing for CSM 2026: Inspiring Growth in Acute Care

    Show Notes  As APTA’s Combined Sections Meeting heads to Anaheim, this special episode offers a behind-the-scenes look at how acute care programming comes together — and how clinicians can prepare with purpose. Co-hosts Dr. Leo Arguelles and Dr. Nicole Neveau are joined by James Crick, PT, DPT, PhD, and Jean Woolford, PT, DPT, co-chairs of acute care programming for CSM, to discuss session planning, emerging themes, and practical tips for navigating the conference and making meaningful professional connections. Today’s Guests: Enjeen Wolford, PTA enjeen@gmail.com James P. Crick, Jr., PT, DPT, PhD jamescrickdpt@gmail.com Co-Chairs, CSM Education Programming, APTA Acute Care Guest Quotes: 5:28 “ Our big goal is to cultivate and bring up the new speakers and the people that have never spoken in a conference before. That’s our big push…” 8:49 “ This is the place to network and to connect.  That is the most important and valuable thing that I would give anybody who’s new or newer to attending CSM.” 27:46 “ So comfortable shoes are definite must!” 27:50 “I’ll remember the first time I ever went to CSM I walked in and I couldn’t believe the masses of people that were crossing the street and walking around, and they were all PTs or PTAs, all of them. They just took over the city. The whole city was taken over and it’s a lot, but it’s so energetic. It’s so much fun and there’s so many great things you can get there.” Rapid Responses:  If you had to go to work at Disneyland as a Disney character for the day, which character would you pick? James: “ I’ll go with Aladdin.  I actually have one of my first jobs in acute care in Naples, Florida. Shout out Naples Community Hospital. They I had a nurse who said. Did you know that your hair looks like Aladdin? Me? A lot of always will be Aladdin from here on out.” Enjeen: Goofy You know you work in acute care when…  Enjeen: “When you have to go look for your nurse on the floor before you see a patient.”  James: “So it’s standing at the bedside first time in a long time and they get to embrace for, physically for the first time in a long time. The therapeutic hug.” Links: Acute Care CSM 2026 Programming: https://apta.confex.com/apta/csm2026/meetingapp.cgi/Subject/220 APTA CSM Event App: https://csm.apta.org/programming/csm-events-app APTA CSM Proposal and Abstract Submissions: https://csm.apta.org/programming/csm-submissions 🎧 Connect with Our Hosts Leo Arguelles (pronounced LEE-O R-GWELL-IS) 📧 largue2@uic.edu 🐦 Twitter: @LeoArguellesPT Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS 📧 ngunder1@gmail.com 🔗 LinkedIn: Nicole Neveau Danny Young, PT, DPT, PhD 📧 daniel.young@unlv.edu 🐦 X: @DLYoungDPTPhD 🌐 Bluesky: @dlyoungdptphd.bsky.social 🎧 Listen now on Spotify | Apple Podcasts (Or wherever you get your podcasts) #AcuteCare #PhysicalTherapy #ClinicalEducation #HealthcareLeadership Interested in being a future guest? APTA Acute Care: Website Awards Journal Access https://www.aptaacutecare.org/page/AspireandAchieveMentorshipProgram Twitter @AcuteCareAPTA Facebook APTA Acute Care Instagram @AcademyAcutePT YouTube  APTA Acute Care Podcast APTA Acute Care Resources APTA Adult Vital Signs APTA Lab Values Document Webinar Recordings

    38 min
  2. FEB 4

    Building Better Decisions: How PT-PENCIL Shapes Acute Care

    Show Notes: How do physical therapists decide who needs therapy today—and how often—when resources are limited and patient needs change by the hour? In this episode of Acute Conversations, hosts Leo Arguelles and Daniel Young sit down with Joshua Johnson, Sandra Passek, and Brittany Lapin to unpack the development and validation of PT-PENCIL, a clinical decision support tool designed to help acute care PTs prioritize care using real-world data. The conversation goes beyond algorithms. The guests walk through how a multidisciplinary learning community shaped PT-PENCIL, why documentation quality matters more than we think, and how predictive models can support—rather than replace—clinical judgment. They also tackle the realities of “it depends,” workflow integration, and why identifying patients on the fence may be where therapy makes the biggest impact. This episode is a must-listen for clinicians, educators, and leaders navigating triage, staffing, and value-based care in today’s hospitals. Today’s Guests: Joshua Johnson PT, DPT, PhD joshua.johnson@duke.edu Sandra Passek PT, DPT, Rehabilitation Manager Clinical Informatics at Cleveland Clinic Brittany Lapin PhD, Associate Professor of Biostatistics lapinb@ccf.org https://www.linkedin.com/in/brittany-lapin-004710b/ Guest Quotes: 7:44 “ I can’t help therapists set a frequency at the outset of a patient’s hospitalization. The best thing we could do and what we felt like really was the most appropriate thing to do was help therapists recognize which patients they needed to see the next day.” 20:43 “really what we found is that everybody benefits from PT. And so that ended up having a lot of discussions with the learning community about how do we then flag patients based on like clinically driven decisions rather than just the statistical model?” 32:27 “ So while we said a lot about helping individual clinicians make decisions about triage. I also think that there’s an opportunity here for managers and leaders to think through, how can I do something like that to support the clinicians that work for me.” Rapid Responses:   What patient population do you enjoy thinking about or working with the most? Brittany: “ As a statistician, I like surgical patients the most because there’s a date, there’s a pre and there’s a post.” Sandi “I like the geriatric population. It doesn’t matter what it is. I think there’s just a lot to learn from them.” Josh “ When I see patients I’m usually on our neurological floor and I really enjoy that. But I’ll admit a bias that I’ve, this little bit of time that I’ve spent in cardiovascular ICUs have been absolutely fascinating. And if I were to do full-time clinical care, I’d want to get trained to really take care of that population.” You know you work in acute care when… Josh “ Your treatment plan changes three times before you make it from the doorway to the edge of the bed.” Sandi “Things change all the time in acute care. You just have to be ready for it. You have to be resilient and just move with it.” Brittany “  📍 Lots of sensitivity analysis with your/any studies.” Links: https://academic.oup.com/ptj/article-abstract/105/9/pzaf093/8198102?redirectedFrom=fulltext 🎧 Connect with Our Hosts Leo Arguelles (pronounced LEE-O R-GWELL-IS) 📧 largue2@uic.edu 🐦 Twitter: @LeoArguellesPT Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS 📧 ngunder1@gmail.com 🔗 LinkedIn: Nicole Neveau Danny Young, PT, DPT, PhD 📧 daniel.young@unlv.edu 🐦 X: @DLYoungDPTPhD 🌐 Bluesky: @dlyoungdptphd.bsky.social 🎧 Listen now on Spotify | Apple Podcasts (Or wherever you get your podcasts) #AcuteCare #PhysicalTherapy #ClinicalEducation #HealthcareLeadership Interested in being a future guest? APTA Acute Care: Website Awards Journal Access https://www.aptaacutecare.org/page/AspireandAchieveMentorshipProgram Twitter @AcuteCareAPTA Facebook APTA Acute Care Instagram @AcademyAcutePT YouTube  APTA Acute Care Podcast APTA Acute Care Resources APTA Adult Vital Signs APTA Lab Values Document Webinar Recordings

    44 min
  3. JAN 14

    Reigniting the Spark: A Breakthrough Approach to Acute Care Burnout

    Show Notes S4E1 Burnout isn’t just a buzzword — it’s a lived experience for many clinicians working in hospital settings. In the Season 4 premiere of Acute Conversations, co-hosts Dr. Leo Arguelles and Dr. Danny Young are joined by Kelly Murphy, PT, DPT; Maria Tucker, PT, DPT; and Laura Cataldo, MOT, OT to unpack what burnout really looks like in acute care — and what can actually be done about it. Drawing from their published work in the Journal of Acute Care Physical Therapy and their experience leading a departmental burnout initiative at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, the guests break down how burnout is defined, how it can be measured, and why it so often goes unrecognized until clinicians are already depleted. They explore the core components of burnout — emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and diminished personal accomplishment — and why acute care environments uniquely intensify each one. The conversation goes beyond awareness to action, highlighting both individual strategies and system-level interventions that can help clinicians reconnect with purpose while still navigating high-acuity, high-demand settings. From grounding techniques that work mid-shift to organizational changes that foster transparency, recognition, and trust, this episode offers a practical and hopeful framework for clinicians who want to keep showing up — without losing themselves in the process. Today’s Guests: Kelly Murphy PT, DPT kamurphy0615@gmail.com Maria Tucker PT, DPT mtucker4@bidmc.harvard.edu Laura Cataldo MOT, OT lecataldoqu@gmail.com Guest Quotes: 11:14 Laura “ …in our research, it, burnout is not something that can be fixed by doing individual interventions alone. And in a setting such as a hospital, or other large organizations, you really have to focus on organizational changes as well to have an effect on burnout.” 26:21 Maria “… another like self-reflection piece is like, yeah, we’re burnt out, but also our managers and leadership and everybody, like they’re burnt out as well. … but realizing and saying, they can be burnt out and they are burnt out and we’re just experiencing a different area of burnout or a reason for burnout. But at the end of the day, we all have the same like kind of feelings.” 32:05 Kelly “ I think it just brought general awareness to how good it feels to remind our staff. Shout each other out or thank someone for their help thing. And then, gosh, I still, to this day, every day on my commute home on the train there’s one intervention that we talk about in here. Three good things. I still do that every day on the way home because I’m like, you know what? Even if this was the worst day ever and my patients. Really had a hard day all day. I can still choose three good things, even if it’s not patient care related.” Rapid Responses:  What’s your best stress relief activity on the weekends when you’re not working?  Ski and golf. Oh, we’re all answering…I like going for a walk with my dog. You know you work in acute care when… Laura “When your knee deep in bodily fluids” Maria “ When you have determined both your worst and best outcome for every single patient before you enter the room.” Kelly “ When you come down to lunch and different scrubs and you start out the day in… Or if you’re throwing away your sneakers, like it’s beyond just a bleach wipe.” Links: https://journals.lww.com/jacpt/abstract/2025/04000/assessing_and_managing_prevalence_of_burnout_in.1.aspx 🎧 Connect with Our Hosts Leo Arguelles (pronounced LEE-O R-GWELL-IS) 📧 largue2@uic.edu 🐦 Twitter: @LeoArguellesPT Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS 📧 ngunder1@gmail.com 🔗 LinkedIn: Nicole Neveau Danny Young, PT, DPT, PhD 📧 daniel.young@unlv.edu 🐦 X: @DLYoungDPTPhD 🌐 Bluesky: @dlyoungdptphd.bsky.social 🎧 Listen now on Spotify | Apple Podcasts (Or wherever you get your podcasts) #AcuteCare #PhysicalTherapy #ClinicalEducation #HealthcareLeadership Interested in being a future guest? APTA Acute Care: Website Awards Journal Access https://www.aptaacutecare.org/page/AspireandAchieveMentorshipProgram Twitter @AcuteCareAPTA Facebook APTA Acute Care Instagram @AcademyAcutePT YouTube  APTA Acute Care Podcast APTA Acute Care Resources APTA Adult Vital Signs APTA Lab Values Document Webinar Recordings

    46 min
  4. 12/10/2025

    The Specialization Shift: Inspiring Growth in Acute Care Practice

    Show Notes  Specialization can shape a therapist’s confidence, identity, and long-term trajectory — but the pathways to get there aren’t always clear. In this episode of Acute Conversations, co-hosts Dr. Leo Arguelles and Dr. Nicole Neveau sit down with Dr. Leslie Ayres, Rajashree Mondkar, and Dr. Terry Schwing to explore what it really takes to pursue the Cardiovascular & Pulmonary (CCS) specialty. Together, they unpack three very different journeys: the traditional pathway, residency-based training, and fellowship experience. Leslie reflects on how a single listserv email led her to a CVP residency five years into practice. Rajashree shares what it meant to become one of the first CCS clinicians in Texas back in 1994. Terry explains how fellowship training and outcomes research shaped his voice in ICU mobility and cardiopulmonary care. Across their stories, one message stands out: there is no single “right” pathway — but there is always a spark. Listeners will hear candid reflections on mentorship, research expectations, clinical identity, and how specialization deepens bedside reasoning across acute care settings. Whether you’re a student curious about your future or a clinician considering your next step, this conversation offers clarity, inspiration, and practical insight into navigating the specialization journey. Today’s Guests: Leslie Ayers PT, DPT, EdD, CCS leslie.ayres@unthsc.edu Rajashree Mondkar PT, MSPT, CCS MondkarR@gmail.com Terry Schwing PT, DPT CCS Guest Quotes: 6:47  Leslie “ And that’s really what inspired me was just, I was thinking, I want to know more about these patients. I wanna get better at treating these patients. I wanna be an expert at this.” 17:34 Terry “ I think specialization really gives you an opportunity to delve deep into what you’re interested in and learn probably a lot more than you maybe thought you would need to know or I topics outside of maybe what your niche current interest is in. And it opens up your world as to all the different things that physical therapy is able to provide for patients.” 20:07 Rajashree “ I think they students, definitely very important because even if you’re not ready to do specialization, as soon as you are out, because you need few years of experience, you need to find where you are passionate about. You can see that even if there, there are many places, maybe the residencies are not available for cardiopulmonary, but you can reach out… You can find mentoring, mentorship, you can find avenues how to get there. And people are, I think people are eager to always guide others. To get to where you are. And that’s how our profession grows.” Rapid Responses:  How fast do you think you could run a hundred meters pushing a crash cart? Leslie “ So my rule for running is to finish in the upright position, but you don’t have to be first. So as long as you get there cart intact, it doesn’t matter how long it takes.” Rajashree “ And my goal is to get there and not that crash cart meeting for me.” Terry “ Yeah. I don’t know. I feel like a lot of the crash carts sometimes have rickety wheels, so I might just be trying to get it there as well. And just not falling and tipping the whole cart with me.” You know you work in acute care when… Leslie “ when you spent 30 minutes with a patient just to go to the restroom and their question is. That’s all we’re doing today.” Rajashree “when you are untangling lines and wiping somebody’s bumps. I did not know in PT school when I went that I’ll be. “ Terry “ I guess I might say you’re an acute therapist and I always think about whenever I’m watching like TV shows or something like that and I see like someone intubated or an eek g on the screen and things like that. And I’m like, I’m always like, okay, is that the appropriate rhythm or intubation like method for like for this patient at that time? And I’m always like they did okay.” Links: Vital Pathways Webinar Connect with our host and the podcast! Leo Arguelles (LEE-O R-GWELL-IS) largue2@uic.edu Twitter @LeoArguellesPT Nicole Neveau ngunder1@gmail.com LinkedIn Danny Young daniel.young@unlv.edu X – @DLYoungDPTPhD Bluesky – @dlyoungdptphd.bsky.social Interested in being a future guest? APTA Acute Care: Website Awards Journal Access https://www.aptaacutecare.org/page/AspireandAchieveMentorshipProgram Twitter @AcuteCareAPTA Facebook APTA Acute Care Instagram @AcademyAcutePT YouTube  APTA Acute Care Podcast APTA Acute Care Resources APTA Adult Vital Signs APTA Lab Values Document Webinar Recordings

    26 min
  5. 11/18/2025

    Measuring What Matters: A New Path for Acute Care Practice

    How do we measure what truly matters in acute care — and why does it finally feel possible to do it well? In this week’s episode, co-hosts Dr. Nicole Neveau and Dr. Leo Arguelles sit down with Dr. Caitlyn Crandall and Dr. Lindsey Fresenko, two contributors to the new clinical practice guideline, “A Core Set of Outcome Measures to Assess Physical Function for Adults Participating in Physical Therapist Treatment in the Hospital.” Together, they unpack how this Core Outcome Measures (COMs) Set was built, what makes each measure clinically feasible, and how the guideline is already reshaping evaluation, communication, and discharge planning across hospital-based physical therapy. Caitlyn and Lindsey share what surprised them during development, how psychometric rigor and real-world feasibility shaped the final set, and why standardized measurement doesn’t replace clinical reasoning — it strengthens it. They also preview their upcoming APTA Acute Care webinar and reflect on how a shared measurement language can help clinicians advocate for staffing, demonstrate value, and elevate patient care. Whether you’re an ICU therapist, med-surg clinician, educator, or student, this conversation offers a clearer, more confident path for integrating outcome measures in acute care. Today’s Guests: Dr. Caitlyn Crandall, PT, DPT, CCS, RYT Email: caitlyn.crandall@unchealth.unc.edu LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/caitlyn-crandall-dpt Instagram: @CaitlynCrandall   Dr. Lindsey Fresenko, PT, DPT, PhD Email: lindsey.fresenko@utoledo.edu Publications: • PTJ CPG: https://academic.oup.com/ptj/article/105/6/pzaf076/8140951 • CC&E Journal: https://journals.lww.com/ccejournal/fulltext/2024/12000/rehabilitation_and_social_determinants_of_health.8.aspx Guest Quotes: Caitlyn: “These outcome measures aren’t meant to replace clinical decision-making — they’re meant to support it.” Lindsey: “The importance of having an evidence-based core outcome measure set is now utilizing it in practice.” Caitlyn: “Parts of these outcome measures are already what we’re doing. The COMs help organize and standardize it.” Rapid Responses: What’s the dumbest way you’ve injured yourself? • Caitlyn: “I fell off my horse — he stopped, I kept going.” • Lindsey: “I stepped on my own pinky toe in middle school and broke it.” You know you work in acute care when… • Caitlyn: “You’ve led a parade down the hallway with ECMO, an IABP, and half the team following behind.” • Lindsey: “Carrying socks in your pocket is an everyday thing.” Links: A Core Set of Outcome Measures to Assess Physical Function for Adults Participating in Physical Therapist Treatment in the Hospital- https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40403754/ 🎧 Connect with Our Hosts Leo Arguelles (pronounced LEE-O R-GWELL-IS) 📧 largue2@uic.edu 🐦 Twitter: @LeoArguellesPT Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS 📧 ngunder1@gmail.com 🔗 LinkedIn: Nicole Neveau Danny Young, PT, DPT, PhD 📧 daniel.young@unlv.edu 🐦 X: @DLYoungDPTPhD 🌐 Bluesky: @dlyoungdptphd.bsky.social 🎧 Listen now on Spotify | Apple Podcasts (Or wherever you get your podcasts)

    36 min
  6. 11/12/2025

    From Bedside to Breakthrough: Redefining Critical Care Mobility

    Show Notes: What does it take to move ICU rehab forward — and who’s leading the charge? In this episode, co-hosts Dr. Leo Arguelles and Dr. Daniel Young sit down with Dr. Monica Silva Damasceno (MD Anderson Cancer Center) and Dr. Vinh Tran (University of New Mexico) — two clinicians who shared the stage at CSM’s ICU Rehab panel alongside Dale Needham, Jen Ryan, and Chris Wells. Together, they unpack what’s changing in critical care physical therapy — from dismantling barriers and writing mobility into unit culture, to building true interprofessional collaboration that lasts beyond a single champion. Monica shares her journey from Brazil to Houston Methodist’s Critical Care Fellowship, and how mentorship shaped her vision for ICU practice. Vinh reflects on his path from cardiac medicine to academia, bridging implementation science with bedside experience. The conversation highlights the power of structure, communication, and persistence in advancing early mobility — especially in smaller hospitals where “doing more with less” is a daily reality. Today’s Guests: Monica Damasceno PT, DPT, CCS monicasdapt@gmail.com linkedin.com/in/monica-silva-damasceno-pt-dpt-ccs-03989965 Vihn Tran PT, DPT, PhD, CCS https://www.linkedin.com/in/vinh-tran-169015200/ Guest Quotes: 15:25 Vihn “ I agree in the shorter duration just because by necessity, if they’re in the ICU, they’re medically unstable, right? So you’re limited on how aggressive you can be, although I do think we can be more aggressive than the average person thinks. So yeah, I think that seems reasonable to, to shorter sessions, but perhaps more frequently. With a caveat that there is potential out there to do longer sessions in certain really niche or precise circumstances.” 20:24   Advice for those therapists that working like the smaller kind of rural community hospitals that wanna kind of make a dent and or wanna start implementing more ICU rehab? Vihn “ ..really, it’s not just a PT or rehab driven process, right. Like we in rehab can just flick a switch and all of a sudden this happens. It requires an extensive amount of collaboration between providers, nurses, techs, your own staff, your equipment managers. Everyone needs to be on board with what the overall aim is. So in order to really get the ball rolling first to me, like identify champions in, in allied communities. So whether it’s a nursing manager that potentially sees the value in early mobility, perhaps it’s a Mutually beneficial relationship where we can provide higher quality therapy or an earlier timeframe. At the same time, we can relieve some of the mobility tasks that nursing might have to do or help them do it in a more safe aspect.” Monica “ ..having an agreement with your team and having the the champions. One from or  multiple people from different groups, a doctor, nurses, and then have a plan of what you see for your unit in the future with this, those people, and create your practices like every day. Cultivating that practice of mobility and encouraging and helping each other.” 29:06 Monica “ one of the strategies to try to encourage more mobility is asking. What is the mobility plan during the rounds? Any rounds you have to have an answer. Then, then you think about mobility.” Rapid Responses:  What’s your go-to karaoke song?  Monica: “it is Mariah Carey. It’s song Mariah Carey. Always Mariah Carey. Yeah. Any song that I can find? Mariah Carey. Which is the hardest to sing. Can you imagine talking about the scales there? Vihn: I’m from St. Louis and I love Nelly, so I just gotta go with Nelly.” You know you work in acute care when… Vihn: “ When you don’t care what you’re wearing in the work or how you look, I should say that way.” Monica: “ The scrubs have extra scrubs, I would say and all. And also having the safety pins in your pocket to secure the lines.” Links: https://orcid.org/0009-0009-6275-4362 🎧 Connect with Our Hosts Leo Arguelles (pronounced LEE-O R-GWELL-IS) 📧 largue2@uic.edu 🐦 Twitter: @LeoArguellesPT Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS 📧 ngunder1@gmail.com 🔗 LinkedIn: Nicole Neveau Danny Young, PT, DPT, PhD 📧 daniel.young@unlv.edu 🐦 X: @DLYoungDPTPhD 🌐 Bluesky: @dlyoungdptphd.bsky.social 🎧 Listen now on Spotify | Apple Podcasts (Or wherever you get your podcasts)

    53 min
  7. 10/08/2025

    Breaking Boundaries: How Acute Care PTs Are Shaping a New Specialty

    Show Notes Acute care physical therapists have long known that their work is different—fast-paced, data-driven, and grounded in collaboration at the highest level of care. Now, that difference is finally being recognized. In this episode of Acute Conversations, Dr. Jennifer Ryan joins hosts Dr. Leo Arguelles and Dr. Daniel Young to share an inside look at the ongoing effort to establish Acute Care as a board-certified specialty through ABPTS. Jen traces the movement’s roots from the early 2000s to today’s evidence-rich, residency-supported landscape and explains what the next steps mean for clinicians at the bedside. From lessons learned through years of research and advocacy to the evolving role of interprofessional collaboration, this conversation highlights the depth and expertise of hospital-based PT practice. Whether you’re a new grad or a seasoned clinician, this episode will leave you inspired to see acute care not just as a setting—but as a specialty built on purpose, complexity, and professional pride. Today’s Guests: Jennifer Ryan PT, DPT, MS APTA Acute Care Vice president and Project Coordinator of the Petition for Specialization jennifer-ryan@northwestern.edu Guest Quotes: 10:31 “ when I hear colleagues say like, acute care is a specialty, really?  It tells me that I need to help them understand what we do.” 24:01 “…in this whole specialty assessment, in this really long survey you had to have a understanding of physiology and a pathophysiology of every body system. You have to have a keen awareness of not necessarily. Everything memorized, right? But a keen awareness of your level of awareness of those and your need to seek out more resources, or you need to confirm information you know, and then all the clinical sciences, all the laboratory values, all the imaging, all the pieces like that.” 26:14 “So now we’re in the perfecting phase one phase. And so demand is one of the categories and need is one of the categories. Demand is how many PTs will. Want to sit for specialization and the turnaround time and all that…The need piece is like. Why do you need PTs to work function at this level? Is someone else taking care of it?” Rapid Responses:   Now you’ve lived in Chicago your whole life, but if you weren’t in the city, where would you go for fun?   “Well, I live in the burbs. I work in the city. That’s been 99% of my experience. I’m never gonna live more than a half a tank of gas from Mount Prospect, Illinois. That’s, and where would I go for fun? I totally love being in my garden. I was picked, I picked about 40 things outta my garden, brought ’em to work today. I, yeah, fun. Fun is like where my family is. My dogs are all that kind of thing.” You know you work in acute care when… “ You know you’re working at acute care when it’s. No big deal to stand in the bathroom with a complete stranger. “ Links: https://specialization.apta.org/for-specialists/volunteer/specialization-academy-of-content-experts https://academy.aptaacutecare.org/ 🎧 Connect with Our Hosts Leo Arguelles (pronounced LEE-O R-GWELL-IS) 📧 largue2@uic.edu 🐦 Twitter: @LeoArguellesPT Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS 📧 ngunder1@gmail.com 🔗 LinkedIn: Nicole Neveau Danny Young, PT, DPT, PhD 📧 daniel.young@unlv.edu 🐦 X: @DLYoungDPTPhD 🌐 Bluesky: @dlyoungdptphd.bsky.social 🎧 Listen now on Spotify | Apple Podcasts (Or wherever you get your podcasts) #AcuteCare #PhysicalTherapy #ClinicalEducation #HealthcareLeadership Interested in being a future guest? APTA Acute Care: Website Awards Journal Access https://www.aptaacutecare.org/page/AspireandAchieveMentorshipProgram Twitter @AcuteCareAPTA Facebook APTA Acute Care Instagram @AcademyAcutePT YouTube  APTA Acute Care Podcast APTA Acute Care Resources APTA Adult Vital Signs APTA Lab Values Document Webinar Recordings 2026 Elections

    39 min
  8. 09/24/2025

    Cultivating Growth and Purpose With New Co-Host Nicole Neveau

    Show Notes  In this episode of Acute Conversations, we welcome Dr. Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS — Director of Rehabilitation Services at SSM Health St. Louis University Hospital and our newest co-host. Nicole shares her path into acute care, from unfolding paper charts as a new grad to leading a team of more than 100 therapists. She reflects on lessons learned in trauma and neuro ICUs, the importance of mentorship, and why she sees therapists as consultants who guide recovery through evidence, collaboration, and patient stories. Alongside host Dr. Leo Arguelles, Nicole also previews the upcoming 2026 Bridge the Gap Conference in Chicago and what it means for connecting research with practice. Today’s Guests: Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS 📧 ngunder1@gmail.com 🔗 LinkedIn: Nicole Neveau Guest Quotes: 14:35 “  In acute care, it’s about the story. Of where that patient is right now and about that risk adjustment of what? As a physical therapist, I need to dose intervention to maximize their recovery without increasing their risk of harm at the point where they are the most critically ill.” 28:28 “ We have to be more precise about how we apply our services and, and be a consulting service…  it also means that as clinicians we’re making decisions that frontline are making decisions with their caseload every day. Yeah. It’s not a simple, here’s your list of six people that you’re gonna go see. Don’t stop until you see all of ’em. Mm-hmm. It’s much more like, what do your people on this list need to maximize their recovery to help with their discharge planning and how are you going to let your day unfold?” Rapid Responses:  What snack best represents you?  “Oh, just all the time. I don’t even know that there needs to be one. I am a snacker. I love Chips or cookies or you know what, I, I love coffee, so I drink a lot of coffee, so that might be, I, if I had to pick one snack forever, it would be Coffee with a lot of cream and sugar in it.” You know you work in acute care when…  “ when you have scratched your patient’s back for the first time and they just start melting and saying, oh my gosh, no one’s done. You know, I’ve been on my back in this bed. So that’s, it’s it. The little things, it build thing. You build a relationship.” Links: https://www.aptaacutecare.org/page/bridgethegap 🎧 Connect with Our Hosts Leo Arguelles (pronounced LEE-O R-GWELL-IS) 📧 largue2@uic.edu 🐦 Twitter: @LeoArguellesPT Nicole Neveau, PT, DPT, NCS 📧 ngunder1@gmail.com 🔗 LinkedIn: Nicole Neveau Danny Young, PT, DPT, PhD 📧 daniel.young@unlv.edu 🐦 X: @DLYoungDPTPhD 🌐 Bluesky: @dlyoungdptphd.bsky.social 🎧 Listen now on Spotify | Apple Podcasts (Or wherever you get your podcasts) #AcuteCare #PhysicalTherapy #ClinicalEducation #HealthcareLeadership Interested in being a future guest? APTA Acute Care: Website Awards Journal Access https://www.aptaacutecare.org/page/AspireandAchieveMentorshipProgram Twitter @AcuteCareAPTA Facebook APTA Acute Care Instagram @AcademyAcutePT YouTube  APTA Acute Care Podcast APTA Acute Care Resources APTA Adult Vital Signs APTA Lab Values Document Webinar Recordings 2026 Elections

    46 min
4.9
out of 5
18 Ratings

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We share engaging conversations about acute care physical therapy so you can connect to your profession.

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