Glenohumeral Gurus by Margie Olds

Dr Margie Olds

Join Dr Margie Olds in "Glenohumeral Gurus," the ultimate podcast for shoulder therapists. Explore expert insights, evidence-based practices, and engaging discussions to enhance your clinical skills and patient care. Each episode features interviews with leading professionals, real-world case studies, and practical tips. Stay at the forefront of shoulder therapy and deliver the best care for your patients. Tune in and become a part of our dedicated community.

  1. Glenhumeral Gurus #36: Criteria-Based Shoulder Rehab: From Motor Control to Reactive Power with Dr Kathryn Fahy(Part 2)

    FEB 15

    Glenhumeral Gurus #36: Criteria-Based Shoulder Rehab: From Motor Control to Reactive Power with Dr Kathryn Fahy(Part 2)

    Beyond Time-Based Rehab: Rethinking Bankart & Return to Sport (Part 2) Are we progressing shoulder instability rehab too quickly… and measuring the wrong things? In Part 2 of my conversation with Dr Kathryn Fahy, we step inside Aspetar — one of the world’s leading sports medicine hospitals — to explore how they are rebuilding their shoulder pathway from the ground up. This episode dives into post-Bankart rehabilitation, criteria-based progression, return-to-sport testing, and why simply waiting six weeks in a sling might not be the answer. ________________________________________ 🔑 Key Takeaways 1️⃣ Time alone is not enough Traditional protocols are heavily time-based. Kathryn challenges this approach and explores earlier mobilisation, clearer criteria, and better sequencing. 2️⃣ Motor control matters more than we think -Before strength. -Before power. -Before return to sport. Spending longer in the foundational motor control phase may improve long-term outcomes. 3️⃣ Active ≠ passive range is a red flag If athletes have passive range they cannot actively control — especially in high-risk ranges — they may be living in a “danger zone.” 4️⃣ Exit criteria > arbitrary timelines Aspetar is working toward clear phase exit criteria: Motor control → Strength → Power → Reactive power → Sport specific load. 5️⃣ Population matters -Hypermobile athletes. -High-contact footballers. -Throwers. Different cohorts demand different decisions — and not all research generalises. 6️⃣ Confidence drives outcomes Fear of instability remains a major barrier to return to play. Building athlete confidence — and clinician confidence — is central. ________________________________________ 🧠 What This Means for Clinicians • Slow down your early phase rehab. • Prioritise control before capacity. • Question purely time-based progression. • Measure what matters — not just what’s easy. • Be honest with patients: we don’t know everything. • Always have a Plan B. This episode is a reminder that shoulder rehab is still evolving — and that better questions may be more powerful than rigid protocols. Part 1 covered large rotator cuff tears and the Calmer Cuff pathway. Part 2 explores instability, progression, and return-to-sport decision making. If you work with shoulder athletes — especially contact or overhead populations — this one is for you. Check out the Aspetar shoulder journal that Kathryn co-edited. Aspetar Shoulder Edition: https://journal.aspetar.com/en/journals/volume-14-targeted-topic-the-athletic-shoulder Follow Kathryn Fahy: Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kathryn-fahy-0400a823/ Follow Margie Olds on Social Media: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠I ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/margie-olds-51586920/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/shouldereducation/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠https://www.instagram.com/margieolds/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠https://studio.youtube.com/playlist/PLsmEfkmzVQerw9rmjMo5RTJNZLd8coRdO/videos ⁠⁠⁠⁠Website⁠ ⁠I ⁠ ⁠⁠www.margieolds.com

    25 min
  2. Glenohumeral Gurus #35: Kathryn Fahy-The Calmer Cuff Approach: A Smarter Pathway for Large Tears (Part 1)

    FEB 15

    Glenohumeral Gurus #35: Kathryn Fahy-The Calmer Cuff Approach: A Smarter Pathway for Large Tears (Part 1)

    In this episode of Glenohumeral Gurus, I sit down with Dr Kathryn Fahy — physiotherapist, researcher, and former elite performance clinician — to unpack her journey into large and massive rotator cuff tears… and why we might need to rethink how we manage them. Kathryn shares how her own experience as a post-op athlete sparked a career-long interest in shoulder rehab, leading her from Ireland to a PhD exploring conservative management for large rotator cuff tears. We dive into: • What the research actually says about exercise vs surgery in large/massive cuff tears • Why systematic reviews can mislead us if populations aren’t clearly described • The problem with poorly reported exercise interventions in research • Why listening to patients changed the direction of her PhD • The major gaps in care pathways for this cohort • And how this led to the development of the “Calmer Cuff” — a patient-centred clinical pathway designed to improve confidence, clarity, and decision-making This conversation challenges the idea that large cuff tears automatically equal surgery and highlights the importance of better education, better documentation, and better communication between clinicians, GPs, surgeons, and patients. Part 1 focuses on cuff tears and the Calmer Cuff pathway. In Part 2, we head to Aspetar to explore return-to-sport testing and performance rehab. If you work with shoulder pain — particularly large rotator cuff tears — this is one you won’t want to miss. Links from the show: Calmer Cuff: https://www.jospt.org/doi/full/10.2519/jospt.2025.13342 Consensus on Exercise Reporting Template (CERT): https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/50/23/1428 Follow Dr Kathryn Fahy: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kathryn-fahy-0400a823/ Follow Dr Margie Olds. ⁠LinkedIn ⁠I ⁠ / margie-olds-51586920 Facebook⁠⁠ I ⁠⁠ / shouldereducation Instagram⁠⁠ I ⁠ / margieolds YouTube⁠⁠ I ⁠https://studio.youtube.com/playlist/P... Website⁠ ⁠I ⁠ https://margieolds.com/

    33 min
  3. Glenohumeral Gurus #34: Stacey Lalande on Shoulder Osteoarthritis, Subgroups & Clinical Decision Making

    JAN 20

    Glenohumeral Gurus #34: Stacey Lalande on Shoulder Osteoarthritis, Subgroups & Clinical Decision Making

    In this episode, Margie speaks with Stacey Lalande, a shoulder physio, clinician–researcher, and incoming NIHR doctoral fellow. Stacey shares her evolving work on shoulder osteoarthritis (OA) — from understanding subgroups, to the gaps in current guidelines, to real-world issues navigating care. She also discusses instability arthropathy in younger patients, lifestyle contributors, the role of injections, and how clinicians can improve assessment and shared decision making. ________________________________________ 🔑 Key Takeaways 1. Shoulder OA is not a single condition — different pathways matter • Older adults often present with slowly progressive pain + stiffness. • Younger patients with instability arthropathy have a distinct traumatic pathway and different needs. • Lifestyle/metabolic factors (e.g., obesity, systemic inflammation) may meaningfully contribute — similar to hand OA where mechanical load isn’t the cause. 2. Current guidelines are borrowed from hip & knee OA — and may not fit • NICE OA guidelines are frequently applied to shoulders, but evidence informing them is almost entirely hip/knee. • Stacey’s work shows that physiotherapists report adhering to guidelines, yet patients describe difficulty navigating care and receiving vastly inconsistent advice. 3. Patients value accurate diagnosis + clear signposting more than anything • Qualitative findings show major gaps in: o getting a diagnosis o understanding what OA means o knowing where to find trustworthy information • Good education + guidance may outperform frequent in-clinic sessions for many patients. 4. Injections: practice is shifting, evidence is unclear • Suprascapular nerve blocks are increasingly used for pain relief—especially in older adults or when surgery isn’t appropriate. • Benefits appear meaningful for some, but optimal technique, dosing, and long-term consequences remain uncertain. • Steroid injections may provide temporary pain relief but may also accelerate cartilage degeneration. Shared decision making is essential. 5. Behavioural and lifestyle contributors should not be overlooked • BMI and systemic low-grade inflammation may contribute to symptom persistence. • This supports encouraging lifestyle modification (“control the controllables”), even though shoulder-specific evidence is limited. 6. Manual therapy + stretching may help some patients—mechanism unclear • Hands-on techniques likely assist by reducing muscle guarding or breaking the pain cycle. • Strengthening evidence is limited; range-focused programs may still have value. • Denmark feasibility studies suggest progressive exercise is possible and helpful, but larger trials are needed. 7. Shoulder replacement surgery is increasing—and happening in younger people • Reverse arthroplasty use is rising and now performed in younger age groups. • Recovery benchmarks: o Sling for ~4 weeks o “Good function” by 3 months o Peak recovery ~12–18 months • Pre-operative optimisation (strength, fitness, health) meaningfully improves outcomes. ________________________________________ 🧪 Clinical Pearls • Morning stiffness + pain with activity remain hallmark features. • Always obtain AP + axillary views to confirm diagnosis. • Instability arthropathy carries 10–20% higher OA risk after a dislocation. • Cuff status (intact vs cuff arthropathy) remains crucial for prognosis and management. • OT involvement is underused and can support work capacity + lifestyle modification. ________________________________________ 🩺 What This Means for Your Clinical Practice • Don’t assume all shoulder OA is the same — subgroup thinking improves care. • Provide diagnosis clarity, reinforce patient understanding, and offer high-quality resources. • Use shared decision making when considering injections or surgery; be transparent about risk–benefit balance. • Exercise programs should emphasise tolerance, range, and functional confidence See www.margieolds.com/podcast for resource links

    41 min
  4. GG#33: Rotator Cuff Tendinopathy: What Clinicians Really Need to Know from Clinical Practice guidelines–Profs Francois Desmeules & Jean-Sebastien Roy

    12/11/2025

    GG#33: Rotator Cuff Tendinopathy: What Clinicians Really Need to Know from Clinical Practice guidelines–Profs Francois Desmeules & Jean-Sebastien Roy

    In this Christmas episode of the Glenohumeral Gurus Podcast, I’m joined by Canadian researchers Professor François Desmeules and Professor Jean-Sébastien Roy to unpack their brand-new Clinical Practice Guidelines on rotator cuff tendinopathy. We cut through 40+ pages of evidence and bring you the practical bits clinicians actually need on the way to work. We cover: • Why diagnosis starts with ruling other conditions out — tendinopathy is often a diagnosis of exclusion • Which tests matter (and which don’t) — the painful arc to help rule in, Hawkins–Kennedy to help rule out, all interpreted with caution • The reality of rotator cuff tendinopathy as a multifactorial condition — strength, control, ROM, psychosocial factors and load all play a role • What the evidence says about exercise — education + exercise remain first-line, and motor control programmes may offer a small short-term edge • When to rethink your plan — if patients aren’t improving by ~12 weeks, reassess, reconsider imaging, and explore other options • Calcific tendinopathy — same start to rehab, but different second-line options (e.g., lavage, shockwave, laser) if symptoms persist • And a big take-home message — stop over-diagnosing, stop over-treating, and focus on high-value care François and Jean-Sébastien also share insights on imaging pitfalls, reasons people don’t improve, and why subacromial decompression has no place in treating rotator cuff tendinopathy today. A brilliant, practical conversation for physios wanting evidence-based clarity without the overwhelm. Download the open-access guidelines here: https://www.jospt.org/doi/10.2519/jospt.2025.13182 Follow Francois Desmeules Research Gate https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Francois-Desmeules Follow Jean-Sebastien Roy Research Gate https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jean-Sebastien-Roy-4 Follow Margie Olds on Social Media: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠I ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/margie-olds-51586920/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/shouldereducation/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠https://www.instagram.com/margieolds/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠https://studio.youtube.com/playlist/PLsmEfkmzVQerw9rmjMo5RTJNZLd8coRdO/videos ⁠⁠⁠⁠Website⁠ ⁠I ⁠ ⁠⁠www.margieolds.com

    42 min
  5. Glenohumeral Gurus #:32 Neurocognitive Strategies in Shoulder Rehabilitation with Professor George Davies

    11/30/2025

    Glenohumeral Gurus #:32 Neurocognitive Strategies in Shoulder Rehabilitation with Professor George Davies

    In this inspiring episode of Glenohumeral Gurus, host Margie Olds sits down with Professor George Davies, a globally respected physiotherapist, educator, and pioneer in sports medicine and rehabilitation. George shares his remarkable career journey, from athletic training in the US Marine Corps to decades of academic and clinical leadership—including launching the JOSPT journal and advancing practice at multiple universities. Their discussion focuses on the neurocognitive aspects of shoulder rehabilitation—a rapidly evolving area with parallels in lower limb ACL research. Professor Davies explains how injuries to the shoulder can affect specific areas of the brain, requiring clinicians to integrate neurocognitive challenges early in rehabilitation, not just at return-to-sport. He offers practical strategies to add cognitive load—such as using blaze pods, visual and auditory cues, dual-task activities, and sport-specific prompts—layered atop foundational strength and skill exercises. He emphasises the progression from internal focus on movement to external, ecologically valid tasks more reflective of real sports environments. Key Takeaways: • Test, Don’t Guess: Clinicians are encouraged to move beyond technician-oriented rehab by embracing reliable, evidence-based neurocognitive testing, including simple dual-task and reaction time drills, even with basic equipment. • Cognition and Movement: Both cognitive processing and physical response are slowed after shoulder injury; tests and rehab should address these domains, not just strength or range. • Dual-Tasking Early: Layer neurocognitive challenges early—after basic skills are learned—to build resilience for the unpredictable, fast-paced demands of sport and life. • Ecological Validity and Fatigue Matter: Preparing athletes for sport means challenging them under realistic, sometimes chaotic, conditions—including cognitive load and fatigue—as this is when many injuries happen and deficits become apparent. This episode is a treasure trove for clinicians seeking to bridge the gap between traditional shoulder rehab and the latest in cognitive-motor science. Professor Davies delivers wisdom from years of research, teaching, and clinical guidance, advocating for practical, patient-centred strategies that prepare individuals not only to recover, but to thrive under real-world pressure. Don’t miss this thought-provoking conversation brimming with optimism, practical examples, and forward-looking guidance for shoulder health. Follow George Davies on Social Media: ⁠LinkedIn⁠: https://www.linkedin.com/in/george-davies-3a9814165/ ⁠Research Gate⁠ https://www.researchgate.net/profile/George-Davies-10 Follow Margie Olds on Social Media: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠I ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/margie-olds-51586920/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/shouldereducation/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠https://www.instagram.com/margieolds/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ I ⁠https://studio.youtube.com/playlist/PLsmEfkmzVQerw9rmjMo5RTJNZLd8coRdO/videos ⁠⁠⁠⁠Website⁠ ⁠I ⁠ ⁠⁠www.margieolds.com

    47 min
  6. Glenohumeral Gurus #31: Challenging Instability- Dynamic Apprehension Testing with Alon Rabin

    11/16/2025

    Glenohumeral Gurus #31: Challenging Instability- Dynamic Apprehension Testing with Alon Rabin

    In this inspiring episode of Glenohumeral Gurus, host Margie Olds sits down with Dr Alon Rabin, physiotherapist, clinical researcher, and leader in shoulder instability assessment. Alon shares insights from his impressive career, spanning advanced clinical training in the US and research leadership in Israel, focusing on the development and validation of novel assessment and rehab approaches for shoulder instability. This episode dives deep into the creation and practical application of the Supine Moving Apprehension Test (SMAT), a dynamic, functionally relevant test for assessing and treating anterior shoulder instability. Alon and Margie discuss the clinical reasoning behind SMAT, from its importance in exposing functional deficits to its role in return-to-sport and rehab. Through case examples and emerging data, Alon outlines how SMAT’s structured progression—static holds, dynamic challenge, and neurocognitive phases—empower patients to overcome apprehension and restore confidence. The conversation also highlights cutting-edge EMG findings, patient safety pearls, and the psychological dimensions of instability and recovery. ________________________________________ Key Takeaways: • Go Beyond Passive Tests: The Supine Moving Apprehension Test provides real-time, dynamic feedback on an individual’s ability to stabilise the shoulder, moving beyond traditional yes/no apprehension tests. • Progressive Exposure Is Powerful: A phased approach—starting with static holds and building to rapid, reactive loaded movement—boosts strength, coordination, and patient confidence in the most provocative ranges. • Mind Over (Shoulder) Matter: Kinesophobia is a key player in instability rehab; real-world exposure paired with ongoing support can break cycles of avoidance and prediction of recurrence. • Don’t Be Afraid to Load: Carefully monitored, provocative loading can safely retrain dynamic stability, prepare patients for daily and sporting demands, and reveal meaningful progress not visible with passive tests alone. ________________________________________ This episode is essential listening for any clinician managing shoulder instability, from first assessment to the complexities of return-to-sport. Dr Alon Rabin’s insights encourage physios and sports medicine professionals to confidently embrace dynamic, functionally-driven shoulder rehab—always with attention to safety, psychology, and individual experience. Tune in to refresh your toolkit with research-backed innovation and practical clinical wisdom. Follow Alon Rabin: Research Gate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Alon-Rabin Ariel University: https://campuscore.ariel.ac.il/projects/trp/GeneralInformation.asp?numRec=76&id_lang=1 Follow Margie Olds on Social Media: ⁠LinkedIn ⁠I ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/margie-olds-51586920/ Facebook⁠⁠ I ⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/shouldereducation/ Instagram⁠⁠ I ⁠https://www.instagram.com/margieolds/ YouTube⁠⁠ I ⁠https://studio.youtube.com/playlist/PLsmEfkmzVQerw9rmjMo5RTJNZLd8coRdO/videos Website⁠ ⁠I ⁠ https://margieolds.com/

    45 min
  7. Glenohumeral Gurus #30: Rethinking Shoulder Instability – Clinical Wisdom and Groundbreaking Research with Anju Jaggi

    10/28/2025

    Glenohumeral Gurus #30: Rethinking Shoulder Instability – Clinical Wisdom and Groundbreaking Research with Anju Jaggi

    In this must-listen episode, host Margie Olds sits down with Anju Jaggi, internationally renowned physiotherapist, researcher, and clinical director at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in London. With over two decades of experience, Anju unpacks the complexity of shoulder instability, shares insights into the Stanmore Triangle classification, and discusses her landmark placebo-controlled surgical trial for atraumatic shoulder instability. Her pragmatic, patient-centred approach—and honest reflections on career resilience—shine throughout. The conversation covers assessment strategies, the evolution of instability diagnosis, and the critical importance of addressing the whole person (not just the joint) in clinical rehab. Anju champions a biopsychosocial mindset, offering practical tips for managing tough cases and candid advice for clinicians working solo or in teams. The episode showcases how evidence-based practice and compassionate care go hand-in-hand for shoulder patients. ________________________________________ Key Takeaways: • Instability Exists on a Continuum: The Stanmore Triangle helps clinicians see the shades of instability—not just “traumatic” or “atraumatic”—and guides whether management should focus on surgery or rehab. • Surgery Isn’t Always Better: Anju’s placebo-controlled trial found no clinical benefit of surgery over placebo for atraumatic shoulder instability, meaning physiotherapy and positive patient belief are often the keys to recovery. • Assessment Should Go Beyond X-rays and Scans: A thorough subjective history, functional movement tests, and symptom modification strategies are vital for identifying what truly drives pain and instability. • Treat People, Not Just Joints: Success in rehab is about listening to the patient, considering psychosocial factors, and learning that medicine can’t always “fix” everything—sometimes, saying no is the hardest, but best, choice. ________________________________________ Clinicians tuning in will gain a fresh perspective on shoulder instability management, a deeper understanding of the evidence (and limitations) behind surgery, and practical strategies for person-centred care. Anju’s personal wisdom and research legacy make this episode essential for anyone wanting to level up their clinical reasoning and patient outcomes in shoulder rehab. Don’t miss the motivating interplay of scientific rigour, clinical realism, and heart—perfect for the modern physiotherapist and shoulder enthusiast. Follow Anju Jaggi on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/anju-jaggi-31ab1545/ X https://x.com/AnjuJaggi Follow Margie Olds on Social Media: ⁠LinkedIn ⁠I ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/margie-olds-51586920/ Facebook⁠⁠ I ⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/shouldereducation/ Instagram⁠⁠ I ⁠https://www.instagram.com/margieolds/ YouTube⁠⁠ I ⁠https://studio.youtube.com/playlist/PLsmEfkmzVQerw9rmjMo5RTJNZLd8coRdO/videos Website⁠ ⁠I ⁠ https://margieolds.com/

    44 min
  8. Glenohumeral Gurus #29: Rethinking Scapula and Rotator Cuff Function with Karen Ginn

    10/12/2025

    Glenohumeral Gurus #29: Rethinking Scapula and Rotator Cuff Function with Karen Ginn

    In this episode of Glenohumeral Gurus, host Margie Olds welcomes back Professor Karen Ginn, a world-renowned clinician, researcher and educator whose EMG-based research on shoulder muscle function has shaped modern rehabilitation approaches. With a deep career in investigating scapular and rotator cuff mechanics—and translating research into clinical practice—Karen shares her proudest achievements, including ground-breaking work on passive mobilisations, surgery outcomes, muscle activity in frozen shoulder, and the complex coordination between shoulder muscles. Karen and Margie explore how understanding muscle recruitment patterns and the interplay between stabilisers and movers should reshape our approach to assessment and rehabilitation. From frozen shoulder to instability, Karen’s research shows that muscle guarding and coordination often drive symptoms, not just anatomical changes. The conversation also spotlights key findings from EMG studies on load, speed, and complexity, and how these should influence progressive, functional shoulder exercise prescription. Key Takeaways: • Muscles Work in Concert: Scapular and rotator cuff muscles display highly correlated activity patterns during movement and loading; they must be trained and assessed together for optimal function. • Beyond Simple Strengthening: Layering load, speed, and complexity of movement tasks builds coordination and recruitment skills, not just brute force—especially vital for challenging cases like instability or frozen shoulder. • Muscle Guarding vs True Pathology: EMG studies show that muscle guarding, not just capsular restriction, can cause shoulder stiffness—clinicians should consider pain responses as major contributors in diagnosis and treatment. • Graduated Rehabilitation is Key: Effective rehab should progress not just by adding load, but also by increasing complexity (multi-muscle tasks), speed, and coordination demands to retrain healthy movement patterns. • Active Movements Provide Clinical Clues: Observing active movements can help pinpoint which muscle groups (and roles within those groups) are underperforming, guiding targeted treatment and avoiding unnecessary interventions. This conversation will change how physiotherapists, shoulder therapists, and rehab professionals approach assessment and exercise design. Karen’s evidence-backed perspective reveals why “rotator cuff” and “scapula” work can’t be separated—and how nuanced recruitment, coordination, and targeted patterning hold the keys to unlocking shoulder recovery. Tune in to discover how a truly holistic understanding of shoulder muscle coordination can turn tricky cases into success stories, and take your rehab planning to the next level. Follow Karen Ginn on Social Media: LinkedIn I https://www.linkedin.com/in/karen-ginn-b4a4b87a/ Karen's Online Course: https://enrol.apacpdguide.com.au/courses/functional-rehabilitation-of-shoulder-muscles-evidence-and-application Follow Margie Olds on Social Media: ⁠LinkedIn ⁠I ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/margie-olds-51586920/ Facebook⁠⁠ I ⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/shouldereducation/ Instagram⁠⁠ I ⁠https://www.instagram.com/margieolds/ YouTube⁠⁠ I ⁠https://studio.youtube.com/playlist/PLsmEfkmzVQerw9rmjMo5RTJNZLd8coRdO/videos Website⁠ ⁠I ⁠ https://margieolds.com/

    44 min

About

Join Dr Margie Olds in "Glenohumeral Gurus," the ultimate podcast for shoulder therapists. Explore expert insights, evidence-based practices, and engaging discussions to enhance your clinical skills and patient care. Each episode features interviews with leading professionals, real-world case studies, and practical tips. Stay at the forefront of shoulder therapy and deliver the best care for your patients. Tune in and become a part of our dedicated community.

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