Description
Chapter 1 Precepts for integration of yoga and rehabilitation Chapter 2 The biopsychosocial model for yoga in healthcare Chapter 3 Neurophysiological foundations for evidence in practice: historical and contemporary support Chapter 4 Respiratory assessment and special testing Chapter 5 Functional movement assessment algorithm Chapter 6 Standing postures Chapter 7 Seated postures Chapter 8 Supine postures Chapter 9 Prone postures Chapter 10 Semi-inversions Chapter 11 Applied Medical Therapeutic Yoga Chapter 12 Considerations for medical providers and yoga professionals
Ginger is an integrative physical therapist (PT), athletic trainer (ATC), educator, and founder of Professional Yoga Therapy Studies. She earned her Master of Physical Therapy (MPT) from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, completing studies in the School of Medicine and School of Public Health. Ms. Garner began work in the field of integrative therapies in 1995, after becoming licensed in sports medicine. She developed Medical Therapeutic Yoga (MTY) as a postgraduate, interdisciplinary certification over a 20 year span, and has been teaching the curriculum for over 10 years. Ginger is a pro bono consultant with universities in Pennsylvania, Mississippi, and Canada, where MTY is being used as part of the master's and doctoral physical therapy curriculum. The program, which provides educational competencies for using yoga in interdisciplinary medical fields, is a first of its kind in the US. Ginger's clinical specialties include public health education, orthopaedics, pain management, and maternal health. She is currently a doctoral candidate at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Ginger considers her most important work to be patient advocacy, where through multimedia platforms she works to increase awareness of, and eliminate barriers to, receiving holistic and integrative health care. Ginger can be contacted at www.gingergarner.com and www.professionalyogatherapy.org.