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Corrective Exercise Solutions to Common Hip and Shoulder Dysfunction

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Dysfunctions of the movement system are at the core of most cases of musculoskeletal injury, including but not limited to degenerative joint conditions, impingement syndromes and chronic myofascial and joint pain. These movement impairments result in repetitive and cumulative microtraumas that affect individuals in their occupations and everyday activities, as well as in their attempts to be more physically active. Full of color photographs illustrating precise assessments, corrective strategies and functional progressions, author Evan Osar demonstrates how the fitness professional or clinician can apply the three principles of human movement--respiration, centration and integration--to improve common movement dysfunctions of the hip and shoulder. This valuable resource The three reasons why clients develop faulty movement patterns, so the fitness professional or clinician can understand and explain the mechanisms behind their clients' hip and shoulder dysfunctions. The concepts and strategies, including real-world and clinical applications, of the corrective exercise and integrative movement approach to common movement dysfunctions of the hip and shoulder, so the fitness professional or clinician has both the strategies and the tools to address their clients' hip and shoulder dysfunctions. An easy-to-implement, principle-based solution to common movement dysfunction of the hip and shoulder, so the fitness professional or clinician can expand the expertise as a movement specialist and become a part of the solution to the health care crisis.

568 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 1, 2012

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Evan Osar

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Profile Image for Tom Davitt.
34 reviews3 followers
October 27, 2018
This is largely a good book but he's not very interested in providing any solid references for some of his claims, which vary from incredibly intuitive to downright wacky. Despite some "facts" which literally made me roll my eyes, there are enough gems in this book for it to be worth the read.
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