On 2/9/18 I met Mr. Mossman at the office of Dr. Drayer. Travel time was extended due to several winter weather. Mr. Mossman’s last day of therapy is today. Dr. Drayer has a physical therapist in his office that will perform measurements before. Dr. Drayer does his evaluation. Per the physical therapist, the range of motion and strength has dramatically improved since the last office visit. Dr. Drayer was very happy with the progress. He told Mr. Mossman to do whatever is able to do, that he will not hurt the repair. Mr. Mossman denied any pain at all. He has been released to full duty work as of 2/12/18. There are no further follow up appointments. SUMMARY Mr. Mossman said while he was working on 10/4/17, he reached out to lift a steel
gate and felt an immediate pain in the left shoulder. Mr. Mossman has treated with orthopedic specialist Dr. Drayer in the past, so he opted to make an appointment with Dr. Drayer. He said he was sent for an MRI and a slap tear to the left shoulder was the diagnosis. Mr. Mossman said he had surgery with Dr. Drayer on 11/20/17 BENEFITS OF CASE MANAGEMENT • Performed comprehensive initial assessment to determine current status. • Attended medical appointments to obtain physician treatment plan and current clinical status. • Communicated regularly with an account in a timely manner. • Communicated regularly with the employer about a return to work status.
In a Georgia Court, Timothy Foster was convicted of capital murder and penalized to death. During his trial, the State Court use peremptory challenges to strike all four black prospective jurors qualified to serve on the Jury. However, Foster argued that the use of these strikes was racially motivated, in violation of Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U. S.79. That led his claim to be rejected by the trial court, and the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed. The state courts rejected relief, and the Foster’s Batson claim had been adjudicated on direct appeal. Finally, his Batson claim had been failed by the court because it failed to show “any change in the facts sufficient to overcome”.
A summary of the case details (provide the circumstances surrounding the case, who, what, when, how)
This case involved a 53 year old man who sustained a significant tear of his rotator cuff while playing baseball. He underwent surgical repair and was given a referral for physical therapy. The referral was to begin passive ROM 3 times per week for 2 weeks then initiate a supervised home program of active exercise for 2 weeks, and elastic resistance exercises for internal and external rotation every other day for a month. 2 weeks after surgery, he had his first PT visit in a sports medicine clinic that was managed by an athletic trainer (ATC).”
The Colten Boushie and Gerald Stanley Case The Colten Boushie and Gerald Stanley case stands as a stark reminder of the persistent divide in Canadian society. The unfortunate death of Colten Boushie, a young Indigenous man, and the subsequent acquittal of Gerald Stanley radiated uproar and combative debate over systemic racism, economic disparities, and justice inequality. The case of Colten Boushie and Gerald Stanley stirred a national conversation about Canada's treatment of its Indigenous Peoples and the functioning of its justice system. The press release first given to the public only stated, “Three occupants from the vehicle, including two females (one being a youth) and one adult male were taken into custody as part of a related theft
Kincaid was not detained for a reasonable time because during her detention the security guard took a fifteen-minute personal phone call. Detention is for a reasonable amount if the store uses the time to investigate and if the store’s employee does not make physical contact with a person in order to detain them. Mitchell v. Walmart Stores, Inc., 477 S.E.2d 631, 633 (Ga. App. 1996). Colonial Stores, Inc. v Fishel, 288 S.E.2d 21, 23 (Ga. App. 1981). In Mitchell, the court held that the plaintiff’s detention was for a reasonable period of time because the store used the time to inquire about the circumstances which lead to their antishoplifting device alarm activating and because the detention was only for ten or fifteen-minutes. Mitchell v. Walmart Stores, Inc., 477 S.E.2d 631, 633 (Ga. App.
In January of 2012, I was playing in the first volleyball tournament of the club season. In the second game of the day, I dove to get a ball and landed wrong on my right wrist. My wrist was constantly popping and hurting when I needed to lift something. In May of 2012, my mother took me to the orthopedic doctor at Athens Orthopedic Clinic. I underwent physical therapy, took pain medicine, and played no volleyball for a month. When the month was up and there was still no improvement, I went to get a MRI. The radiologist said that there was nothing wrong, but my orthopedic referred me to an orthopedic surgeon for a second opinion. It only took a minute for my orthopedic surgeon to see what the problem was: a tear in my TFCC (a cartilage structure located on the small finger side of the wrist that, cushions and supports the small carpal bones in the wrist (Midwest). On August 8, 2013, I had surgery on my wrist. Ever since I’ve had surgery I’ve wanted to be an orthopedic surgeon. Although becoming an orthopedic surgeon takes years of education, hours of training, and hours of on-call work, orthopedic surgery’s advantages outnumber the disadvantages.
Will's first examination by his primary care physician consisted of testing his flexibility and checking his back muscles for stiffness and spasms after performing load bearing exercises. Will's doctor found signs of a muscle strain, so he sent him home with a prescription of ibuprofen, and advised Will to take some time off work to rest. Taking things easy after two weeks off from work hadn't improved Will's condition, so he returned to see his doctor. X-rays were taken and the doctor discovered signs of arthritis in Will's spine. The doctor wasn't sure of his diagnosis, so he reffered Will to a spine therapy specialist to undergo physical therapy in hopes that the pain might be alleviated after strengthening the back muscles. If the back pain still didn't improve after taking these measures, an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) of the lumbar area would be considered.
He was a large, muscular man who stood about 6 feet and weight 200 pounds. When this was written, he was probably about 30 year old. The skills he had were strength and the ability to do hard labor. He went to Summer County to work on Big Bend Tunnel for $1.25 per day. This was good money even though it was hazardous
The purpose of this case study is to investigate and bring new insight to situations and behaviors within an organization. Case studies are learning tools which utilize social science research to identify and resolve individual and organizational challenges (K. Mariama-Arthur Esq., 2015).
DOI: 6/15/2010. The patient is a 50-year-old female sewer/engineering technician who sustained repetitive trauma to her eyes, hands, waist, back, right hip, right leg and forearm. Panel QME Dr. Morris, IW is P & S on 0/08/14 with 19 % permanent disability. Future e medical care incldues
At the time it was the biggest load in the Southern Hemisphere, it was 500 tons, it was towed up over Mount Nameless, they would have two Mack 600's pulling it, they had two A24 rubber tyred dozers pushing it on the bitumen when it wasn’t on the bitumen they would push it with D9 dozers along the road. It took three days to move the shovel from Tom Price to Paraburdoo. In 1972 the price of iron ore dropped dramatically, the Japanese order was decreased by 40%. The staff were called together and told they were closing down Paraburdoo, two took a redundancy and Hamersley Iron found work for 400 people carrying out maintenance, 64 families stayed there keeping things running.
The patient is a 53-year-old individual who was injured on 06/12/2016. During that time, he was stacking rims together and putting them inside the box. The patient states that each box would weigh up to 80 pounds. Suddenly one of the rims fell in-between the 2 separate stacks of rims. He reached down with his right hand to grab the falling rim. As he was pulling his arm up, he straightened his right index finger that got caught on one side of the stacked rims causing a cut.
On 12/12/16 I met Mr. McClellan and his step dad at the office of Dr. Nzoma. The MRI was reviewed. There is a partial tear of the ACL. There is some popping but examination showed good strength and stability. Dr. Nzoma would like physical therapy to continue to help him wean out of the brace and to work on the popping. We discussed a return to work and restrictions were written.
The past two and a half weeks have been very productive and I continue to make progress in continuing to regain my tissue mobility. The medication in conjunction with the work hardening program is working and the restriction in my shoulder appears to be lessening in small increments weekly. I am trying to be patient and had one bad session from me trying to push too hard too fast in an effort to move through my restriction, but I now realize that slow and steady will win this race. Additionally, my sleep periods are improving. I am successfully working two hours per day from home without flare-up of my shoulder and my at home work hardening sessions have increased to nearly four hours.