Delaware Back Pain & Sports Rehabilitation Centers

  • Call Call
  • Contact Contact
  • Our Locations Our Locations
  • Testimonials
  • News & Announcements News & Announcements
  • YouTube

  • COVID-19
  • Telemedicine
  • Pay Bill
  • Patient Survey
  • Request an Appointment

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Legal Concierge
    • Careers
  • Providers
    • Medical
      • Barry L. Bakst DO
      • Arnold Glassman DO
      • Jeffrey S. Meyers MD
      • Kartik Swaminathan MD
      • Pramod Yadhati MD
    • Chiropractic
      • Brian Baar D.C.
      • Mark Farthing D.C.
      • Marjorie Mackenzie D.C.
      • Adam Maday D.C.
      • Hetal Patel D.C.
      • Michael Sharkey, D.C.
      • Riley Tuininga, D.C.
  • Specialties
    • Chiropractic Care
    • EMG/NCS
    • Rehabilitation Therapy
    • Sports Medicine
    • Accident & Injury
    • Workers’ Compensation
    • DOT - CDL Medical Exams
    • Wellness
    • Closed Head Injuries
  • Treatments & Procedures
    • Advanced Non-Surgical Treatments
      • Platelet Rich Plasma Therapy
      • Prolotherapy
      • Laser Therapy
      • Graston Technique
      • Anti-Gravity Treadmill
      • Myofascial Release
      • 3D Active Traction
      • Ultrasound-Guided Injections
    • Interventional Procedures
      • Interventional Pain Management
  • Patient Forms
  • Testimonials
  • Our Blog
    • Call Call
    • Contact Contact
    • Our Locations Our Locations
    • Testimonials
    • News & Announcements News & Announcements
    • YouTube
    • Patient Survey

Hand Therapy

Back to Patient Education
  • Introduction
  • Treatment

Introduction

Hand Therapy is a specialized area of rehabilitation.  Your doctor may refer you to an occupational therapist or physical therapist with advanced skills or a Certified Hand Therapist (CHT) for hand therapy.  A CHT is an occupational or physical therapist that has completed continued education, supervised training, and testing to earn credentials beyond a therapy degree.  Hand therapists focus on rehabilitation for conditions that affect the hand and arm.
 
A hand therapist provides continuing care for individuals with hand conditions resulting from medical conditions or following hand surgery or injury.  Medical conditions, such as arthritis; neurological conditions, such as stroke, traumatic brain injury, and spinal cord injury; and disorders, such as carpal tunnel syndrome; can affect the way hands move and function.  Hand therapy can be helpful for people with trauma, burns, and amputations.  Additionally, hand therapy is common following hand surgery to restore tendons, nerves, and joint function.  A hand therapist may be consulted for preventive consultation, especially in the manufacturing industries.
Back to top

Treatment

Your hand therapist will work with your doctor to determine treatments that are appropriate for you and that are designed to meet your goals.  Hand therapy can reduce pain and swelling.  It can help to restore strength, endurance, coordination, and movement.  It can also promote healing and reduce scar formation.  You should tell your hand therapist about your symptoms, concerns, and goals.  Your therapist will create a treatment plan that incorporates your goals for functional improvement.

At your initial evaluation, your therapist will examine your hand and take measurements.  Your hand and finger strength, coordination, and sensation will be tested.  The therapist will measure how far you can move your joints.  He or she will look at your hand for any sores, deformities, or swelling. 

Hand therapy treatments vary and depend on the type of condition you have, the extent of your condition, and your goals.  It is common for therapy to include hand exercises, splinting, and modalities.  You may need to wear hand splints while your hand is at rest, during work, or both.  Hand splints can help your hand heal, reduce pain, and improve function.  Modalities are treatments that can help relieve pain and promote movement.  These include heat, ice, ultrasound, electrical stimulation, and others.  Additionally, hand therapy can include wound healing treatments and burn debridement.  Your therapists can suggest adaptive devices, such as eating or writing utensils, to improve your functional independence.

In industrial settings, hand therapists perform workplace evaluations for injury prevention.  Hand therapists can recommend alternative work methods or work station changes to prevent injuries and cumulative trauma disorders.  They can also help an individual with a hand injury return to work by making workplace modifications.

Back to top

Copyright ©  - iHealthSpot Interactive - www.iHealthSpot.com

This information is intended for educational and informational purposes only. It should not be used in place of an individual consultation or examination or replace the advice of your health care professional and should not be relied upon to determine diagnosis or course of treatment.

The iHealthSpot patient education library was written collaboratively by the iHealthSpot editorial team which includes Senior Medical Authors Dr. Mary Car-Blanchard, OTD/OTR/L and Valerie K. Clark, and the following editorial advisors: Steve Meadows, MD, Ernie F. Soto, DDS, Ronald J. Glatzer, MD, Jonathan Rosenberg, MD, Christopher M. Nolte, MD, David Applebaum, MD, Jonathan M. Tarrash, MD, and Paula Soto, RN/BSN. This content complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information. The library commenced development on September 1, 2005 with the latest update/addition on February 16, 2022. For information on iHealthSpot’s other services including medical website design, visit www.iHealthSpot.com.

Footer

Patient Education

Our patient education library features more than 200 award-winning articles with images, videos, and tons of helpful information.

LEARN MORE

Foulk Road
2006 Foulk Road, Suite B
Wilmington, DE 19810
Phone: (302) 529-8783
Fax: (302) 529-7470

Smyrna
29 N. East Street
Smyrna, DE 19977
Phone: (302) 389-2225
Fax: (302) 389-1003

Riverside
700 Lea Blvd., Suite 102
Wilmington, DE 19802
Phone: (302) 764-2615
Fax: (302) 762-4076

Dover
1006 College Road, Suite 201
Dover, DE 19904
Phone: (302) 730-8848
Fax: (302) 730-8846

Omega
87 Omega Drive, Building B
Newark, DE 19713
Phone: (302) 733-0980
Fax: (302) 733-7495

Milford Office (Air Park Plaza)
915 North DuPont Blvd, Suite 104
Milford, DE 19963
Phone: (302) 491-4487
Fax: (302) 491-4635

Glasgow
2600 Glasgow Avenue, Suite 210
Newark, DE 19702
Phone: (302) 832-8894
Fax: (302) 832-8897

REQUEST AN APPOINTMENT

EMPLOYEE LOGIN

iHealthspot Medical Website Design and Medical Marketing by iHealthSpot.com

Home | HIPAA Privacy Policy | Accessibility Statement | Sitemap
Copyright © var dDate = new Date(); document.write(dDate.getFullYear()); Delaware Back Pain and Sports Rehabilitation Centers. All Rights Reserved.

Staffed by certified physiatrists, chiropractors, psychologists, and therapeutic rehabilitation specialists, we provide pain relief for many types of bone, joint, nerve conditions. Our interventional pain management specialists (PM&R) treat closed head injuries, stroke, concussion, whiplash, dizziness, headaches, sciatica, disc problems, back & neck pain, joint stiffness, sleep apnea, muscle spasm, fibromyalgia, arthritis, neuritis, bursitis, and more.  We also treat job related injuries and injury from auto accident, sports or a fall at home.  As experts in Pain Medicine, our doctors provide surgical and non-surgical solutions including trigger point injections, epidural injections, nerve block, spinal cord stimulation, intrathecal spinal pump implant, PRP therapy, Graston® technique, Prolotherapy and more.  Serving Wilmington, Newark, Middletown, Smyrna, and Dover, Delaware.