Apologies for the shameless self-publicity, but I’m truly delighted to reveal that the book I have been working on for the last two years went off to Routledge for copy editing this morning, with a publication date set for just before WCPT in June next year.
Notwithstanding its apocalyptic title, The End of Physiotherapy is actually a book about the future for the profession, and asks how physiotherapy developed the way it did, and how we are going to need to respond to the challenges facing us in the years to come.
The book analyses the purpose (or end) of physiotherapy, but also predicts that physiotherapy will not survive (the other meaning of ‘end’), unless it understands its culture and history better, and recognises the need for radical reform.
Here’s the broad abstract for the book:
The End of Physiotherapy is the first book length critical history of the profession ever written. Prompted by the tensions and pressures now being felt by physiotherapists throughout the world, the book seeks answers in the profession’s past. Through a detailed and comprehensive analysis of the principles, practices, systems and structures developed by successive generations of practitioners, teachers and regulators, the book argues that the roots of the profession’s present problems can be found in the way it established its legitimacy and orthodox status. Drawing on a wide range of historical and contemporary sources from the United Kingdom, North America and Australasia, the book explores how neoliberal economic reforms, the burden of chronic illness and lifestyle diseases, the end of the welfare state, and people’s increasing skepticism towards orthodox healthcare, might now be posing challenges that the physiotherapy profession is ill-equipped to answer. The book explores the idea of a physiotherapy paradox, whereby the very conditions that once gave the profession its social standing now threaten to undermine it. The book challenges physiotherapists to reflect on these conditions and see the challenges now being posed as a call for the greatest reform ever undertaken by the profession: a challenge that will require physiotherapists to leave behind the very principles that once made their profession great, and carve out an entirely new professional identity.
I’ll post more information on here as the publishing deadline gets closer, but for now I’m going for a lie down.
Dave Nicholls, AUT University, Auckland
Margareth Lorena Alfonso says
I have been reading your book. I think that is so great contribution for reflection an analysis in physiotherapy practice.
The chapter about the posture and movement has given me a point for starting with my doctoral thesis project. (The body from the posture of women in the specific colombian rural area, I would like to know about the meaning of their environment over their body and posture).
Therefore your book, and manuscripts like body and physiotherapy and connectivity in physiotherapyy have show me a theoretical approach for build my project. Also I have been reading other authors from South America (Paulo Freire, Sousa de Santos, Edgar Morín) that have allowed me to understand other kind of thinking for increasing my comprehension about the women’s reality in my country; which currently is in the peace process and is the propicios moment for try to built a new way for living a new reality.
So, again your book has give me the opportunity for connecting the reality with the physiotherapy.
Dave Nicholls says
Thank you for the lovely feedback Margareth. The book was written to be used by physios, so hearing that it’s helped you develop a focus for your doctoral thesis project is the best feedback an author can get. There are lots of people in the CPN who will be keen to follow your work as it develops, so please keep us updated. I’ve been talking with another colleague in Germany (Franziska Seitz) about a thesis very similar to the one you’re looking at. Her interest is also in women’s posture and the effect of culture on how women stand and move, so I’ve pointed her to your message and suggested you get in touch, you might have a lot to discuss. Dave