Tell us a little about her current work and study, especially how she thinks and practices herself critically?
I am a physiotherapist who works in a public institution, the same one from which I graduated, there I am a professor of hospital practice. In the pregado I am in charge, interest and pleasure, the class of History, transformations and perspectives of physiotherapy. It is a subject for newcomers to the university.
I have others in my charge, but in her and for her, since I went to David’s presentation in Cape Town, I got closer to thinking critically THE stories in the profession, the places of power and the interpretative frameworks of the models that install some. And other perspectives of the profession.
What attracts you to critical physical therapy?
The possibility of “disbelieving”, the freedom to be a bad thinker.
What do you contribute to the CPN?
I like to join in what I can do, learn and unlearn, invite semiotic vigilance, not to normalise polyphonic categories loaded with ideology
How would you like the critical physical therapy community to develop in the next few years?
I would like us to have a YouTube channel with interviews from everyone, with contributions of freely accessible documents, with an international stage to discuss the issues that interest us.
A channel with music from many places where we are, we come and we each live, with a place to cook intellectual, academic, philosophical, ethical and aesthetic recipes
How would you like the profession of physical therapy to develop in general?
In the recognition of the profound interdependence that we have.
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