going to the doctor

moving me forward™

Your movement may be limited, but your options don't have to be. See how other patients conquered their pain and get started on your own journey to recovery.

Mike "Coach K" Krzyzewski
Inspirational college coach and DePuy joint recipient.

watch a pep-talk from Coach Kread Coach K's story

now playing:

"It's not worth living with pain."

http://prod.depuy.edgesuite.net/patients/media/depuy_intro.mp4
http://prod.depuy.edgesuite.net/patients/media/depuy_intro.mp4
"It's not worth living with pain."

read Coach K's story

"Hi, I'm Mike Krzyzewski, coach of Duke University's Men's Basketball team. If you could take a journey to move better, live better, why wouldn't you? I did when I had joint replacement surgery.

"I'm here to tell you that you have two opponents. Pain and lack of mobility. Pain can get you down every day. Lack of mobility can lead to decreased speed and loss of endurance. With speed and endurance loss, you don't stay competitive and you spend energy just trying to catch up. But you've got to fight your opponents to stay in the game.

"I know it isn't always easy. There was a part of me that thought of stopping, giving up coaching altogether. I would never have won two Olympic team medals and four NCAA Championships if I hadn't had my surgeries.

"Now, I don't have to overcompensate for injury and pain. I'm more active than before, I have relief from pain and I'm even quicker on my feet. People say I look better now. Do you want your life back the way it should be? You have two choices, a continued downward spiral or take action.

"So don't let the injury win. You don't need to live in pain. That's why I want to encourage you to empower yourself. Get educated, develop a personal treatment plan with your doctor, build a team of support and commit to reclaiming your life. Remember, this is a major event in your life—treat it as such. What you put into it will multiply for you at the end of the journey."
 

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choosing a doctor

When an orthopaedic surgeon is needed, it helps to know something about how to compare the training and experience of the different orthopaedic surgeons who are available.

how are orthopaedic surgeons trained?

Orthopaedic surgeons are medical doctors or osteopaths, which means that after college they attend medical school for four years to receive an MD degree or a DO (Doctor of Osteopathy) degree. There they receive general training in medicine and choose the area of medicine in which they will receive further training after graduation from medical school.

Following medical school or osteopath school, orthopaedic surgeons must complete a "residency" in orthopaedicsorthopaedicsThe medical specialty involved in the preservation and restoration of function of the musculoskeletal system t.... This is usually a minimum of five years and may last longer at some medical centers that require research or extra training. While in residency, the orthopaedic surgeon learns much more about the bones, joints and muscles of the body. It is here that the orthopaedic surgeon-in-training learns to operate and perfects the surgical skills under the guidance of the professors of orthopaedic surgerysurgeryThe branch of medicine concerned with the treatment of disease, injury, and deformity by operation or manipula....

Once the orthopaedic surgeon satisfactorily completes the required residency training, he or she is able to begin practice. The new surgeon must then obtain "surgical privileges" at the hospitals where surgery will be performed. An extensive process of "credentialing" by the hospital is usually required to obtain surgical privileges. The surgeon‘s background and training are thoroughly checked.

what is board certification?

Orthopaedic surgeons are certified by the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgeons (ABOS). To become "board certified" following completion of a residency program, the orthopaedic surgeon must first pass a written test and a grueling oral examination that is given two years after entering practice. During the oral examination, the surgeon is questioned by a team of orthopaedic surgeons to assess his or her understanding of orthopaedic medicine and surgery. The surgeon must present the results of the surgical procedures he or she has performed to date for the team‘s review. To maintain "board certification," the surgeon must take an additional test every ten years and prove that he or she has attended a minimum number of hours of continuing education.

what is fellowship training?

Many orthopaedic surgeons choose to specialize even further and obtain special training in a specific area of orthopaedic surgery. This requires even more training in the form of a "fellowship". A fellowship usually lasts six months to one year. During the fellowship, the orthopaedic surgeon works with one or several experts in a specialized field of orthopaedic surgery. This allows the orthopaedic surgeon to become even more experienced in certain areas, such as jointjointThe junction between the ends of two adjacent bones. replacement, spinal surgery, hand surgery, children‘s orthopaedics or sports medicine to name a few. Following fellowship training, some orthopaedic surgeons limit their practice to those areas in which they are most highly trained. The larger the town, the more likely you will find orthopaedic surgeons who are "subspecialists" that limit their individual practice to just a few areas.

 

May 15 2012 - 19:17:49