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  • Back to the Basics: Evidence-based Management & Clinical Reasoning for the Cervicothoracic Spine

Back to the Basics: Evidence-based Management & Clinical Reasoning for the Cervicothoracic Spine

  • Saturday, September 26, 2026
  • 8:00 AM
  • Sunday, September 27, 2026
  • 5:00 PM
  • UND SMHS, 1301 North Columbia Road, Grand Forks, ND
  • 25

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Outline of Presentation:
Grounded in evidence-based practice and the latest cervical clinical practice guidelines, this course builds the knowledge and hands-on skills to properly manage cervicothoracic conditions.  Given the significant treatment variability in orthopedic practice, this course will focus on getting "back to the basic," highlighting what the research truly supports.  Over two in-person days, participants will dive into evidence-based examination, treatment, and manual therapy/manipulation instruction.  This course will bring awareness to the clinical biases that likely influence us every day, the different types of clinical reasoning, and review/discuss real patient case videos to spark high-level discussion amongst participants.  The goal is that you leave confident and ready to apply it all in the clinic on Monday morning.

Learning Objectives:

  • Review the most up-to-date literature on evidence-based examination and treatment of cervicothoracic conditions
  • Differentiate individuals who are most likely to benefit from manual therapy interventions (e.g., thrust and non-thrust joint mobilization) targeting the cervicothoracic spine
  • Enhance clinical reasoning skills through guided analysis and discussion of real patient video cases, allowing participants to identify key subjective and objective findings, generate and refine hypotheses, and apply evidence-based decision-making in cervicothoracic management
  • Explain current best evidence to ensure safe and appropriate screening and use of thrust and non-thrust manipulative techniques for common cervicothoracic conditions.
  • Demonstrate skillful psychomotor skills necessary for the same and effective application of both thrust and non-thrust manipulation techniques
  • Demonstrate and prescribe appropriate manual therapy-reinforcing therapeutic exercises to optimize outcomes in the management of cervicothoracic conditions
Speaker Biographical Sketch:
Matt Schumacher, a native of Hazelton, ND, is a physical therapist who earned his Doctor of Physical Therapy from the University of Mary in 2016 and a Doctor of Science (DScPT) from Bellin College in 2024.  He holds a manual therapy certification, is a Board-certified Orthopedic Clinical Specialist (OCS), and a Fellow of the American Academy of Orthopedic Manual Physical Therapists (FAAOMPT), a dual distinction held by only approximately 500 PTs nationwide.  he is part of the core faculty in the University of Mary's Department of Physical Therapy and a Fellow Mentor Leader in Bellin College's Orthopedic Manual Physical Therapy program.  He maintains an active membership in the APTA and AAOMPT, and an avid research program with over 25 peer-reviewed publications and national presentations on orthopedic manual physical therapy (e.g., JOSPT, PTJ).  His research interests include mechanisms of manual therapy, referred musculoskeletal pain, and advanced post-professional residency and fellowship training.

(c) American Physical Therapy Association NORTH DAKOTA (APTAND)

1301 North Columbia Rd, Stop Box 9037 |  Grand Forks, North Dakota 58202

 (701) 777-3873  |  Contact Us at info (@) aptand (dot) com


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