Skip to main content

Physical therapy can change lives — but only if PTs and PTAs haven't been drained of their passion. A new APTA initiative in partnership with Hyperice wants to help the physical therapy community hold on to that passion through self-care.

Called Fit for Practice, the recently launched project will offer a range of resources to members and nonmembers aimed at helping individuals take the needed time to look at their own health — physical and emotional — and take steps to improve it, if needed.

Drew Contreras, PT, DPT, APTA's vice president of clinician integration and innovation, heads up the program. During remarks at the APTA Future of Physical Therapy Summit on Sept. 13, he laid out the urgent need for action.

"We are reaching an inflection point in our profession, where our clinicians are exhausted and words like 'burnout' and 'compassion fatigue' aren't even enough to describe the scope of what we are facing," Contreras said. "Clinicians are walking away from the profession, not because of salary or positions, but because they are exhausted."

The campaign begins in mid-October. Anchored in a webpage on apta.org, the program will offer weekly content including webinars, blog posts, CEU courses, social media engagement opportunities, and articles focused on four major areas of well-being: movement, resilience, restoration, and practice health. In collaboration with Hyperice, the effort will include contributions from more than a dozen entities within and outside the physical therapy industry.

Fit for Practice will run through the 2022 APTA Combined Sections meeting. Sign up now to get the most out of the program.

 


You Might Also Like...

Article

New Study Reimagines the Relationship Between Daily Steps and Health Outcomes

Sep 3, 2025

For decades, 10,000 steps a day has been regarded as a near-universal benchmark for fitness and general health goals — often promoted by wearable fitness

News

Congress Is Back in Town: 5 Things to Watch on Capitol Hill in September

Sep 2, 2025

In July, APTA and other provider groups secured a 2.5% funding increase from Congress to the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule for 2026. While this was a

News

October Is National Physical Therapy Month: See How APTA Helps You Celebrate

Sep 2, 2025

APTA is recognizing National Physical Therapy Month in October by spotlighting the vital role physical therapy plays in improving movement for people of