Stabroek News Sunday

Sport physiother­apist Jana Edghill is focused on helping athletes get to the next level

- By Miranda La Rose

Sport physiother­apist Jana Edghill hopes to continue working on a plan to elevate and expand the standard of practice in her field in the public sector and is doing so along with a team of sport physiother­apists now based at the National Sports Clinic and other parties.

“We have a great team at the clinic led by physiother­apist Vanessa Wickham, who accompanie­d our athletes at the recent Carifta Games in Grenada, that did so well. When you think about it, athletes pay a lot for assessment­s and therapies in other countries where the services are not easily accessible. Here it is free of cost. You just come in and we take a look at you,” Edghill told Stabroek Weekend in a recent interview.

“From the humble Castellani House, where we were prior to moving the clinic to the National Aquatic Centre, we have made a lot of strides and I am really happy to be a part of that. We have a lot of athletic talent in Guyana, yet to bloom, and if I have the kind of skills to get that talent to a next level, I want to help.”

Her desire is to be a part of a team that raises the standard of practice of athletes to the elite level, the world championsh­ips and the Olympics.

“We have been there before, not necessaril­y with the physio team we have now, but we have the capacity to do it now. I want to see our athletes do well,” she said.

A staffer of the National Sports Clinic (NSC) and in her seventh year as a physiother­apist Edghill, 29, is now in her second year working with the Golden Jaguars, Guyana’s senior men’s national football team.

She is also pursuing, simultaneo­usly, two master’s degrees. The first is in sports and exercise medicine at the University of the West Indies, Mona Campus. The second is in healthcare management through the Guyana Online Academy of Learning (GOAL) scholarshi­p programme. She expects to complete both programmes by the end of this semester.

Tours of duty

After completing tours of duties at the rehabilita­tion department of the Palms Retirement Home, Georgetown Public Hospital Corporatio­n (GPHC), two rotations at the Ptolemy Reid Rehabilita­tion Centre (PRRC) and an 18month rotation in Berbice, she was assigned to the National Sports Clinic where she has found her niche.

At the Palms, the focus was on neurologic­al conditions such as strokes, spinal cord injuries and traumatic brain injuries. “At that time, I was very green in the profession so I wasn’t drawn to an area of specialisa­tion,” she said. At the GPHC, the focus was on orthopae-dic conditions and at the PRRC, the focus was on persons with disabiliti­es.

“Working with children is not an area where I necessaril­y excel but I believe once you’re doing something, you do it to the best of your ability. The children grew on me after a time and one of the things I took away from my rotations at Ptolemy Reid was a lot of patience. I’m so grateful for that experience,” she added.

When she was assigned to supervise three orthopaedi­c department­s in the Region Six (East Berbice-Corentyne) health department, the Covid -19 pandemic struck. “It wasn’t the best time to grow the service in the area. We had to provide rehabilita­tion services in Region Six. We had department­s at the hospitals in New Amsterdam, Port Mourant and Skeldon. We could not expand in the way we wanted to because of Covid-19. Our aim was to have a physiother­apist in every region. When I got to New Amsterdam where I was based, there was no physio at the time,” she recalled.

Her stint was supposed to be for a year but she stayed for 18 months then returned to the city and was assigned

to the National Sports Clinic housed at the National Aquatic Centre compound, Liliendaal.

National Sports Clinic

By the time Edghill began her stint at the NSC she had started the master’s degree programme at UWI.

“It is a very intense and very orthopaedi­c-based programme that has given me a lot of knowledge on how to deal with sport-specific injuries and to analyse an injury more in-depth. Because it is also orthopaedi­c-based it can be related to non-athletes,” she said.

The University of Guyana (UG), where she obtained a bachelor of science degree in medical rehabilita­tion, does not offer any post graduate courses in that area and she wanted to continue in the same field. When she started the programme at UWI she had already known she liked working with orthopaedi­c cases, dislocatio­n, fractures and muscles.

“My intention was to study sport and even though it

was sport it could also relate to any orthopaedi­c condition. After joining the National Sports Clinic everything kind of snowballed .... I was getting all this knowledge and skills on sport-related conditions and I started to apply them to the athletes with favourable results. At the clinic my love for working with athletes grew. It had a domino effect and I started travelling with sports teams. I got so many opportunit­ies to work with national teams and national athletes to the point where I’m assigned to the Golden Jaguars which is a great experience. Every day I’m grateful for that,” she said.

The National Sports Clinic is an arm of the physiother­apy department of the GPHC. It was designed to provide a service for national athletes in any sport for any sportrelat­ed injury. Originally it was housed at Castellani House before it was moved to the National Aquatic Centre. Since the move, Edghill said, the clinic has

expanded and is better equipped.

“We have more equipment. We have six staff members and we see all the national athletes from all the sports you could imagine – boxing, weightlift­ing, football, track and field, everything, for assessment, physiother­apy treatment and advice on techniques for injury prevention and proper form. The clinic has grown, not just physically but we now have a pool of physiother­apists who are interested in sports. We are trying to increase our knowledge day by day on how to work with our athletes. Physiother­apy in general is one thing but working with athletes is another,” she added.

The clinic is ideally located, she said. “The pool is very important to the athletes’ recovery. We use it for hydrothera­py sessions and sometimes for strength and conditioni­ng, especially if games are coming up. Hydrothera­py is not just for the athletes but for stroke patients and patients with orthopaedi­c conditions like hip replacemen­t or any body part replacemen­t, back pains among other things. You have to be part of the clinic to access the service,” she explained.

Golden Jaguars

In January 2023, one of the Golden Jaguars players had an injury and he was being treated at the clinic when the head coach said the team was looking for a physiother­apist to work with the local players when they train in the country.

“We discussed the plans to raise the standard of treatment and medical services for the Golden Jaguars. I decided to give the players a try. I was hoping for the experience because this is how we gain knowledge and experience and pass it on. Since then I joined as an ancillary staff of the team on the Concacaf Nations League qualifiers’ tour to Bermuda, Barbados, and Antigua and Barbuda. The team is now training for the World Cup Qualifiers in June,” she revealed.

More recently she travelled with the team to Saudi Arabia for the FIFA Friendly Series where the Golden Jaguars played two games losing one and winning one. “We won the match against Cambodia but we put up a fight against Cape Verde, a higher ranked team, and ended up with nil-one in favour of Cape Verde,” she said.

Her first travel experience with athletes was to the Junior Pan Am Games in Cali, Colombia in 2021 and

after that she accompanie­d athletes to the Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham, England in 2022.

“I was also fortunate to be attached to the Guyana female cricketers for their regional cricket that was held here. After that, football took over most of my travel experience,” she said

“I have never had an experience where I was disrespect­ed in any way nor have they expressed concern or discomfort that I did not know what I was doing working with them. For me, I don’t even think about genders. I carry myself as a profession­al and I always keep that at the back of my mind. It is just about loving what I do to the best of my ability and keeping my head on in helping and guiding those who need assistance in my field,” she said.

The most common injuries among athletes are lower body injuries such as ankle sprains, hamstring issues, knee pains and ligament tears, especially in football.

At what stage she brings the doctor in? She said, “Maybe, I am biased and this is just me tooting my own horn, but I do believe that in some cases, especially with sport-related injuries, the physiother­apists do better assessment­s because we understand how the injury works and we have been trained to understand the mechanics of it. When a physiother­apist assesses an injury, it is quite an in-depth analysis of the injury. We also look at the things they eat, their rest patterns, supplement­s and hydration. We do a lot of tests, we look at outcome measures and fitness tests among other areas.”

She would only bring a doctor in if there was a need for some medical imaging/tests or blood work. “Then we would bounce ideas off of each other. There are stages when we do need a doctor’s involvemen­t. We are not allowed to write prescripti­ons or give injections. When it comes to medical procedures, well yeah, we call in the doctor. However, 80% to 85 % of the time when an athlete comes with an injury they come to a physiother­apist for assessment. You hardly find them going to a doctor unless they need some sort of medical interventi­on,” she stated.

Becoming a physio

The past student of Marian Academy had always wanted to work in the medical

field so she enrolled at UG to study medicine but that did not pan out well for her. “I think I wasn’t as discipline­d as I should’ve been. One day a friend told me about the medical rehabilita­tion programme also known as the physiother­apy programme at UG. I didn’t even know that UG was offering that programme. However, I was exposed to physical rehabilita­tion through my own sports injuries and it was always something I had actually wanted to do since I was always active in sports or around sporting activities,” she recalled. She has played volleyball at the national level and even though she does not play any sport at present, she still enjoys working out at the gym.

Edghill decided to switch to physiother­apy. “I didn’t just want a career for the sake of a career. I knew though that I wanted to do something in the medical field. After switching to physiother­apy, I enjoyed every minute of my tertiary education and the rest is history,” she said.

“You don’t have to do a sport or have an interest in sport to do physiother­apy. There are so many areas that you can fall into in physiother­apy. Even if it is not physiother­apy, you should do things that you love. If you do things that you love you will go a far way.

“I learned a lot, not just about sports but how physiother­apy can be applied in children, the elderly and with persons with disabiliti­es and how it can make our lives easier by preventing injury and pain.”

Because physiother­apy was a new programme at UG she was a part of its early developmen­tal stages. She was in the third graduating class of three in 2017. The then three newly-minted physiother­apists graduated in November 2017 and the following month they all began working in the public sector. “It was a great opportunit­y for us,” she said.

She is conscious that people are becoming more aware of the importance of physiother­apy and that it is more than a massage or the demonstrat­ion of two exercises.

What’s next? She said, “Right now I’m focused on my career and taking it to the next level. I’m making my contributi­on and I am happy where I am. I’m also paving the way for the younger physios coming behind me to get it a bit easier.”

She said that ten years ago physiother­apy was a service that was not even recognised as something that the Ministry of Health offered, much less something offered to sportsmen and sportswome­n.

“I’m grateful to the people who paved the way for me - Beverley Nelson, Barbara Lawrence, the late Janice Simmons, Dr Arianne Mangar who is currently my director and Cynthia Massy who was at Ptolemy Reid when I did my first rotation there. If they didn’t give me the opportunit­ies or teach me the things that I now know, I wouldn’t be here today,” she said.

A fun fact? She said, “I can sing really well in the shower where I like to have my own concerts.”

 ?? ?? Jana Edghill treating an athlete
Jana Edghill treating an athlete
 ?? ?? Jana Edghill with the national men’s relay team at the 2022 Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham, England
Jana Edghill with the national men’s relay team at the 2022 Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham, England
 ?? ?? Jana Edghill advising a member of the Guyana women’s cricket team
Jana Edghill advising a member of the Guyana women’s cricket team

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