Deep Dive: Give Them a Hand: 11/18/25, 5-9 PM, 4 Supervised CE Hours

$100.00

In-Person or Live Online via Zoom (please let me know if you wish to attend In-Person or Online)

Live (in-person) participation provides: 4 Supervised CE Hours for OBMT Renewal, 4 Contact CE hours for Washington renewal, 4 Live CE hours for NCBTMB

Online participation provides: 4 Supervised CE Hours for OBMT Renewal, 4 NON-Contact CE hours for Washington renewal

5-9 PM

Location: 2135 SE 76th Ave, Portland, OR 97215

Give Them a Hand: A Deep Dive into Hand and Forearm Anatomy, Pathology and Bodywork. Presented by Alex Susbauer, BCSI, LMT, CPT

Working with our hands is a very rewarding and potentially injury-causing activity and the line between use and overuse is often very small. This workshop aims to take a deeper look at the anatomy of the forearm and hand and explore common pathologies seen in a manual therapy practice. All of this will be interwoven with specific, focused bodywork for the forearm and hand with an emphasis on techniques that won’t overuse the therapist’s hands in the process. We will discuss ways in which bodywork can support our clients with hand and forearm issues and when it would be more appropriate to refer our clients out. Some highlights include: tenosynovitis conditions, carpal tunnel syndrome, epicondyle related pathologies, nerve locations as well as radius and carpal movements and mobilizations.

In-Person or Live Online via Zoom (please let me know if you wish to attend In-Person or Online)

Live (in-person) participation provides: 4 Supervised CE Hours for OBMT Renewal, 4 Contact CE hours for Washington renewal, 4 Live CE hours for NCBTMB

Online participation provides: 4 Supervised CE Hours for OBMT Renewal, 4 NON-Contact CE hours for Washington renewal

5-9 PM

Location: 2135 SE 76th Ave, Portland, OR 97215

Give Them a Hand: A Deep Dive into Hand and Forearm Anatomy, Pathology and Bodywork. Presented by Alex Susbauer, BCSI, LMT, CPT

Working with our hands is a very rewarding and potentially injury-causing activity and the line between use and overuse is often very small. This workshop aims to take a deeper look at the anatomy of the forearm and hand and explore common pathologies seen in a manual therapy practice. All of this will be interwoven with specific, focused bodywork for the forearm and hand with an emphasis on techniques that won’t overuse the therapist’s hands in the process. We will discuss ways in which bodywork can support our clients with hand and forearm issues and when it would be more appropriate to refer our clients out. Some highlights include: tenosynovitis conditions, carpal tunnel syndrome, epicondyle related pathologies, nerve locations as well as radius and carpal movements and mobilizations.