Skip to main content

A lot has changed in the profession of physical therapy since 1994, when Beth Domholdt, PT, EdD, FAPTA, conducted a question-and-answer interview on "Reentering Practice" for this publication's predecessor, PT Magazine.

feature-reentry-350.jpg

Back then, Domholdt — not yet a Catherine Worthingham Fellow of APTA — was dean of the Krannert School of Physical Therapy at the University of Indianapolis. The school offered a "clinical update" program geared in part toward "inactive" PTs returning to the profession after an extended absence. The most typical reason for those hiatuses, the article noted, was pregnancy and childrearing, with nearly 40% of female APTA members, according to the association's 1993 Active Member Profile Report, having reported one or more career interruptions of unspecified length.

Log in or create a free account to keep reading.


Join APTA to get unlimited access to content.


You Might Also Like...

News

Rehab Company Co-Founder Rocky Ortenzio Has Died

Nov 20, 2024

Select Medical chair emeritus was a former APTA Pennsylvania delegate and Foundation supporter.

Perspective

I Took 20 Free APTA Learning Center Courses in 20 Days

Nov 19, 2024

What I learned from the course content and from the experience of disciplining myself to meet the challenge.

News

APTA 2024 House of Delegates Election Results Announced

Nov 18, 2024

The APTA Board of Directors and Nominating Committee positions are set for 2025.