Backspin Volume 3, Issue 10 | Page 23

ptspin by Amber Narro Get a grip – and exercise it often Golfers focus on their grip, regrip and change their grip. And still, hands hurt. Over time, the grip gets weaker, but Occupational Therapist Carrie Higgs says there are things we can do to protect the hands from weakness and accidents that may come with that weakness. In sports, hand strength is important for catching, throwing, gripping or lifting. In daily activities, hand strength can deteriorate as activity lessens, so this strength is important whether or not people are involved in athletics to perform simple tasks like turning a doorknob. “I have seen a 93-year-old woman who could barely open her yogurt work to strengthen her grip to be able to do that and much more,” says Higgs. “She had taken care of normal daily living for years and then stopped performing those daily duties and lost her strength.” But with occupational therapy and hand exercises, she regained that strength pretty quickly and is now working to get even stronger. Occupational therapists use a tool called a dynomometer to measure hand and forearm strength. The patient will test one hand against the other in instances when patients are recovering from injury or compare the strength over time as they go through the therapy process. Higgs’ patient got stronger and stronger over time, leaving a mindset that she was getting weaker and weaker. This patient had even chosen the walker she would eventually use. Now, she has turned her focus to getting stronger – at 93. “She doesn’t even think about that walker anymore,” Higgs laughed. “She drives herself here, and she’s enjoying her life again, not over-preparing for old age to set it.” While it is important for everyone to exercise their hands, Higgs says that people should be careful not to assume that weak hands are simply a part of aging. “J