Current Pedorthics | January-February 2014 | Vol. 46, Issue 1 | Page 44

Taking Steps in the Right Direction: Building your Pedorthic Practice After you have established a relationship with a physician’s practice, you must continue to nurture it. Check in with staff members, update with them with the latest happenings of your business. Make in person visits to their facilities. This will keep you in tune to what is needed in their practice and keep you fresh in their minds. We cannot stress enough, to be available! That means promptly addressing their concerns, by email, phone, or text. A huge part of the job is keeping everyone you deal with content. One of the best ways to keep everyone happy is to achieve compliance with patients: All the proper instruction and equipment will be of little use if the patient doesn’t comply. For example, convincing the geriatric patient to change their lifestyle to achieve healthier and more active mobility is a valuable skill which can determine success or failure in the treatment plan. We have patients who are in their mid-eighties that play tennis every day. However, we also have patients in their fifties who can barely walk from the chair to the treatment room. It is our duty as foot health care professionals to see that our patients are able to be active every day of their life. The difficulty is that a person’s knees hips and back are not really designed to go seventy, eighty, or even ninety years but forty or fifty years, maximum. Therefore, the preservation of these joints becomes paramount. Comfort Finn Educating the patient is paramount. Providing foot care tips and explaining how crucial it is to change out their inserts every four months and wearing socks seems repetitive, yet extremely important reminders for your patients! Take the time to talk about the risks of poor choices as well as the benefits of compliance as it pertains to their treatment. Kolding If you can’t succeed in getting your patients to wear their healthy shoes and, if applicable, their orthotics as much as possible, then you have failed to benefit that patient and probably lost their future business. But how do you stress the importance of this to a patient without being too casual, scolding, or too technical? The world of shoes is a mish mash of extremely unhealthy but popular designs that are made to please the eyes, rather than the feet, as well as a never ending cycle of gimmicks that fade as fast as the fashions. So which should your patients choose? Is it OK to comp