Sean Gibbon’s Blog
I decided to start this blog after recent course feedback. On the course we discussed some of the issues in the physiotherapy profession, the complexity of pain, research gaps, ideas, clinical reasoning, clinical top tips and case studies. So this blog was born to share this. It is my opinion that chronic pain is not simple and that most people will do better with an individualized approach rather than simple strengthening. I look forward to sharing some case studies to highlight the use of Motor Behavior Therapy, and the newer testing and rehab strategies not everyone is familiar with (e.g., primitive reflex inhibition, postural reflex facilitation & cranial nerve treatment). My research ideas have largely come from problem solving with clients and continue to evolve. I’m sure it will evolve to include other musings!
The model has advanced quite a bit over the years into “Motor Behavior Therapy” (MBT). This is a clinical reasoning framework for the personalized management of musculoskeletal pain. The key themes are:
- Mechanisms
- Causation
- Individualization
- Barriers
Making Sense of Complexity
A Rehab Direction for All Patients
Motor Behavior Therapy is allows the therapist to assess the dominant mechanisms contributing to an individuals’ presentation and use clinical reasoning to prioritize starting points and problem solving. The MBT framework has identified key barriers for progression which can be used for stratification or sub-classification.
Motor Behavior Therapy allows the therapist to integrate their current knowledge and apply it within this framework, while adding new core skills to improve patient treatment.
Latest Posts
Commentary on: “Why we need to stop blaming the Transversus Abdominis for back pain”
Constructive criticism and debate is essential. Social media platforms can be useful to facilitate this. But they also allow misinformation that can influence patient care (Keter 2023). I decided to write [...]
Birth History & Musculoskeletal Pain: If You Don’t Assess It, You Can’t Address It
Is it important to take a detailed birth history? Yes it is - sometimes. It is most important when there is very poor motor skill learning, body imagery deficits or when [...]
Possible Causes for the Presence of Primitive Reflexes in adults
Movement is a foundation of physiotherapy rehabilitation. A sub group of patients have very poor coordination and this interferes with traditional rehab. Other patients just seem to have tightness in muscles [...]
Prone Over Bed Hip Abduction-Extension-External Rotation: An alternative Exercise for Posterior Gluteus Medius (AKA: the clam)
A number of years ago, I saw a need to have an exercise for posterior gluteus medius that solved the issues related to the clam. In a previous post I mentioned [...]







