4.6 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 13 August 2024
⏱️ 65 minutes
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Back pain for lifters can be scary & frustrating & varies in severity. Learn the causes, treatments, approaches, & red flags as a lifter and coach.
Rebekah Krieg, Exclusive Coach & former long-time physical therapist, discusses back pain, how to approach it as a lifter and coach, and red flags contraindicate training.
Back pain happens.
Whether an MRI of your back would look "normal" or "bad," back pain seems to be part of the human experience for those who exercise and train and those who do not.
It is better, all things being equal, to train and strengthen your low back. A strong back is a resilient low back.
Back pain comes in many intensities and durations, from the short-term tweaks, to the multi-month or year variety, to chronic back pain.
As lifters and coaches, we have to approach back pain with some flexibility but basic principles, an openness to refer out, active listening to our clients.
The general approach is to focus on what you can do.
If a lifter experiences a tweak during the workout, a general approach is to do the following:
As a coach, do not encourage or support client catastrophizing. Training curious, see what works. Even if the workout has to be ended, most likely the client will feel better after a day or two and with something easy movements like bending over at the waist to get blood flowing into the back.
Motion is lotion.
For someone with new back that comes in, encourage them to see how the back feels after a warm up (and likely a slower, longer warm up). If they are still not feeling good, than follow the steps above. Often times, though, they will feel better after a warm up.
If someone comes in with chronic back pain, they are used to back pain. Focus on excellent technique and be more conservative with them. Ensure that the back pain does not get worse, and see if it gets better. Communication will be critical, and you may include a back pain metric that helps you and the client ensure pain monitoring is a regular part of the coaching process.
If the back pain is bad and normal enough, they might never do the conventional deadlift. Focus on what they can do. If the conventional deadlift or low bar squat causes significant pain or things to get worse, it does not make sense to force them into these movement patterns.
Sometimes, clients should not even warm up. If the client reports any sudden loss of function since the back pain, this contraindicates training. Below is a longer list:
Do NOT let them warm up. They need to go to the doctor.
Bekah even has said that she has had to fire a client who would not follow her recommendations and guidelines for lifting and would not see a doctor. This may be the kindest thing you can do to them.
What type of glaring signal might it send to someone that a coach will no longer take their money unless they change their behaviors?
Back pain for lifters and coaches can be frustrating and scary. Do not catastrophize, follow some basic steps and principles, and do not be afraid to refer out to another healthcare professional.
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0:00.0 | You're listening to Barbell Logic. |
0:04.0 | The podcast where we talk about what it means to experience strength. |
0:08.0 | And how you can use simple, hard and effective strategies in training and nutrition to improve your life. |
0:14.8 | It starts with meeting you where you are right now and finding lasting solutions. |
0:19.8 | Welcome to the show. Welcome everybody to the barbell logic podcast. It's so awesome to have you here |
0:37.0 | with us joined today with my co-host CJ. Ohoy! I just love imagining that everybody who's like doing the dishes or walking or |
0:46.5 | driving right now just says a hoi back to you makes me happy to think about that. |
0:51.1 | Would warm my heart. |
0:53.0 | And we're joined today by a coach who's very special to me because she's my coach and very |
0:57.8 | special to the Barbologic team. |
0:59.3 | We're joined by Rebecca Krieg. |
1:01.3 | Hey, hi everybody, it's good to be here. |
1:04.0 | You've heard her before, but Becca, do you want to give a little intro about yourself and |
1:09.0 | kind of set up, you don't know what we're talking about today but this is why it matters who Beck is. |
1:14.0 | Yeah that's right well I am Rebecca Craig I am a strength coach obviously but I also |
1:18.3 | worked as a physical therapy assistant for 20 some years most of it in orthopedic, but also in some like geriatric stuff. |
1:26.0 | I've also been a strength coach since, hmm, let's see, like 2012 probably, something like that. |
1:32.0 | Like, so, you know, my see like |
1:33.4 | So you know my passion is definitely seeing someone overcome injury weakness and get way past where you get from physical therapy to being even more strong and capable. |
1:45.0 | And so I guess I am here because I deal with a lot of people with back pain and I have for a long time for a lot of years so that's why I'm here I think yeah good |
1:56.2 | so good answer yeah okay I didn't know how long you'd been you know serving as a PTA like 20 years feels so long for me you know serving as a PTA like 20 years feel so long for me. |
2:04.3 | Yeah that gives my age out of course but yeah yeah so I think I've worked nine years |
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