The Joint Effort Podcast

Bone And Joint Health: Occupational Therapist Nathan Sharbaugh Discussed The 5-Point Screening Program

13 min · 9 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Bone And Joint Health: Occupational Therapist Nathan Sharbaugh Discussed The 5-Point Screening Program

Descripción

Free X-rays, a bone density check [https://www.pghbjc.com], a balance screen, and a grip strength test that might say more about your future than you expect, all in one community stop. We sit down with Nathan Sharbaugh, director of the Innovation Center and a trained occupational therapist, to explain the Joint Effort Podcast’s five-point bone and joint health screening program [https://www.pghbjc.com] and why it’s built for real life, not perfect routines or perfect access to care. We walk through each part of the screening: nutrition, fall-risk questions, a quick balance and sit-to-stand test, grip strength testing, bone density screening using ultrasound technology, and a mobile X-ray service we bring out into Western Pennsylvania. We also talk about why people love the hands-on experience, how immediate feedback helps the information actually stick, and how we connect community members to follow-up care when something looks off. Then we zoom in on the big takeaways. Grip strength [https://www.pghbjc.com] isn’t just a “gym stat” it’s tied in the research to independence, fall risk, bone density, and broader health outcomes. And fall prevention isn’t a lecture about being careful; it’s about the environment you live in, the habits you repeat, and simple changes that lower risk today. If you’ve ever worried about osteoporosis, osteopenia, arthritis, or staying steady as you age, this conversation turns those concerns into clear, doable next steps. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs a simple starting point for better mobility, and leave a review if the show helps you. What screening would you want to try first? To learn more about The Bone and Joint Center at Magee-Womens Hospital visit:  https://www.pghbjc.com [https://www.pghbjc.com] Dr. Noelle DiGioia Guthrie 300 Halket St.  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-683-7272   To learn more about The Wellness Center for Bone and Joint Health visit:  https://www.boneandjointhealth.org [https://www.boneandjointhealth.org] Tiffany Belculfine 300 Halket St., Suite 1601  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-641-8594

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15 episodios

episode You Don’t Heal Alone: The Power of a Post‑Surgery Support Team artwork

You Don’t Heal Alone: The Power of a Post‑Surgery Support Team

Healing after a hip or knee procedure [https://www.pghbjc.com] is not just about what happens in the operating room, it’s about what happens when you get home and realize the small stuff is suddenly hard. From medication schedules to stairs at the front door, recovery becomes a thousand tiny decisions, and trying to hold all of it in your head can spike stress fast. That’s why we keep coming back to one message: recovery does not happen alone. We talk through what a real support team looks like across the full patient journey, including clinic visits, pre-op planning, surgery day, discharge, home safety, and the transition into physical therapy and occupational therapy [https://www.pghbjc.com]. We share why having an “extra set of eyes and ears” reduces confusion, how we help patients who don’t have family nearby, and when a rehabilitation facility may be the safest option even if home is the preferred healing environment. You’ll also hear the practical caregiver must-knows: understanding restrictions, using a cane or walker correctly, navigating bedroom-to-bathroom distance, preventing falls, and handling the everyday tasks people underestimate, like carrying food or reaching clothes. We also get real about pain expectations after joint surgery [https://www.pghbjc.com]: pain may not be zero, but it should be controlled, and there are multiple tools to support that plan. Finally, we explain why the first five to seven days matter so much for caregivers and how our post-op phone calls help patients feel calmer, more informed, and more confident about when to call with questions. If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s planning surgery, and leave a review telling us what part of recovery you want us to break down next. To learn more about The Bone and Joint Center at Magee-Womens Hospital visit:  https://www.pghbjc.com [https://www.pghbjc.com] Dr. Noelle DiGioia Guthrie 300 Halket St.  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-683-7272   To learn more about The Wellness Center for Bone and Joint Health visit:  https://www.boneandjointhealth.org [https://www.boneandjointhealth.org] Tiffany Belculfine 300 Halket St., Suite 1601  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-641-8594

27 de may de 202615 min
episode Preparing for Surgery: Kristie Francioni Shares the Patient Education Process artwork

Preparing for Surgery: Kristie Francioni Shares the Patient Education Process

You can feel completely confident saying “yes” to a total knee replacement [https://www.pghbjc.com] or total hip replacement [https://www.pghbjc.com] and still feel anxious afterward. That anxiety doesn’t mean you made the wrong decision—it usually means the unknown feels loud. My goal is to bring the unknown down to size by walking patients through what actually happens from the moment surgery becomes real all the way through the practical details that shape a smooth recovery. Once a patient decides to move forward, the next steps are straightforward: confirming candidacy with a clinician, reviewing medical history, scheduling pre‑op testing [https://www.pghbjc.com], and receiving clear guidance that carries through post‑op expectations. When education is thorough, patients tend to have fewer last‑minute questions, and tools like step‑by‑step videos, take‑home folders, QR codes, online resources, and nutrition guidance make it easier to learn at a comfortable pace. I also acknowledge that overwhelm is normal. Surgery brings nerves, and too much information at once can feel like its own stressor. That’s why we keep support human—easy access to call with questions, the option to revisit education, and encouraging patients to bring a coach so a second set of ears can help at home. And if someone isn’t ready for orthopedic surgery yet, we still walk them through non‑surgical options and what their next steps could look like. If this kind of breakdown is helpful, share it with someone preparing for joint replacement and let me know what part of the process you’d like explained next. To learn more about The Bone and Joint Center at Magee-Womens Hospital visit:  https://www.pghbjc.com [https://www.pghbjc.com] Dr. Noelle DiGioia Guthrie 300 Halket St.  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-683-7272   To learn more about The Wellness Center for Bone and Joint Health visit:  https://www.boneandjointhealth.org [https://www.boneandjointhealth.org] Tiffany Belculfine 300 Halket St., Suite 1601  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-641-8594

20 de may de 202610 min
episode Clearing Up the Most Common Joint Health Questions artwork

Clearing Up the Most Common Joint Health Questions

People hear “bone on bone” and immediately picture an operating room, months of misery, and a life on hold. We slow that story down and replace it with something more accurate: a careful joint evaluation [https://www.pghbjc.com], clear choices, and a plan built around your goals. From the first visit, we walk through what actually happens in a bone and joint appointment, why we spend so much time on your medical history, and how X-rays fit into the bigger picture of osteoarthritis, arthritis pain, and daily function. We also demystify joint replacement surgery [https://www.pghbjc.com] and recovery. Surgery is elective for most people, which means we focus on safety and pre-op optimization, including medication review and coordination with your primary care doctor, cardiologist, or other specialists when needed. Just as important, we talk about the “coach” role, the caregiver support that helps with everything from remembering instructions to navigating stairs and dressing changes. If you live alone, we share why that matters and how a care team can help connect you with support resources. Along the way, we tackle common bone health myths, including the misconception that men do not get osteoporosis. We explain why osteoporosis screening and DEXA scans can matter regardless of gender, and how non-surgical options like physical therapy, lifestyle changes, and injections may provide real relief before surgery is ever on the table. If you want clearer expectations, less fear, and better mobility, subscribe, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a review with the question you want us to answer next. To learn more about The Bone and Joint Center at Magee-Womens Hospital visit:  https://www.pghbjc.com [https://www.pghbjc.com] Dr. Noelle DiGioia Guthrie 300 Halket St.  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-683-7272   To learn more about The Wellness Center for Bone and Joint Health visit:  https://www.boneandjointhealth.org [https://www.boneandjointhealth.org] Tiffany Belculfine 300 Halket St., Suite 1601  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-641-8594

18 de may de 202615 min
episode A Closer Look at Women’s Unique Bone and Joint Health Needs artwork

A Closer Look at Women’s Unique Bone and Joint Health Needs

You can’t “tough it out” forever, especially when your joints and bones are trying to tell you something. We talk honestly about why women often wait longer to get pain, stiffness, and mobility changes [https://www.pghbjc.com] checked out and how that delay can mean more progressed arthritis, more limitation, and a tougher recovery if surgery becomes necessary. We dig into the real drivers behind women’s bone and joint health, including hormones and the menopause transition. Estrogen helps protect bone density, so when levels fall, osteoporosis risk rises, sometimes without obvious symptoms until a fragility fracture happens. We also clear up misconceptions, like the idea that osteoporosis [https://www.pghbjc.com] only affects women, and we explain what to ask about screening, including DEXA scans, vitamin D, calcium, and earlier testing for people with risk factors such as prior fractures, smoking history, chemotherapy, or long-term steroid use. We also get practical about prevention and day-to-day action. Strength training and muscle mass support joint stability [https://www.pghbjc.com], improve balance, and help protect both bones and joints, and we address fears about “bulking up” along with the nuance of weight-bearing exercise when osteoarthritis pain is in the picture. Finally, we share concrete ways to advocate for yourself when symptoms are dismissed: ask to see your X-rays, ask why a treatment is recommended, and get a second opinion when you need one. If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with a friend who keeps putting herself last, and leave a review with the question you want us to tackle next. To learn more about The Bone and Joint Center at Magee-Womens Hospital visit:  https://www.pghbjc.com [https://www.pghbjc.com] Dr. Noelle DiGioia Guthrie 300 Halket St.  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-683-7272   To learn more about The Wellness Center for Bone and Joint Health visit:  https://www.boneandjointhealth.org [https://www.boneandjointhealth.org] Tiffany Belculfine 300 Halket St., Suite 1601  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-641-8594

11 de may de 202615 min
episode Understanding the Difference Between Partial and Total Knee Replacement artwork

Understanding the Difference Between Partial and Total Knee Replacement

Knee replacement sounds like a single decision until you learn the knee has three compartments and arthritis doesn’t always hit them equally. We break down partial vs total knee replacement [https://www.pghbjc.com] in a way that maps directly to what patients see on X rays and feel in daily life, so you can walk into an orthopedic visit with clearer expectations and better questions. We talk through the real anatomical difference: total knee replacement is usually the right choice when arthritis affects two or more compartments, while partial knee replacement can work when wear is truly isolated. We also explain the two common partial options, including unicompartmental replacement for the inside or outside of the knee and patellofemoral replacement [https://www.pghbjc.com]for arthritis behind the kneecap. Along the way, we dig into why surgeons aim to preserve healthy joint structure when possible, especially for younger, active patients thinking about the long view. Recovery is the next big question, so we unpack what can change after a partial procedure, including the potential for less swelling and stiffness and a quicker return of range of motion. Even with those differences, the core message stays the same: movement is key, and consistent rehab supports pain control, mobility, and strength. We also share how prehab works, why it often starts about a month before surgery, and how to keep the exercise plan realistic if pain has limited your activity. If you’re researching knee replacement surgery, knee arthritis treatment, or physical therapy after knee replacement, this conversation will help you understand the tradeoffs, the timelines, and the decision points that matter most. Subscribe, share this with someone considering surgery, and leave a review with the question you want us to tackle next. To learn more about The Bone and Joint Center at Magee-Womens Hospital visit:  https://www.pghbjc.com [https://www.pghbjc.com] Dr. Noelle DiGioia Guthrie 300 Halket St.  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-683-7272   To learn more about The Wellness Center for Bone and Joint Health visit:  https://www.boneandjointhealth.org [https://www.boneandjointhealth.org] Tiffany Belculfine 300 Halket St., Suite 1601  Pittsburgh, PA, 15213  412-641-8594

7 de may de 202612 min