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As published in the September 21, 2006 Edition
of the Dodgeville Chronicle
Athletic Trainer Joins Sports Medicine Team
At Upland Hills Health

New Athletic Trainer Brad Vamstad joins the Upland Hills
Health Sports Medicine team |
by Jean Berns Jones
Upland Hills Health has a new staff
member who spends most of his duty hours outside the hospital,
working along the sidelines at Dodgeville and Mineral Point
sports events.
Brad Vamstad, athletic trainer, is the newest
addition to the Sports Medicine program at the Dodgeville
hospital. He functions as the first line of defense in a
network of Upland Hills therapists and doctors who serve
the needs of area athletes.
“I’m usually the first person who sees
the kids and from there I may refer them to a family practice
physician or an orthopedic physician,” Vamstad said. “In
some cases they don’t need to be referred but I can
tape them, do rehabilitation at the school, and work with
the coaches instead.”
Vamstad holds a masters degree
in athletic training from Western Michigan University (2002).
He received his bachelors degree in kinesiology, with emphasis
in athletic training, at the UW-Madison. While in Madison
he had a five-semester internship working with the Badgers
sports teams.
Originally from Darlington where he attended
high school, Vamstad has worked at a hospital in Two Rivers
until recently moving his residence to Dodgeville. He started
at Upland Hills Health on August 7, with the start of the
high school football season.
“Sports medicine is an
area we’ve been looking at expanding for a long time,” said
Phil Swain, Director of Physical Therapy at the hospital. “Phil
identified a need here for outreach to the community, because
of our proximity,” explained Patricia Lawson, Director
of Marketing and Public Relations. “It only makes common
sense for young athletes to get these services close to home
and not have to take half a day off from school and drive
to Madison.”
“We had a lot of the pieces already
in place with therapists and doctors with expertise here
at the hospital,” Lawson added, “but Phil saw
the need for us to have someone right out there in the schools
working with the coaches.”
UW-Health in Madison has
been and continues to be a contracted entity in both the
Mineral Point and Dodgeville School Districts.
“The
athletic trainers UW-Health sends out are skilled trainers
and good trainers but unfortunately because of our location
they’re only able to get out here a couple times a
week for an hour or two during the school day,” Swain
said. “We wanted to be able to supplement that service
and start providing more athletic training coverage after
school, during practices, and cover more events.”
“We’re
volunteering our services to the schools in order to provide
more athletic training time for the kids,” he continued. “We’re
working collaboratively with UW-Health providing some extra
hours at this point and working with coaches and athletic
directors.”
Including the athletic training area, Upland
Hills is developing an integrated sports medicine program
that involves area physicians, hospital therapists, and the
rehabilitation team.
“We want to make it a whole link
so that parents and athletes have a real easy access to the
whole spectrum of services,” Swain said. “We’d
like people to be seen by Brad in the schools and then get
sent where they need to go from there, quickly and in a timely
manner, and hopefully get them back to playing their sports
as soon as possible.” Students are starting to participate
in contact sports at progressively earlier ages and medical
personnel are seeing the ramifications of the stress on young
bodies. It causes a need for athletic services that were
not required by earlier generations at their age.
“Younger
and younger they need that support of an organization that
can help them not only when they are hurt, but an athletic
trainer’s job is also to help them avoid injury --
giving them the knowledge of what they can do to compete
in sports without having damage in either the short term
or the long term,” Lawson said.
“Brad will often
intervene with teaching techniques, exercise and various
things than can be done to prevent the injuries from occurring
in the first place,” Swain added.
When the school day
ends, Vamstad is on hand at either Dodgeville or Mineral
Point. He tapes kids up for practice, does rehabilitation,
evaluates new injuries and communicates with the coaches.
“I
try to hit each coach to see if they’re having any
problems out there,” he said. “I service all
sports and try to make as many events as possible. It’s
football, cross country, soccer, and volleyball going on
right now.”
“My goals are to get kids back playing
as soon as possible but as safely as possible without risking
any further injury,” Vamstad said. Having the trainer’s
objective expertise at games and practices relieves stress
for the coaches and makes parents feel more comfortable --
especially in cases where kids beg to play despite possible
injuries.
“As a parent of a football player,” Lawson
said, “I can tell you that during games it’s
a good feeling to see that professional person with the expertise
down there supporting the coaches on the field.”
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