Call us: 90424 28391
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Explore our collection of documentary films and rehabilitation videos designed to motivate, inspire, and raise awareness about the importance of rehabilitation. Learn more about our services and discover how specialized physiotherapy can change lives.
At Movhabily Physiotherapy LLP, we believe that rehabilitation is not just about recovery; it's about empowering individuals to regain independence and live fulfilling lives. Our tailored physiotherapy programs are designed to meet each patient’s unique needs, ensuring long-term mobility, health, and happiness. By staying at the forefront of rehabilitation science, we are committed to transforming lives and reshaping the future of healthcare.
Learn more about how rehabilitation can improve everyday function and overall well-being in this detailed WHO video. Anybody, at some point, might need rehabilitation. Rehabilitation enables us to interact, move, be independent, and communicate. Rehabilitation is about health and functioning in everyday life.
The video introduces rehabilitation, including the broad range of people who may benefit from it. The video presents different types of rehabilitation interventions, including therapeutic approaches, assistive technology and environmental modifications.
Pain scientists starting to think differently about persistent (chronic) pain and its causes, are they're making exciting discoveries - like how you think about your pain can change the way it feels. Here Professor Lorimer Moseley explains how pain works and explains new approaches to help reduce your pain.
No-one should miss out. Too many do.
Physiotherapy helps people return to the things they love doing and supports those with a long-term condition to maintain their quality of life.
But many patients across the country are unable to access high-quality community rehabilitation services, with devastating consequences for some.
There's an underlying myth that falls are an inevitable part of getting old.
The surprising truth is our risk of a fall decreases with one thing - exercise.
Here are six simple exercises used by physiotherapists to keep muscles strong and keep us mobile and independent as we age. Try out heel raises, toe raises, heel toe stand, one leg stand, heel toe walking, and sit to stand exercises.
This Special Collection brings together a selection of Cochrane Reviews assessing the benefits of physical activity interventions on activity levels, physical function, and symptoms. The reviews synthesize evidence regarding the general population, or groups of people who have specific health conditions. Visit the Cochrane Campbell Global Ageing Partnership website: https://globalageing.cochrane.org/
If you want your body to stay young, you might want to exercise more. Scientists recently found that only people who exercise the most actually benefit at a cellular level and actually slow down the aging process.
TODAY’s Donna Farizan sits down with Ida Keeling, who at 104 years old is a runner and world record holder inspiring others with her strength.
In this video, Dr. Lori Desautels delves into the amygdala's function as the brain’s emotional control center. She illustrates how this key brain region triggers strong emotional reactions like anxiety, anger, and sadness, effectively "firing like fireworks" during intense emotional states. This engaging teaser provides a concise introduction to how the amygdala affects emotional responses and stress.
This is the most detailed scan of the human brain. It was made from a scan of BBC Medical Correspondent Fergus Walsh's brain, carried out at Cardiff University. Engineers from Siemens used the latest computer tools to create these cinematographic 3D images. The technology is helping scientists understand how the brain functions, and gain insights into diseases such as dementia, epilepsy and MS.
This 10-minute short film, produced by Charles Finney M, Founder & Director of Movhabily Physiotherapy, emphasizes the critical role of posture in maintaining overall health and well-being. Released during the Regional Physiotherapy Conference PHYZENTIAL ’07, this award-winning film highlights how poor posture impacts human lives and demonstrates how physiotherapy can help correct and prevent postural issues, promoting a healthier lifestyle. Awarded the Certificate of Excellence at the event.
More than 40 million people worldwide suffer from Alzheimer's disease, and that number is expected to increase drastically in the coming years. But no real progress has been made in the fight against the disease since its classification more than 100 years ago. Scientist Samuel Cohen shares a new breakthrough in Alzheimer's research from his lab as well as a message of hope. "Alzheimer's is a disease," Cohen says, "and we can cure it."
“People are so afraid of variety that they try to fit everything into a tiny little box with a specific label,” says 16-year-old Rosie King, who is bold, brash and autistic. She wants to know: Why is everyone so worried about being normal? She sounds a clarion call for every kid, parent, teacher and person to celebrate uniqueness. It’s a soaring testament to the potential of human diversity.
Biochemist Gregory Petsko makes a convincing argument that, in the next 50 years, we'll see an epidemic of neurological diseases, such as Alzheimer's, as the world population ages. His solution: more research into the brain and its functions.
Simple solutions are often best, even when dealing with something as complicated as Parkinson's. In this inspiring talk, Mileha Soneji shares accessible designs that make the everyday tasks of those living with Parkinson's a bit easier. "Technology is not always it," she says. "What we need are human-centered solutions."
We live in a world of unseeable beauty, so subtle and delicate that it is imperceptible to the human eye. To bring this invisible world to light, filmmaker Louie Schwartzberg bends the boundaries of time and space with high-speed cameras, time lapses and microscopes. At TED2014, he shares highlights from his latest project, a 3D film titled "Mysteries of the Unseen World," which slows down, speeds up, and magnifies the astonishing wonders of nature.
Harvard University selected XVIVO to develop an animation that would take their cellular biology students on a journey through the microscopic world of a cell, illustrating mechanisms that allow a white blood cell to sense its surroundings and respond to an external stimulus. This award winning piece was the first topic in a series of animations XVIVO is creating for Harvard's educational website BioVisions at Harvard.
Movhabily Physiotherapy℠
No 16/18, Ground Foor, Lakshmipuram Extension II, Mudichur Road, West Tambaram, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India 600 045.
Copyright © 2024 Movhabily Physiotherapy LLP - All Rights Reserved.
Know ye that the LORD he is God. Psalm 100:3