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In tactical settings, something powerful happens in the treatment room. The table becomes more than a place for rehab and manual therapy — it becomes a place where first responders feel safe enough to talk. And sometimes, you realize you might be the only person they’re opening up to about what they’ve seen, what they’re carrying, and how much it’s affecting them.
So what do you do next?
In this episode of Ask the Tactical Trio, we tackle a question sent in by an athletic therapist working full-time with law enforcement who found herself in exactly this position. Her question is one many tactical clinicians quietly wrestle with:
How do you stay within your scope of practice while still supporting first responders when the conversation shifts from orthopedic pain to stress, trauma, and mental health?
From there, the conversation opens into something even bigger.
We discuss:
Then we shift into the physical side of the conversation — because what looks like knee pain, back pain, or chronic injury in first responders is often deeply tied to a dysregulated nervous system.
We walk through:
This episode is honest, practical, and deeply reflective of the reality of working as an athletic therapist, athletic trainer, or clinician in police, fire, and other tactical environments. If you’ve ever left a shift thinking, “I don’t know if I handled that conversation right,” this one is for you.
Most importantly, this conversation is driven by your questions.
If you’re working in a tactical setting and navigating challenges like scope of practice, mental health conversations, nervous system treatment, culture barriers, or anything else that feels unique to this population, we want to hear from you.
Send us your questions and situations — anonymously if you prefer — and we may feature them in a future episode.
Because if you’re feeling it, you are absolutely not the only one.
Submit your questions to [email protected] and join the conversation.
Support the show
By Traci Tauferner, Becky Swan, & Anna AugustIn tactical settings, something powerful happens in the treatment room. The table becomes more than a place for rehab and manual therapy — it becomes a place where first responders feel safe enough to talk. And sometimes, you realize you might be the only person they’re opening up to about what they’ve seen, what they’re carrying, and how much it’s affecting them.
So what do you do next?
In this episode of Ask the Tactical Trio, we tackle a question sent in by an athletic therapist working full-time with law enforcement who found herself in exactly this position. Her question is one many tactical clinicians quietly wrestle with:
How do you stay within your scope of practice while still supporting first responders when the conversation shifts from orthopedic pain to stress, trauma, and mental health?
From there, the conversation opens into something even bigger.
We discuss:
Then we shift into the physical side of the conversation — because what looks like knee pain, back pain, or chronic injury in first responders is often deeply tied to a dysregulated nervous system.
We walk through:
This episode is honest, practical, and deeply reflective of the reality of working as an athletic therapist, athletic trainer, or clinician in police, fire, and other tactical environments. If you’ve ever left a shift thinking, “I don’t know if I handled that conversation right,” this one is for you.
Most importantly, this conversation is driven by your questions.
If you’re working in a tactical setting and navigating challenges like scope of practice, mental health conversations, nervous system treatment, culture barriers, or anything else that feels unique to this population, we want to hear from you.
Send us your questions and situations — anonymously if you prefer — and we may feature them in a future episode.
Because if you’re feeling it, you are absolutely not the only one.
Submit your questions to [email protected] and join the conversation.
Support the show