Provider Spotlight: Ben Benesh PT, DPT, SCS

Ben Benesh talking about physical therapy for athletes and the mental components of rehabilitation.

Sometimes you have to push people to get out of them what is needed.

When you interview a physical therapist with numerous specialties, advanced certifications, and the broad range of experiences that 20+ years in the profession provides, you know you’re talking with someone who can treat just about anyone who walks into his clinic.

“I love working with all my patients and getting them back to full function,” said Advanced Physical Therapy’s Ben Benesh. “It’s very rewarding.”

Yes, I understand, but is there a type of patient that is your favorite to work with?

“Well, I do love working with athletes,” he said.

BAM

“Those are probably my favorite patients and it's a pretty wide variety and wide age variety of athletes. But I do love the high school athlete, and those are the patients that often stick out in my head over the last 20 years, those kids that had ACL injuries, a reconstruction, and then they come to me,” said Benesh. “And working with them, getting them to that sports performance phase over the last few months, moving them into a guarded progression and then getting them back to their sport.”

Here Benesh discusses a local high school athlete who suffered ACL tears in back to back years.

“About 18 months of rehab, a huge commitment,” Benesh said. “She was so strong, maybe the strongest patient in my 20 years.”

We discussed the high school athletes he’s treated and the emotional toll wrought by such devastating injuries. Those patients, said Benesh, are the ones who often end up becoming physical therapists.

So was that Benesh’s path?

“Well, I played sports and was injured a lot, but I didn’t receive a lot of PT for it.”

For Benesh, it was an opportunity as a college student to work with a physical therapist from his hometown that was the catalyst. This “one man show” of a physical therapy practice influenced Benesh in more ways than he could count.

“I loved his life, his family life, his demeanor with patients,” said Benesh. “The whole experience was fantastic. And he wrote me a really nice reference letter for my PT school application.”

Nearly a quarter century and a bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degree later, Benesh’s special interest in sports continues unabated. He’s received additional sports medicine training in a number of areas including advanced treatment of the shoulder, concussion management, and performance running video analysis.

He’s also a Board Certified Clinical Specialist in Sports Physical Therapy (SCS), a certification that identifies those who are experts within their branch of PT. It also provides enhanced opportunities to use those skills working with local sports teams, high-level athletes, and youth feeder programs (Benesh provided on field coverage for UW-Oshkosh football as well as for the Oshkosh Flyers, a competitive youth football club for fourth through eight graders).

And it’s a commitment with rigorous requirements.

“It’s a beast of an exam,” said Benesh. “There aren’t that many of us in the state of Wisconsin with the SCS certification, but it’s worth it. Keeps you up to date on the latest on sports performance, nutrition, emergency medicine, coverage on the field, a wide range of specializations.”

Benesh is used to seeing highly motivated patients ready to take on the physical challenges of rehab, but mental and emotional components must be addressed. This is where Benesh the dad, the coach of his children’s sports teams, and the clinician all meet.

“I think that the honesty that I can have with these patients is important.” Said Benesh. “I feel like it's a positive thing for injured athletes to talk to somebody other than their coach or their mom or dad. It’s also good for the parents to have a sounding board to have a thought process. I try to keep it as objective as I can, but I have daughters and a son. I feel I'm in a good spot to understand and empathize in these situations.”

Benesh has three children, all involved in sports. And at one point he was coaching all three at the same time. That’s no longer the case, and you’d think that would result in a more stable work-life balance.

“Oh, no, it’s way easier to make schedules work for me when I’m coaching all of them,” said Benesh. “Otherwise, things conflict.”

Working at the Oshkosh YMCA location affords Benesh the opportunity to utilize facilities with his injured athletes. If he’s working with a swimmer, there’s the pool; a hockey player gets to use the ice; the soccer player is on the pitch; the hoops player is on the basketball court.

“It's really nice to have that ability to see them at this location,” said Benesh. “Usually, I'll see them weekly for three to five months, whatever it takes to get them back, and then I do a return-to-sport testing with them before I release them back to their sport.”

Sometimes you have to push people to get out of them what is needed.

That’s what physical therapists do.

Dr. Ben works with patients and athletes at both YMCA locations in Oshkosh, WI (Downtown, 20th Ave). 920-305-7910

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Provider Spotlight: Dr. Will Hartmann, PT at Lawrence University

Dr. Will Hartmann working with an athlete in the athletic training room at Lawrence University

When you work with competitive athletes to get them back to their sports following injury, does it help if you were a competitive athlete who suffered a few injuries and endured lots of rehab yourself?

Physical therapist Will Hartmann of Advanced Physical Therapy & Sports Medicine thinks it might.

To a certain extent.

“It helps athletes relate to me if they know it,” Hartmann said. “But I'm the washed-up version now.”

The former Division 1 athlete played five years of college football with the Wisconsin Badgers and had a litany of injuries (concussion, patellar tendinitis, lacerated kidney) connected to his days on the gridiron. Eschewing any details or elaboration, Hartmann recited his traumas like items in a bulleted list.

Just tell me a little about your most memorable, then.

“Yeah, the elbow injury in my first spring game at Camp Randall. I picked off a pass and dislocated it when I tried to score a touchdown. After the game, the coach saw me in the training room and said, ‘That’s why you take a knee.’ Thanks a lot, coach. Lesson learned.”

Now in his seventh year working with Lawrence University athletes, Hartmann’s approach is, in many respects, just that direct, albeit without the sarcasm.

“I tell injured athletes, if you want to do this, we can do this,” said Hartmann. “Or if you don't want to do that kind of work, we’ll just take it down a notch. It all depends on what the person wants to put in.”

Much like himself in days of yore, several of his Division 3 college athletes view their sport as their job, working out multiple times a day just about every day of the year. They bring that same focus to the rehab process when they get injured.

“I’m working with a girl who’s coming into the athletic training room twice daily to do rehab. That shows the level of commitment familiar to me,” said Hartmann. “I’ve been there; I’ve done it.”

His role at Lawrence is to help with the treatment of complex injuries. Hartmann’s sports medicine background and orthopedic training allow him to treat anyone who enters the door. Working with Advanced PT’s athletic trainers at LU, Hartmann is included when his expertise is needed, typically when an injury isn’t improving or rehabbing something more intricate, like an ACL reconstruction.

To further progress his manual skills and meet a wider variety of patient needs, Hartmann completed an Orthopedic Residency. An additional year of specialized training, the residency includes one-on-one mentorships with experts in the field to enhance clinical decision-making. Combined with his Strength & Conditioning Specialist certification, Hartmann is well-suited to communicate and collaborate with LU’s athletic trainers and strength coaches.

“We do a good job at Lawrence treating these athletes and getting good outcomes,” said Hartmann.

Advanced PT has deep roots at the collegiate level and has treated LU undergraduates—both athletes and students in the Conservatory of Music—for three decades.

At the time of this interview, Hartmann was preparing for spring sports at LU and the inevitable uptick of injuries by getting some care for himself: he had an arthroscopic knee procedure the following day.

And he answered the final question before it was asked.

“No, this isn’t related to football,” he said.

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