SPEAKER_08 1:03:16–1:04:07
Yeah. No. And I definitely knew coming into this, like the question was kind of be a little bit vague, but I guess like you start using the C word in the wrong population and it becomes insulting, you know? Right. But I just feel like those types of activities that are just like half hazard thrown someone's way that comes slow back pain. That's just like something that you see very often. And so I was kind of just like trying to think through, it's persisted for so long in the field, I feel like. Right. And people are getting better. But now it's like, are they getting better because of that? Is it just natural history? And it's just like, so like just trying to figure out, like, do these actually play a role for, because I watched like, you had one video about stretching. I got here's a situation where like maybe stretching actually does has some utility based off of presentation. So it's kind of going off of that. Why I'm thinking for it again, but like for the core, general core strengthening stuff.
core strengtheningexercise utilityclinical reasoning