New EducATe Courses Released in March

April 1, 2025 by Lydia Hicks
NATA EducATe Courses Newly Released in March;  NATA logo, educate logo

As your source of lifelong learning, NATA EducATe provides users with an extensive educational library, a customizable experience, the ability to interact with peers and more.

New courses are constantly being added to the platform to ensure you have the knowledge needed to stay up to date in your practice – as well as earn CEUs.

Enhanced access to the entire NATA EducATe On-Demand Course Catalog is also now available to NATA members, so take advantage of these courses.

Here are the new courses released in March. Visit NATA EducATe for more information on these and other courses available at your fingertips.

 

Professional Football Athletic Trainers Society (PFATS) Ronnie Barnes Educational Series: Conservative and Surgical Management of High Ankle Sprains

By David Porter, MD, PhD, Erin Barill, PT, ATC, and Steve Kennelly, MEd, ATC, CSCS

The objective of this course is to summarize latest trends in foot/ankle injury prevention and management. It’s also to define various objective criteria used to progress foot/ankle rehabilitation and return to play. It serves to identify critical movement patterns and gait analysis as it relates to an athletes’ overall performance and implement corrective exercises based on these movement patterns.

 

Evidence-Based Application of Manual Therapy for the Lumbar and Sacral Spine

By Michael Higgins, PhD, PT, ATC

The aim of this course is to understand treatment principles that govern manual therapy application for the lumbosacral region. It’s also to understand the evidence supporting the use of selective manual therapy techniques for the lumbosacral region. The course also performs a SCAN in order to identify impairments that can be treated with manual therapy pertaining to the lumbosacral region.

 

A Holistic Approach to Injury Prevention and Why It Matters

By Jillian Nicholson, LAT, CEAS, AEP

This course seeks to explain how a holistic health and wellness approach applies to injury prevention. It serves to identify psychosocial components of work and life that impact employee’s overall health and wellness. It also aims to identify options for determining worker health and wellness in the occupational setting. Ways to improve overall health and wellness as an athletic trainer in the occupational setting are also explained.