How to Organize your QUADRASTEP SYSTEM® Kit Drawers

IMG_2444Do you have trouble locating the orthotics you are looking for in your QUADRASTEP SYSTEM® Kit? It’s a great time to organize your drawers for easy access to the pairs you use most often.

Here are some pointers:

  • Pack drawers back to front
  • A and B Quads, heels to the outside of the drawers.
  • Then F and D Quads
  • Then E and C Quads
  • pack each drawer in each size the same way

The most common orthotics will be in the front and most easily accessible. Heels always to the outside of the drawers. Keep a bio-safe wet wipe container on top of the kit to wipe them down after testing on a patient.

Packing drawers consistently speeds up time when choosing your orthotics and when taking inventory for missing pairs when it’s time to reorder…you quickly recognize what’s missing!

For those of you who own Success Kits, it can be a little bit trickier to fit everything.

success kit drawers

Here is an example of how one of our customers organizes his drawers with 2 of each same sized orthotic in each drawer. Be sure to keep all of your size 1 orthotics in the top drawer, your size 2 orthotics in the second drawer, etc. Your littleSTEP® orthotics can go in the drawers with the QUADRASTEP® orthotics, just put size 00, 0, 1 in the top size 1 drawer, the size 2 in the size 2 drawer, etc. Sizes 6-9 can go in the bottom drawer.

Happy Organizing!

Welcome to our new Blog: Kylie’s Corner!

kylie picI’m excited to do my inaugural blog post about Foot typing and functional foot orthoses. For those people who don’t know me. I Graduated as an Australian Podiatrist in 1994 and I am also a US Certified Pedorthist. My specialty is biomechanics and functional foot orthoses. I have been working part-time for the QUADRASTEP SYSTEM® as a biomechanics instructor for the past couple of years and I have recently become their Education Coordinator.

I first heard about foot typing and the QUADRASTEP SYSTEM® when I was attending a Podiatry convention in Las Vegas about 4 years ago and I heard a lecture by Dr. Louis DeCaro, DPM and he kept referring to foot typing and how all the patients he sees get assigned a foot type. I was fascinated by this concept and liked the idea of having a standardized assessment model for patients. One of my pet peeves is the fact that if a patient goes to see a foot practitioner for foot orthoses and then sees someone else that patient can end up being prescribed and dispensed different types of orthotics for the same condition! This is very confusing for patients. It is a different story in the world of Optometry, for example. It doesn’t matter where you go and who you see, anywhere in the world, if you need eye glasses you are going to get the same glasses prescription no matter where you go.

Anyway time went on and I happened to see Dr DeCaro lecture at another convention and in this lecture he went into the Basics of how foot typing works and doing the assessment on the QUADRASTEP SYSTEM®. My first thought and initial reaction was that I wished I had of known about this when I was in Podiatry school it would have made my life much easier. I made a decision at that point that I really wanted to find out more about this and be able to teach it to others and I’m pleased to say that I have been able to do just that in recent years. Since I’ve been teaching the one day class on Functional Gait Analysis, which I now like to call Biomechanics Made Easy, it has been my intention to make the understanding of prescribing and dispensing functional foot orthoses much easier plus more fun and rewarding. I know the way I was taught biomechanics in Podiatry school was very confusing and there is a lot of misconceptions and conflicting information which just adds to the confusion. Roberta Nole, who invented the QUADRASTEP SYSTEM® and foot typing algorithym, is a modern day genius in my opinion.

Educational Adventures!

There was time for some adventure after our course in Palmer Alaska!

We have had some awesome courses in the last few months! We’ve been to wonderful places like the Cayman Islands, Alaska and Chicago. We’ve met many new practitioners and established successful working relationships. If you would like to be a part of one of our courses you can visit our education page http://www.thequadrastepsystem.com/education.html for more information. We are looking for host sites for 4th quarter of 2012. If you would like to host a course, please contact us at education@thequadrastepsystem.com.