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Books by Sandra Shultz

Sandra J. Shultz, PhD, ATC, CSCS, FNATA, is an associate professor and director of graduate study at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. As a certified athletic trainer since 1984, Shultz has a broad clinical perspective having worked with athletes at the high school, collegiate, Olympic, and international levels.

Before coming to the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Shultz taught and conducted clinical research in the sports medicine and athletic training program at the University of Virginia. She also served as associate director of athletic training and rehabilitative services at the University of California at Los Angeles, where two of her primary responsibilities were the direct health care of student-athletes and the education of athletic training students.

Shultz is a member of the National Athletic Trainers' Association (NATA), the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA), and the Orthopaedic Research Society (ORS). She currently serves as a member of the NATA Foundation Research Committee and Fellows Award Committee and is a section editor for the Journal of Athletic Training. Previously she served on the NATA's Entry-Level Education Committee, Pronouncements Committee, Convention Educational Program Committee, and Appropriate Medical Coverage for Intercollegiate Athletics Task Force. She was also the site visitor for the Joint Review Committee on Educational Programs in Athletic Training (JRC-AT). As a researcher, Shultz focuses on the study of risk factors for anterior cruciate ligament injury in female athletes and has received grant funding from the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS), the NATA Research and Education Foundation, and the National Institutes of Health. She is the primary author of the NFHS Sports Medicine Handbook and the NATA Appropriate Medical Care for Intercollegiate Athletics.

Shultz received the Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award from the NATA in 2005, and the Freddie H. Fu, MD, New Investigator Award from the NATA Foundation in 2003. She was the recipient of the Kenneth L. Knight Award for Outstanding Research Manuscript from the Journal of Athletic Training in 2001.

Shultz enjoys running, reading, and traveling. She resides in Greensboro.

Peggy A. Houglum, PhD, ATC, PT, is an associate professor at the Rangos School of Health Sciences at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. She has nearly 40 years of experience providing patient and athlete care in a variety of settings, including athletic training facilities, sports medicine clinics, rehabilitation hospitals, acute care hospitals, burn care facilities, workers' compensation clinics, and extended care facilities. She has also served as an athletic trainer with the United States Olympic Sports Festivals, Olympic Games, and World University Games.

Houglum's extensive background as a certified athletic trainer, physical therapist, clinical and classroom educator, and program director gives her a unique perspective on the appropriate use of therapeutic exercise techniques in rehabilitation programs for treatment of athletic injuries.

In 1991, Houglum created the NATA's first formal continuing education programming. Since that time Houglum has served as chair of the NATA Continuing Education Committee and as a member of the organization's Education Council and the Council on Employment. In 2002, she was named to the NATA Hall of Fame, the association's highest award, and received NATA's Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award in 1996.

Houglum is a member of the American Physical Therapy Association's Sports Medicine Section and CEPAT. She is also a member of NATA and serves on the NATA Board of Certification Role Delineation #6 Committee. Houglum is also associate editor for Sports Rehabilitation and clinical applications editor of the Journal of Athletic Training.

In her free time, Houglum enjoys spending time with family, reading, and painting. She resides in Gibsonia, Pennsylvania.

David H. Perrin, PhD, ATC, is Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs of the School of Health and Human Performance and a professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

For 13 years, Perrin was a member of the NATA Professional Education Committee, helping to write the guidelines for accreditation of both undergraduate and graduate athletic training education programs. For 15 years, he directed the graduate programs in athletic training and sports medicine in the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia. He was editor in chief of the Journal of Athletic Training from 1996 to 2004 and was the founding editor of the Journal of Sport Rehabilitation. He is author of Isokinetic Exercise and Assessment and Athletic Taping and Bracing, editor of the third edition of The Injured Athlete, and coauthor of Research Methods in Athletic Training.

Perrin's research interests include injury risk factors of the anterior cruciate ligament in female athletes. His awards from the National Athletic Trainers' Association include the Sayers "Bud" Miller Distinguished Educator Award, the Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award, the William G. Clancy, Jr., MD, Medal for Distinguished Athletic Training Research, and induction into the NATA Hall of Fame. He is a fellow of the American College of Sports Medicine and a fellow of the American Academy of Kinesiology and Physical Education.

In his free time, Perrin enjoys traveling, exercising, and vacationing at his lake cottage in Vermont.