Guest guest Posted September 18, 1998 Report Share Posted September 18, 1998 - I, too, feel that walking out is not a professional option. We have a legal and ethical responsibility to our patients to not abandon them. We also have protected rights under fair labor laws which should be investigated by anyone who feels that they are being " abused " or " misused " . A greater problem is the one which involves PTs abusing their license by evaluating patients/clients and automatically triaging them to aides, ATCs, etc. The business folks know this is happening, see a lower overhead for personnel (which is at least 50-60% of any health care service budget), and like what happens to the bottom line. In terms of productivity, there is a soft rule of thumb that quite a few people use. It is quoted on moose's book on PT Management ( a new volume is now available). It states that you should plan to capture at least 75% of the billable hours. For an eight hour day, this translates into 6 hours of care that should (must) be captured to cover costs, etc. Using a 15 minute unit, each care givers should capture 24 units/day. For this to work, it is imperative that the staff understand and agree to what a " billable unit " is. You would be surprised what staff thinks is unbillable time. It is helpful to have the staff develop and agree to a " billable " unit so that they own it. Secondly, it is difficult for some people providing bedside treatment to produce 24 units a day. On the other hand, gym based care - which allows for scheduling more than one person at at time - is a very effective way to produce 30 or more units. I used to average the productivity of the whole staff across all care settings to determine if we were ahead or behind in the game. Hope this helps. Sinnott ______________________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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