Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: hospital -acute

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Our organization has also been dealing with similar questions. Historically, all

ortho patients were seen bid Mon-Fri and once on Sat. All other acute patients

were seen qd and not on Saturdays.

We are currently rethinking this. While most of our therapists agree bid is

excellent ofr ortho patients, we are now asking " Why not others " , in particular

CVAs or amputees.

Skilled vs nonskilled is a whole other problem. If anyone has an easy answer for

that, PLEASE tell me.

Michele

Rehabilitation Services Coordinator

>>> " NANCY E. RIGHI MFW241 " 11/16 1:31 pm >>>

--- Received from MSJ.CRSNER NANCY E. RIGHI MFW241 11-16-98 131p

-> ptmanageregroups

How are people in other acute settings dealing with frequency of care? We

have many disagreemnets between therapists and we have ortho suregons who

demand bid for all ortho patients while some medical doctors don't even

know we write notes never mind frequency. We also have problems with

therapist agreeing on what is skilled versus nonskilled .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We see all our acute patients BID unless we receive a specific order for QD

from the MD. Occasionally if we have a long termer with poor+ to fair-

potential we request a QD order from the MD. With the length of stay so

short, patients out for tests or just the fact that the patient isn't

feeling well in the case of medical patients we usually only 'catch' them

once a day anyway.

----------

To: ptmanageregroups

Subject: hospital -acute

Date: Monday, November 16, 1998 1:00 PM

--- Received from MSJ.CRSNER NANCY E. RIGHI MFW241 11-16-98 131p

-> ptmanageregroups

How are people in other acute settings dealing with frequency of care? We

have many disagreemnets between therapists and we have ortho suregons who

demand bid for all ortho patients while some medical doctors don't even

know we write notes never mind frequency. We also have problems with

therapist agreeing on what is skilled versus nonskilled .

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

I work in an acute care setting. If a physician orders PT BID and the

therapist feels that Qd PT is more appropriate, how do your therapists go

about changing that order/plan of care? I have been advised (by a clinical

nurse specialist), that I must somehow get the MD's verbal OK or order

clarification in order to change any order. What are other thoughts, and/or

processes for this.

Any help is appreciated.

Re: hospital -acute

>You wrote:

>

>How are people in other acute settings dealing with frequency of care? We

>have many disagreement between therapists and we have ortho surgeons who

>demand bid for all ortho patients while some medical doctors don't even

>know we write notes never mind frequency. We also have problems with

>therapist agreeing on what is skilled versus nonskilled .

>

>

>

>Here at the facility where I am the PT director (it is similar at the other

facilities in the same system depending on load and staffing):

>All inpatients are seen bid, especially the orthopedic and rehab type

patients; wound care is done once a day. Other patients frequency depends

on medical status and is left to the discretion and professional judgement

of the therapist when establishing the plan of care. We have gotten no

flack from the physician's when we determine that a patient no longer

requires our services. The physician's aren't the ones we battle with over

whether or not the patient is appropriate for therapy. The nurses are the

ones always wanting us to get " patient up in chair bid " . We just document

that is not a skilled physical therapy service and inform the nursing

supervisor. Of course, there can be other instances when we have to make a

professional judgement regarding services. It helps if your administrator

backs you up with nursing and the docs. My administrator knows that I and

my staff have the skills and knowledge necessary to make these calls as well

as have a better understanding of medicare as it pertains to skilled therapy

services.

>

>If there is a disagreement among PT staff as to what is skilled and

non-skilled it is my job to mediate, educate and inservice the department

staff on the difference.

>

>

> Pat Jobes, PT

>Director of Physical Therapy

>North Hospital

>Methodist Healthcare Memphis

>jobesm@...

>

>------------------------------------------------------------------------

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi and Tina -

First of all, you may want to post this on the acuteptegroups list serve

as well. You may get it to a different group of people. As for the

difference of opinion regarding frequency, the PT should determine the

appropriate intensity, frequency, and duration of care based on the patient's

needs. If there is a discrepancy with what the physician ordered, we would

contact the physician directly, explain the plan of care, identify any problem

areas or questions, and resolve the conflict. Often we found that the

physicians wrote for BID treatment because they wanted the patient to be

ranged, walked, etc. In many cases, this can be delegated to an aide or

nursing assistant once the PT has determined it is safe to do so. It is not

billable as PT care (as you know). Bottom line - you have to determine what

the patient needs, what the needs are of all the other patients, and the

resources you have available to meet all of the needs. I found that after an

intelligent and articulate discussion, most physicians agreed and changed the

order. However, there are times when this just doesn't happen and you don't

have the resources to meet all of the needs. Keep track of orders you cannot

comply with and speak with the physicians and , nurses, and administrators to

develop a strategy to rectify the situation. Thanks. Sinnott

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Link to comment
Share on other sites

in our facility (tertiary, trauma acute care, behavioral health,and LTC)

we have realized that there are long standing differences in the orders

that therapy receive ,the orders that nursing receives and the

" functional " impact of those orders. Therefore, we rely less on what

nursing uses as their standard practice.

We have agreed with the Medical Board that Therapy will be ordered and

that our care of plan will serve as the agreed upon orders, since we are

the experts in the field. When there are remaining strong difference

between clinicians, the supervisors get involved. It rarely comes to my

level (admin) after that. Good luck!

> Re: hospital -acute

>

>

> >You wrote:

> >

> >How are people in other acute settings dealing with frequency of

> care? We

> >have many disagreement between therapists and we have ortho surgeons

> who

> >demand bid for all ortho patients while some medical doctors don't

> even

> >know we write notes never mind frequency. We also have problems with

> >therapist agreeing on what is skilled versus nonskilled .

> >

> >

> >

> >Here at the facility where I am the PT director (it is similar at the

> other

> facilities in the same system depending on load and staffing):

> >All inpatients are seen bid, especially the orthopedic and rehab type

> patients; wound care is done once a day. Other patients frequency

> depends

> on medical status and is left to the discretion and professional

> judgement

> of the therapist when establishing the plan of care. We have gotten

> no

> flack from the physician's when we determine that a patient no longer

> requires our services. The physician's aren't the ones we battle with

> over

> whether or not the patient is appropriate for therapy. The nurses are

> the

> ones always wanting us to get " patient up in chair bid " . We just

> document

> that is not a skilled physical therapy service and inform the nursing

> supervisor. Of course, there can be other instances when we have to

> make a

> professional judgement regarding services. It helps if your

> administrator

> backs you up with nursing and the docs. My administrator knows that I

> and

> my staff have the skills and knowledge necessary to make these calls

> as well

> as have a better understanding of medicare as it pertains to skilled

> therapy

> services.

> >

> >If there is a disagreement among PT staff as to what is skilled and

> non-skilled it is my job to mediate, educate and inservice the

> department

> staff on the difference.

> >

> >

> > Pat Jobes, PT

> >Director of Physical Therapy

> >North Hospital

> >Methodist Healthcare Memphis

> >jobesm@...

> >

> >---------------------------------------------------------------------

> ---

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

> We have agreed with the Medical Board that Therapy will be ordered and

> that our care of plan will serve as the agreed upon orders, since we are

> the experts in the field.

How is this set up and how is it documented? If I were to attempt this at my

hospital... how would I go about it. " Getting the medical board to agree to

that " is what I mean???

Thanks in advance.

Tina

INdpls, IN

-----

See the original message at /list/ptmanager/?start=2446

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The docs don't usually write BID, mostly Eval and Treat. If a specific order is

written and the therapist feels that it is not warrented, contraindicated and or

unnecessary, we do call the doctor and then write the new order on the chart.

If it is a case of the patient being too high level and independent. We just

document the evaluation and findings and make a notation in the Dr. Progress

Notes that the patient does not need PT at this time. More can be written

depending on the situation.

If the order is perscriptive, you must get new orders.

On the issue of the physicain being aware of the plan of care, we acknowledge

the order, and document that the evaluation is complete and in chart (which

includes plan of care) Nothing is necessary on the Dr.'s part unless he

DISAGREES with the Plan of Care. ((>%% of the time there is no disagreement.

Pat Jobes, PT

Director of Physical Therapy

North Hospital

Methodist Healthcare Memphis

jobesm@...

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...