Guest guest Posted September 5, 2001 Report Share Posted September 5, 2001 Group, Can anyone give me advice regarding the expected productivity for PT vs. OT vs. SLP? In particularly interested in OT vs. PT. Is there any difference in productivity expectations?? Todd Freeman, MHSA, PT, CHE Director of Wellness & Rehabilitation Sumner Regional Medical Center Gallatin, TN (Nashville suburb) / fax Freemat@... This message is a PRIVATE communication. If you are not the intended recipient please do not read, copy, or use it, and do not disclose it to others. Please notify the sender of the delivery error by replying to this message, and then delete it from your system. Thank you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 5, 2001 Report Share Posted September 5, 2001 Shouldn't be any differences in productivity across the board!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2001 Report Share Posted September 6, 2001 Todd, I am the director of an acute service and your dilemma is an interesting one. When looking strictly at visits, PT's typically are able to generate more visits per day than OT's and OT's more than SLP's in my setting. Given this disparity, we track productivity by patient care units. Patient care units are 15 minute units reflecting billed and unbilled time spent in direct patient care. If your facility is anything like mine, the nursing shortage and high medical acuity of patients neccesitates greater involvement by rehab staff in assisting nursing with many functions. For example, we don't have the luxury of calling nurses to take over if the patient needs to use the toilet. If the patient soils their bedding, we typically must manage this as well, (though often with help of or delegated to aides). Using this system, we don't have a differential in expected patient care units. I expect every clinician to generate 26 fifteen minutes units daily (8 hours) Subtracted from a possible 30 units, this allows approximately 60 minutes daily for personal needs (everybody's got to pee) documentation, QA, and non patient care meetings. Given that approximately 70% of our acute population is on fixed reimbursement, ie DRG's, Managed care contracts etc, we as a hospital have determined that the focus needs to be on providing care to our patients and working as an interdisciplinary team. Our average PT treatment length is 36 minutes, OT is 47 minutes, and SLP is 51 minutes. Average number of visits per patient are 3.4 for PT, 1.5 for OT, and 1.4 for Speech. This is determined by classifying time as either billable or non billable patient care time. An assessment will typically generate 45 minutes (3 units billable) The therapist codes this as one unit of charged assessment (for charging purposes) and 2 units of non charged assessment (for productivity purposes) Perhaps this is followed up with 15 minutes of time spent with confused or distraught family members (15 minutes of non-billable patient care. Together this result in 4 units of productive time though only 1 unit chargeable and 2 units non chargeable. We have a daily tracking sheet that codes each time of patient interaction for each therapist and results in a daily productivity score. Hope this is helpful, (sorry for the length) Redge L MS OTR/L Director of Rehabilitation Services on Hospital Bremerton, WA 98310 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2001 Report Share Posted September 6, 2001 Todd, I am the director of an acute service and your dilemma is an interesting one. When looking strictly at visits, PT's typically are able to generate more visits per day than OT's and OT's more than SLP's in my setting. Given this disparity, we track productivity by patient care units. Patient care units are 15 minute units reflecting billed and unbilled time spent in direct patient care. If your facility is anything like mine, the nursing shortage and high medical acuity of patients neccesitates greater involvement by rehab staff in assisting nursing with many functions. For example, we don't have the luxury of calling nurses to take over if the patient needs to use the toilet. If the patient soils their bedding, we typically must manage this as well, (though often with help of or delegated to aides). Using this system, we don't have a differential in expected patient care units. I expect every clinician to generate 26 fifteen minutes units daily (8 hours) Subtracted from a possible 30 units, this allows approximately 60 minutes daily for personal needs (everybody's got to pee) documentation, QA, and non patient care meetings. Given that approximately 70% of our acute population is on fixed reimbursement, ie DRG's, Managed care contracts etc, we as a hospital have determined that the focus needs to be on providing care to our patients and working as an interdisciplinary team. Our average PT treatment length is 36 minutes, OT is 47 minutes, and SLP is 51 minutes. Average number of visits per patient are 3.4 for PT, 1.5 for OT, and 1.4 for Speech. This is determined by classifying time as either billable or non billable patient care time. An assessment will typically generate 45 minutes (3 units billable) The therapist codes this as one unit of charged assessment (for charging purposes) and 2 units of non charged assessment (for productivity purposes) Perhaps this is followed up with 15 minutes of time spent with confused or distraught family members (15 minutes of non-billable patient care. Together this result in 4 units of productive time though only 1 unit chargeable and 2 units non chargeable. We have a daily tracking sheet that codes each time of patient interaction for each therapist and results in a daily productivity score. Hope this is helpful, (sorry for the length) Redge L MS OTR/L Director of Rehabilitation Services on Hospital Bremerton, WA 98310 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 7, 2001 Report Share Posted September 7, 2001 There's also an incentive with the pay by billable unit model for overutilization of services to maintain or achieve personal income needs & /or goals. I'm aware that many if not most therapists are more ethical than this, but I've also known it to occur...and even when we remain ethical, the direct ratio between earnings and billable units will likely result in extreme scrutiny by most payors once discovered due to known current and historical abuses which cost us all in terms of increased regulatory burdens and capitation of reimbursement. D. Geyer, P.T. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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