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Re: Acute Care OT/PT

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Group-

I seek your collective wisdom. I have been an OT for several years in the

OP arena, but just recently moved to work in a small (200 bed) community

hospital in Upstate New York. I am doing mainly acute care evaluations. In

an effort to better my own knowledge, I set a goal to develop some sort of

parameters/guidelines/reference point/etc. to identify when OT is and is not

appropriate for referral. I believe that I can assume the obvious reasons

why OT is indicated, but no one in the hospital can efficiently state

when/where/why OT need (or does not need) to be involved in the care of an

acute care patient.

As I began talking about things with my peers and coworkers, it became

obvious that there has been a concern here regarding inappropriate referrals

for both OT and PT. So my " project " has now bloomed into an initiative to

educate groups (primarily our case managers/discharge planners and

hospitalists) on the acute care rehab spectrum. I forsee a delicate walk

that will need to be done to ensure that we do not seem like complainers and

subsequently see a drop-off of all our referrals; we will need tact and

preparation so as to make sure that we are called in when we are needed and

not when we are not needed.

A major problem that I am having is simply nailing down a basic statement of

WHAT the purpose of acute care rehab is. Are we here to start the ball

rolling for rehab? Are we here to triage? Are we here to ensure safety

within the hospital and prevent unsafe discharge home? I think that we do

all three, and that all three are beneficial. But I am not sure that those

placing our referrals know what and why.

At the admitted risk of extreme naivete, I seek any and all advice and

assistance. Would folks be willing to share missions, policies,

precautions/contraindications for eval and treatment, insight, references

and anything else that is pertinent? I will be more than willing to call to

talk, or give a fax or snail mail address if needed.

Thanks all in advance, and thanks for your time and consideration in

reading.

Best wishes for great holidays,

dc

Cormican

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Ms. Wittwer-

Thanks for the input.

We have a similar form in place; the problem that I see is that the nurses

don't seem to pay much attention to the accuracy of their input. Do you do

training for the nurses at orientation? Do you have periodic updates and or

competencies?

Thanks again.

dc

Cormican

>From: dwittwer@...

>Reply-To: PTManager

>To: PTManager

>Subject: Re: Re: Acute Care OT/PT

>Date: Fri, 26 Nov 2004 06:58:12 -0800

>

>

>

>

>I work at a 125 bed acute care facility. I have integrated into the

>nursing admission form a rehab section that would trigger an eval/consult

>for any of the three disciplines. The nurse is able to initiate a referral

>with the physician. This has worked well at our facility.

>

>Dudi Wittwer, O.T.R.

>Manager, Rehab Services

>Bay Area Hospital

>1775 Road

>Coos Bay, Oregon 97420

>dwittwer@...

>

>

>

>

>

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We have participated in their orientation in the past but the nursing

education department discusses our role in patient care during their

orientation. I have had input into this orientation process and feel

comfortable in what they are teaching. We attend the unit meetings when

further education is identified.

I am part of the Patient Care Quality Team. So when the nursing admission

form is presented to this team for revision, they have always asked for my

input.

I feel the nurses do a good job in advocating for the patient when they

need our services. Even the discharge planners have advocated for our

services.

Dudi Wittwer, O.T.R.

Manager, Rehab Services

Bay Area Hospital

1775 Road

Coos Bay, Oregon 97420

dwittwer@...

" Cormican "

<bigdarkdan@hotma To:

PTManager

il.com> cc:

Subject: Re: Re:

Acute Care OT/PT

11/26/2004 11:01

AM

Please respond to

PTManager

Ms. Wittwer-

Thanks for the input.

We have a similar form in place; the problem that I see is that the nurses

don't seem to pay much attention to the accuracy of their input. Do you do

training for the nurses at orientation? Do you have periodic updates and

or

competencies?

Thanks again.

dc

Cormican

>From: dwittwer@...

>Reply-To: PTManager

>To: PTManager

>Subject: Re: Re: Acute Care OT/PT

>Date: Fri, 26 Nov 2004 06:58:12 -0800

>

>

>

>

>I work at a 125 bed acute care facility. I have integrated into the

>nursing admission form a rehab section that would trigger an eval/consult

>for any of the three disciplines. The nurse is able to initiate a

referral

>with the physician. This has worked well at our facility.

>

>Dudi Wittwer, O.T.R.

>Manager, Rehab Services

>Bay Area Hospital

>1775 Road

>Coos Bay, Oregon 97420

>dwittwer@...

>

>

>

>

>

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit www.InHomeRehab.com.

Bring PTManager to your organization or State Association with a

professional workshop or course - call us at 313 884-8920 to arrange

PTManager encourages participation in your professional association. Join

and participate now!

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We have had a great deal of success with our inpatient referral

criteria. I have pasted the criteria we use and this is part of an

overall ancillary referral criteria reference sheet that is posted in

all nursing areas and inserviced to nursing staff. We get approximately

35% of all hospital admissions referred to PT, 20% to OT and 10% to

speech. We, on occasion get inappropriate referrals but these are

addressed by me or the supervisor directly with the physician.

Interpreter Services

Pt. has limited skill in English

Pt. normally communicates by sign language.

Pastoral Care

Patient/Family in need of emotional and/or spiritual support.

Patient anxious re: illness/suffering/end-of-life issues.

Patient Representative

Patient has concern about rights or quality of care.

Social Work

Dependent person is at home unattended.

Reason to suspect abuse, neglect or family violence.

May need different care setting at discharge.

May need community health or social service at discharge.

Pt/family has decision-making difficulties which affect care

Mental health, substance abuse or other significant social

problem

Physical Therapy (Requires MD Order)

New musculoskeletal limitations or risk for worsening of

chronic conditions

Surgical patients with impaired mobility

Ambulatory patients with a history of falls

Uncertain discharge plan requiring functional evaluation for

appropriate recommendation or unclear whether there is adequate

function for safely returning patient's destination of choice.

Bed rest for greater than 7 days

New onset of neurological impairment benefiting from immediate

therapy

Occupational Therapy( Requires MD Order)

Uncertain discharge plan requiring functional evaluation for

appropriate recommendation or unclear

whether there is adequate function for safely returning

patient's destination of choice.

Functional condition prevents them from participating in

self-care activities necessary for discharge

destination.

New onset of neurological impairment benefiting from immediate

therapy

Bed rest for greater than 7 days.

Diagnoses that would benefit from positioning devices or upper

extremity orthotics.

Speech Pathology (Requires MD Order)

Limited ability to communicate due to medical condition,

neurological function, or external device

such as a ventilator.

Following surgery on the neck, throat, or mouth

At risk for aspiration or with a dysfunctional swallow.

New onset of neurological impairment benefiting from immediate

therapy

Respiratory Therapy ( Requires MD Order)

Change in breathing pattern, i.e., work of breathing

Change in breath sounds, i.e., increased wheezing or ronchi

Increase cough with sputum production

Drop in SpO2 below 90%

Dietary

Any 1 below:

On TF/TPN/PEG

Pediatric failure to thrive

DKA, newly diagnosed diabetes mellitus, new to insulin

Any 3 below:

Unintentional weight loss of greater than10% usual body weight

Less than 90% of ideal body weight

initial albumin equal to or less than 2.8 mg/dl or pre-albumin

equal to or less than165 mg/dl

abdominal surgery within the past month or impending abdominal

surgery

Chewing, swallowing problems or oral pain

Nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea

Poor appetite or minimal intake for 7 days or more

Enterostomal Nursing

Skin breakdown around leaky tube

Ostomy appliances not staying on @ least 2-3 days

Herniation near ostomy site needing hernia support belt.

Marking of stoma site on ostomy pre-op patient

Prolapsed stoma

Teaching needs related to ostomy self-care

Redge L MS OTR/L

Director of Rehabilitation Services

on Hospital

Bremerton, WA 98310

Administrative Assistant:

Wanda Kotte: wandakotte@...

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