Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

where are we going?

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with some of

those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing, turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills, do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like these conversations and find them very useful and greatly respect these

opinions. I have had great success partnering via independent contracts with

physicians on my own behalf and that of my members. We have completed over 80

such transactions. In most every case a therapist was approached by a physician

wanting to employ them. After the physician recovered from the " ABSOLUTELY NOT "

response, they embraced the idea that they could have these great services

provided within the therapists existing clinics thus freeing up space and

avoiding the set up costs etc. Your clinic remains your clinic; you've just

added a valuable contract no different than Blue Cross, Aetna, etc. Our studies

indicated that in house therapy for docs produces just above or below a 10%

return, with the better ones being run without therapists. The greatest

blessing of this year is the APTA/CMS agreement which will eliminate these farce

practices.

ly I think if all therapists refuse to ever be employees (I would never

allow that to happen), then contracts and a great deal of respect can be gained.

Our standard to begin talks is 70% for the therapist/clinic and a risk free 30%

for the physician. Instead of the physician having the hassles and hoping for a

10% return, he/she has a guaranteed return of 30% and your clinic remains yours.

I know what you're thinking: 1) this isn't legal. It is. I'm not a therapist

but a business guy with lots of experience and the best lawyers money can by.

In fact, ALL of our major contracts put the physician's attorneys with ours and

each one has agreed; 2) I can't make it at 70%! Wrong! If you are operating at

below 90% of your capacity these contracts fill the gap quite nicely. Our first

small physician contract produced cash to us of $29,000 during our first quarter

ramp up with added expenses of $300.18. Your fixed expenses are already paid

for so these revenues go to the bottom line. The profit margin on adding

additional staff can make a lot of sense once that threshold is met.

They have a problem and you are the solution. It's that or they do it the wrong

way without you. We currently have eight contracts in place using multiple

facilities and multiple physicians per facility producing around 60-70 new

patients per week that we weren't seeing previously. This activity leads to

other new opportunities. For example, a large physician group is forming a

rehab hospital and wants to contract home health and outpatient to us. It won't

open until August but we're seeing their patients as standard referrals now.

For more information please check out

www.mdptpartners.com<http://www.mdptpartners.com/>. It's an informational

website with nothing to buy. In the words of one member/friend, " last year I

thought you were Satan and now this year you've literally saved my practice of

23 years. You truly do everything in my power to assist the therapist " . Take

care. Doug

Doug Sparks

Advanced Physical Therapy Concepts / APTC

www.aptc.biz<http://www.aptc.biz/>

doug@...

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with some of

those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find that

they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing, turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills, do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like these conversations and find them very useful and greatly respect these

opinions. I have had great success partnering via independent contracts with

physicians on my own behalf and that of my members. We have completed over 80

such transactions. In most every case a therapist was approached by a physician

wanting to employ them. After the physician recovered from the " ABSOLUTELY NOT "

response, they embraced the idea that they could have these great services

provided within the therapists existing clinics thus freeing up space and

avoiding the set up costs etc. Your clinic remains your clinic; you've just

added a valuable contract no different than Blue Cross, Aetna, etc. Our studies

indicated that in house therapy for docs produces just above or below a 10%

return, with the better ones being run without therapists. The greatest

blessing of this year is the APTA/CMS agreement which will eliminate these farce

practices.

ly I think if all therapists refuse to ever be employees (I would never

allow that to happen), then contracts and a great deal of respect can be gained.

Our standard to begin talks is 70% for the therapist/clinic and a risk free 30%

for the physician. Instead of the physician having the hassles and hoping for a

10% return, he/she has a guaranteed return of 30% and your clinic remains yours.

I know what you're thinking: 1) this isn't legal. It is. I'm not a therapist

but a business guy with lots of experience and the best lawyers money can by.

In fact, ALL of our major contracts put the physician's attorneys with ours and

each one has agreed; 2) I can't make it at 70%! Wrong! If you are operating at

below 90% of your capacity these contracts fill the gap quite nicely. Our first

small physician contract produced cash to us of $29,000 during our first quarter

ramp up with added expenses of $300.18. Your fixed expenses are already paid

for so these revenues go to the bottom line. The profit margin on adding

additional staff can make a lot of sense once that threshold is met.

They have a problem and you are the solution. It's that or they do it the wrong

way without you. We currently have eight contracts in place using multiple

facilities and multiple physicians per facility producing around 60-70 new

patients per week that we weren't seeing previously. This activity leads to

other new opportunities. For example, a large physician group is forming a

rehab hospital and wants to contract home health and outpatient to us. It won't

open until August but we're seeing their patients as standard referrals now.

For more information please check out

www.mdptpartners.com<http://www.mdptpartners.com/>. It's an informational

website with nothing to buy. In the words of one member/friend, " last year I

thought you were Satan and now this year you've literally saved my practice of

23 years. You truly do everything in my power to assist the therapist " . Take

care. Doug

Doug Sparks

Advanced Physical Therapy Concepts / APTC

www.aptc.biz<http://www.aptc.biz/>

doug@...

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with some of

those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find that

they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing, turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills, do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Doug:

Perhaps you could answer just one question for me; what service is the

physician providing, in the arrangement that you describe, to justify

receiving " a risk free 30% " of the fee for my services? The physician is

certainly free to bill for services rendered, just as we are. I am

wondering however, what service are they providing in your scenario?

Ken Mailly, PT

Mailly & Inglett Consulting, LLC

Tel. 973 692-0033

Fax 973 633-9557

68 Seneca Trail

Wayne, NJ, 07470

www.NJPTAid.biz

Bridging the Gap!

Re: where are we going?

I like these conversations and find them very useful and greatly respect

these opinions. I have had great success partnering via independent

contracts with physicians on my own behalf and that of my members. We have

completed over 80 such transactions. In most every case a therapist was

approached by a physician wanting to employ them. After the physician

recovered from the " ABSOLUTELY NOT " response, they embraced the idea that

they could have these great services provided within the therapists existing

clinics thus freeing up space and avoiding the set up costs etc. Your

clinic remains your clinic; you've just added a valuable contract no

different than Blue Cross, Aetna, etc. Our studies indicated that in house

therapy for docs produces just above or below a 10% return, with the better

ones being run without therapists. The greatest blessing of this year is

the APTA/CMS agreement which will eliminate these farce practices.

ly I think if all therapists refuse to ever be employees (I would never

allow that to happen), then contracts and a great deal of respect can be

gained. Our standard to begin talks is 70% for the therapist/clinic and a

risk free 30% for the physician. Instead of the physician having the

hassles and hoping for a 10% return, he/she has a guaranteed return of 30%

and your clinic remains yours. I know what you're thinking: 1) this isn't

legal. It is. I'm not a therapist but a business guy with lots of

experience and the best lawyers money can by. In fact, ALL of our major

contracts put the physician's attorneys with ours and each one has agreed;

2) I can't make it at 70%! Wrong! If you are operating at below 90% of

your capacity these contracts fill the gap quite nicely. Our first small

physician contract produced cash to us of $29,000 during our first quarter

ramp up with added expenses of $300.18. Your fixed expenses are already

paid for so these revenues go to the bottom

line. The profit margin on adding additional staff can make a lot of sense

once that threshold is met.

They have a problem and you are the solution. It's that or they do it the

wrong way without you. We currently have eight contracts in place using

multiple facilities and multiple physicians per facility producing around

60-70 new patients per week that we weren't seeing previously. This

activity leads to other new opportunities. For example, a large physician

group is forming a rehab hospital and wants to contract home health and

outpatient to us. It won't open until August but we're seeing their

patients as standard referrals now. For more information please check out

www.mdptpartners.com<http://www.mdptpartners.com/>. It's an informational

website with nothing to buy. In the words of one member/friend, " last year

I thought you were Satan and now this year you've literally saved my

practice of 23 years. You truly do everything in my power to assist the

therapist " . Take care. Doug

Doug Sparks

Advanced Physical Therapy Concepts / APTC

www.aptc.biz<http://www.aptc.biz/>

doug@...

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

some of those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills,

do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in

the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Doug:

Perhaps you could answer just one question for me; what service is the

physician providing, in the arrangement that you describe, to justify

receiving " a risk free 30% " of the fee for my services? The physician is

certainly free to bill for services rendered, just as we are. I am

wondering however, what service are they providing in your scenario?

Ken Mailly, PT

Mailly & Inglett Consulting, LLC

Tel. 973 692-0033

Fax 973 633-9557

68 Seneca Trail

Wayne, NJ, 07470

www.NJPTAid.biz

Bridging the Gap!

Re: where are we going?

I like these conversations and find them very useful and greatly respect

these opinions. I have had great success partnering via independent

contracts with physicians on my own behalf and that of my members. We have

completed over 80 such transactions. In most every case a therapist was

approached by a physician wanting to employ them. After the physician

recovered from the " ABSOLUTELY NOT " response, they embraced the idea that

they could have these great services provided within the therapists existing

clinics thus freeing up space and avoiding the set up costs etc. Your

clinic remains your clinic; you've just added a valuable contract no

different than Blue Cross, Aetna, etc. Our studies indicated that in house

therapy for docs produces just above or below a 10% return, with the better

ones being run without therapists. The greatest blessing of this year is

the APTA/CMS agreement which will eliminate these farce practices.

ly I think if all therapists refuse to ever be employees (I would never

allow that to happen), then contracts and a great deal of respect can be

gained. Our standard to begin talks is 70% for the therapist/clinic and a

risk free 30% for the physician. Instead of the physician having the

hassles and hoping for a 10% return, he/she has a guaranteed return of 30%

and your clinic remains yours. I know what you're thinking: 1) this isn't

legal. It is. I'm not a therapist but a business guy with lots of

experience and the best lawyers money can by. In fact, ALL of our major

contracts put the physician's attorneys with ours and each one has agreed;

2) I can't make it at 70%! Wrong! If you are operating at below 90% of

your capacity these contracts fill the gap quite nicely. Our first small

physician contract produced cash to us of $29,000 during our first quarter

ramp up with added expenses of $300.18. Your fixed expenses are already

paid for so these revenues go to the bottom

line. The profit margin on adding additional staff can make a lot of sense

once that threshold is met.

They have a problem and you are the solution. It's that or they do it the

wrong way without you. We currently have eight contracts in place using

multiple facilities and multiple physicians per facility producing around

60-70 new patients per week that we weren't seeing previously. This

activity leads to other new opportunities. For example, a large physician

group is forming a rehab hospital and wants to contract home health and

outpatient to us. It won't open until August but we're seeing their

patients as standard referrals now. For more information please check out

www.mdptpartners.com<http://www.mdptpartners.com/>. It's an informational

website with nothing to buy. In the words of one member/friend, " last year

I thought you were Satan and now this year you've literally saved my

practice of 23 years. You truly do everything in my power to assist the

therapist " . Take care. Doug

Doug Sparks

Advanced Physical Therapy Concepts / APTC

www.aptc.biz<http://www.aptc.biz/>

doug@...

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

some of those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills,

do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in

the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Ken and happy holidays. As 100% of the collections belong to the physician,

the 70% they pay to the therapist/therapy company is the contracted expense of

service. Discount for volume and exclusivity (where relevant) is another common

business description. It's based on, and not owed until collection to account

for denials or nonpayment/adjustments for other reasons beyond their immediate

control. The physicians have a choice to provide the space, staff, equipment,

etc., or contract to have those services provided. I've seen other percentages

based on depth of services offered such as billing and inclusion of other

physicians into a new " group " . Continuity of care and communication makes the

process require teamwork which results in better service.

Once again, the therapist can get in the path of progress, or not, as the

physicians will continue to exclude them if options aren't presented. People

continue to rightfully complain about these arrangements that they see going on

around them, and wondering how it can happen and what they can do. Though I

have heard some very good suggestions that I too will implement, this is the

" mystery " that's causing the frustration. The real downside of not

participating is being shut out from any future referrals. I've had several

therapists tell me that 1-3 of their main referring physicians are bringing

therapy inside and that it will likely put them out of business. That scares

them and me. Thanks for your input and have a great evening. Doug

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

some of those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills,

do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in

the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit

www.InHomeRehab.com<http://www.inhomerehab.com/<http://www.inhomerehab.com<http:\

//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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Ken and happy holidays. As 100% of the collections belong to the physician,

the 70% they pay to the therapist/therapy company is the contracted expense of

service. Discount for volume and exclusivity (where relevant) is another common

business description. It's based on, and not owed until collection to account

for denials or nonpayment/adjustments for other reasons beyond their immediate

control. The physicians have a choice to provide the space, staff, equipment,

etc., or contract to have those services provided. I've seen other percentages

based on depth of services offered such as billing and inclusion of other

physicians into a new " group " . Continuity of care and communication makes the

process require teamwork which results in better service.

Once again, the therapist can get in the path of progress, or not, as the

physicians will continue to exclude them if options aren't presented. People

continue to rightfully complain about these arrangements that they see going on

around them, and wondering how it can happen and what they can do. Though I

have heard some very good suggestions that I too will implement, this is the

" mystery " that's causing the frustration. The real downside of not

participating is being shut out from any future referrals. I've had several

therapists tell me that 1-3 of their main referring physicians are bringing

therapy inside and that it will likely put them out of business. That scares

them and me. Thanks for your input and have a great evening. Doug

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

some of those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills,

do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in

the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit

www.InHomeRehab.com<http://www.inhomerehab.com/<http://www.inhomerehab.com<http:\

//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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Ken and happy holidays. As 100% of the collections belong to the physician,

the 70% they pay to the therapist/therapy company is the contracted expense of

service. Discount for volume and exclusivity (where relevant) is another common

business description. It's based on, and not owed until collection to account

for denials or nonpayment/adjustments for other reasons beyond their immediate

control. The physicians have a choice to provide the space, staff, equipment,

etc., or contract to have those services provided. I've seen other percentages

based on depth of services offered such as billing and inclusion of other

physicians into a new " group " . Continuity of care and communication makes the

process require teamwork which results in better service.

Once again, the therapist can get in the path of progress, or not, as the

physicians will continue to exclude them if options aren't presented. People

continue to rightfully complain about these arrangements that they see going on

around them, and wondering how it can happen and what they can do. Though I

have heard some very good suggestions that I too will implement, this is the

" mystery " that's causing the frustration. The real downside of not

participating is being shut out from any future referrals. I've had several

therapists tell me that 1-3 of their main referring physicians are bringing

therapy inside and that it will likely put them out of business. That scares

them and me. Thanks for your input and have a great evening. Doug

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

some of those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills,

do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in

the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit

www.InHomeRehab.com<http://www.inhomerehab.com/<http://www.inhomerehab.com<http:\

//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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see this same marketing conversation every few months.

One thing I do like, it certainly generates some interesting comments about

" under & over the table " arrangements.

Steve Passmore PT, MS

Re: where are we going?

>

>

>

>

> Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

> CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

> Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

> doctors we

> prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

> some of those

> same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

> employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It

> is working

> quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

> and

> staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

> the

> therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is

> that

> the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

> that they

> are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

> turnover,

> billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

> are

> now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

> will

> consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the

> bills, do

> not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

> because

> the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

> concern.

> We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

> we

> want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years

> in the

> Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

> this

> not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

>

> Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

> Occupational Therapist

> Certified Vocational Evaluator

> Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

> Chief Executive Officer

> WORK & REHAB

> 4546 South 14th

> Abilene, Texas 79605

> -phone

> -fax

> email:bubklo@...

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Looking to start your own Practice?

> Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see this same marketing conversation every few months.

One thing I do like, it certainly generates some interesting comments about

" under & over the table " arrangements.

Steve Passmore PT, MS

Re: where are we going?

>

>

>

>

> Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

> CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

> Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

> doctors we

> prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

> some of those

> same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

> employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It

> is working

> quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

> and

> staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

> the

> therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is

> that

> the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

> that they

> are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

> turnover,

> billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

> are

> now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

> will

> consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the

> bills, do

> not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

> because

> the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

> concern.

> We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

> we

> want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years

> in the

> Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

> this

> not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

>

> Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

> Occupational Therapist

> Certified Vocational Evaluator

> Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

> Chief Executive Officer

> WORK & REHAB

> 4546 South 14th

> Abilene, Texas 79605

> -phone

> -fax

> email:bubklo@...

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Looking to start your own Practice?

> Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see this same marketing conversation every few months.

One thing I do like, it certainly generates some interesting comments about

" under & over the table " arrangements.

Steve Passmore PT, MS

Re: where are we going?

>

>

>

>

> Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

> CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

> Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

> doctors we

> prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

> some of those

> same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

> employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It

> is working

> quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

> and

> staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

> the

> therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is

> that

> the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

> that they

> are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

> turnover,

> billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

> are

> now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

> will

> consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the

> bills, do

> not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

> because

> the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

> concern.

> We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

> we

> want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years

> in the

> Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

> this

> not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

>

> Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

> Occupational Therapist

> Certified Vocational Evaluator

> Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

> Chief Executive Officer

> WORK & REHAB

> 4546 South 14th

> Abilene, Texas 79605

> -phone

> -fax

> email:bubklo@...

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Looking to start your own Practice?

> Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sure sounds like referral for profit to me.

Unethical and illegal in my world

Ron Barbato P.T.

Corporate Director , Rehabilitation

Ephraim McDowell Health

Voice (859 )239-1515

Fax (859 )936-7249

rbarbato@...

" PRIVILEGED AND CONFIDENTIAL: This transmission may contain information that

is privileged, confidential and/or exempt from disclosure under applicable

law. If you are not the intended recipient, then please do not read it and

be aware that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the

information contained herein (including any reliance thereon) is STRICTLY

PROHIBITED. If you received this transmission in error, please immediately

advise me, by reply e-mail, and delete this message and any attachments

without retaining a copy in any form. Thank you. "

Re: where are we going?

I like these conversations and find them very useful and greatly respect

these opinions. I have had great success partnering via independent

contracts with physicians on my own behalf and that of my members. We have

completed over 80 such transactions. In most every case a therapist was

approached by a physician wanting to employ them. After the physician

recovered from the " ABSOLUTELY NOT " response, they embraced the idea that

they could have these great services provided within the therapists existing

clinics thus freeing up space and avoiding the set up costs etc. Your

clinic remains your clinic; you've just added a valuable contract no

different than Blue Cross, Aetna, etc. Our studies indicated that in house

therapy for docs produces just above or below a 10% return, with the better

ones being run without therapists. The greatest blessing of this year is

the APTA/CMS agreement which will eliminate these farce practices.

ly I think if all therapists refuse to ever be employees (I would never

allow that to happen), then contracts and a great deal of respect can be

gained. Our standard to begin talks is 70% for the therapist/clinic and a

risk free 30% for the physician. Instead of the physician having the

hassles and hoping for a 10% return, he/she has a guaranteed return of 30%

and your clinic remains yours. I know what you're thinking: 1) this isn't

legal. It is. I'm not a therapist but a business guy with lots of

experience and the best lawyers money can by. In fact, ALL of our major

contracts put the physician's attorneys with ours and each one has agreed;

2) I can't make it at 70%! Wrong! If you are operating at below 90% of

your capacity these contracts fill the gap quite nicely. Our first small

physician contract produced cash to us of $29,000 during our first quarter

ramp up with added expenses of $300.18. Your fixed expenses are already

paid for so these revenues go to the bottom line. The profit margin on

adding additional staff can make a lot of sense once that threshold is met.

They have a problem and you are the solution. It's that or they do it the

wrong way without you. We currently have eight contracts in place using

multiple facilities and multiple physicians per facility producing around

60-70 new patients per week that we weren't seeing previously. This

activity leads to other new opportunities. For example, a large physician

group is forming a rehab hospital and wants to contract home health and

outpatient to us. It won't open until August but we're seeing their

patients as standard referrals now. For more information please check out

www.mdptpartners.com<http://www.mdptpartners.com/>. It's an informational

website with nothing to buy. In the words of one member/friend, " last year

I thought you were Satan and now this year you've literally saved my

practice of 23 years. You truly do everything in my power to assist the

therapist " . Take care. Doug

Doug Sparks

Advanced Physical Therapy Concepts / APTC

www.aptc.biz<http://www.aptc.biz/>

doug@...

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

some of those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills,

do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in

the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sure sounds like referral for profit to me.

Unethical and illegal in my world

Ron Barbato P.T.

Corporate Director , Rehabilitation

Ephraim McDowell Health

Voice (859 )239-1515

Fax (859 )936-7249

rbarbato@...

" PRIVILEGED AND CONFIDENTIAL: This transmission may contain information that

is privileged, confidential and/or exempt from disclosure under applicable

law. If you are not the intended recipient, then please do not read it and

be aware that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the

information contained herein (including any reliance thereon) is STRICTLY

PROHIBITED. If you received this transmission in error, please immediately

advise me, by reply e-mail, and delete this message and any attachments

without retaining a copy in any form. Thank you. "

Re: where are we going?

I like these conversations and find them very useful and greatly respect

these opinions. I have had great success partnering via independent

contracts with physicians on my own behalf and that of my members. We have

completed over 80 such transactions. In most every case a therapist was

approached by a physician wanting to employ them. After the physician

recovered from the " ABSOLUTELY NOT " response, they embraced the idea that

they could have these great services provided within the therapists existing

clinics thus freeing up space and avoiding the set up costs etc. Your

clinic remains your clinic; you've just added a valuable contract no

different than Blue Cross, Aetna, etc. Our studies indicated that in house

therapy for docs produces just above or below a 10% return, with the better

ones being run without therapists. The greatest blessing of this year is

the APTA/CMS agreement which will eliminate these farce practices.

ly I think if all therapists refuse to ever be employees (I would never

allow that to happen), then contracts and a great deal of respect can be

gained. Our standard to begin talks is 70% for the therapist/clinic and a

risk free 30% for the physician. Instead of the physician having the

hassles and hoping for a 10% return, he/she has a guaranteed return of 30%

and your clinic remains yours. I know what you're thinking: 1) this isn't

legal. It is. I'm not a therapist but a business guy with lots of

experience and the best lawyers money can by. In fact, ALL of our major

contracts put the physician's attorneys with ours and each one has agreed;

2) I can't make it at 70%! Wrong! If you are operating at below 90% of

your capacity these contracts fill the gap quite nicely. Our first small

physician contract produced cash to us of $29,000 during our first quarter

ramp up with added expenses of $300.18. Your fixed expenses are already

paid for so these revenues go to the bottom line. The profit margin on

adding additional staff can make a lot of sense once that threshold is met.

They have a problem and you are the solution. It's that or they do it the

wrong way without you. We currently have eight contracts in place using

multiple facilities and multiple physicians per facility producing around

60-70 new patients per week that we weren't seeing previously. This

activity leads to other new opportunities. For example, a large physician

group is forming a rehab hospital and wants to contract home health and

outpatient to us. It won't open until August but we're seeing their

patients as standard referrals now. For more information please check out

www.mdptpartners.com<http://www.mdptpartners.com/>. It's an informational

website with nothing to buy. In the words of one member/friend, " last year

I thought you were Satan and now this year you've literally saved my

practice of 23 years. You truly do everything in my power to assist the

therapist " . Take care. Doug

Doug Sparks

Advanced Physical Therapy Concepts / APTC

www.aptc.biz<http://www.aptc.biz/>

doug@...

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

some of those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating everything

and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can combat

the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if we

will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the bills,

do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the customers

we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years in

the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit www.InHomeRehab.com<http://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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The oft heard pronouncement that one thing or another is legal because " my

lawyer(s) said it was " needs some serious scrutiny. Lawyers are not, as many

would have us believe, the ultimate arbiters of legality. If it were so you

would never see two lawyers in a courtroom arguing opposite sides of a case.

When such questions arise, usually one's ethics lobe takes over and gives

clear enough direction. If not, the self-preservation instinct should warn

against skirting the edges. Driving on the the yellow line invites disaster

(often involving someone doing the same thing in the opposite direction!).

Dave Milano, Director of Rehab Services

Laurel Health System

32-36 Central Ave.

Wellsboro, PA 16901

dmilano@...

Re: where are we going?

Hi Ken and happy holidays. As 100% of the collections belong to the

physician, the 70% they pay to the therapist/therapy company is the

contracted expense of service. Discount for volume and exclusivity (where

relevant) is another common business description. It's based on, and not

owed until collection to account for denials or nonpayment/adjustments for

other reasons beyond their immediate control. The physicians have a choice

to provide the space, staff, equipment, etc., or contract to have those

services provided. I've seen other percentages based on depth of services

offered such as billing and inclusion of other physicians into a new

" group " . Continuity of care and communication makes the process require

teamwork which results in better service.

Once again, the therapist can get in the path of progress, or not, as the

physicians will continue to exclude them if options aren't presented.

People continue to rightfully complain about these arrangements that they

see going on around them, and wondering how it can happen and what they can

do. Though I have heard some very good suggestions that I too will

implement, this is the " mystery " that's causing the frustration. The real

downside of not participating is being shut out from any future referrals.

I've had several therapists tell me that 1-3 of their main referring

physicians are bringing therapy inside and that it will likely put them out

of business. That scares them and me. Thanks for your input and have a

great evening. Doug

Re: where are we going?

Our main focus in my private practice of 7 PT's and 3 OT's 2 of which

are

CHT(the only CHT's in our area, is to offer Injury Management to our

area

Employers. We provide all the services to the employer and use the

doctors we

prefer(even the ones with their own therapists) and the agreement with

some of those

same doctors who have their own therapists, is that if we bring them the

employer for their services we will be the rehab provider, not them. It

is

working

quite well. Now, this concept takes much time in coordinating

everything

and

staying on top of all the details, but this is the only way we can

combat

the

therapists working for physicians. The other thing we are finding is

that

the physicians who have their own therapists ,after about 2 years find

that they

are not making as much as they thought and the overhead, staffing,

turnover,

billing/collecting/denial issues are much more than they imagined. They

are

now approaching us to discuss either stopping the therapy or asking if

we

will

consider managing it. We also find that the employers, who pay the

bills,

do

not really like the idea of the physician having their own therapist

because

the length of time in therapy increases and overutilizing therapy is a

concern.

We decided many years ago that our community employers are the

customers

we

want to market to. I also will be ther first to say even after 28 years

in

the

Rehab business, I have never worked harder to stay ahead of the game and

this

not a fun time and I only hope that the times will improve.

Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS

Occupational Therapist

Certified Vocational Evaluator

Certified Ergonomic Assessment Specialist

Chief Executive Officer

WORK & REHAB

4546 South 14th

Abilene, Texas 79605

-phone

-fax

email:bubklo@...

Looking to start your own Practice?

Visit

www.InHomeRehab.com<http://www.inhomerehab.com/<http://www.inhomerehab.com<h

ttp://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!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The problem with what you are doing is not that the patient care is good oro

whether or not the PTs are happy with it...from the prospective of making PT

an autonomous, direct access profession, you are hurting that cause. PTs in

the days of yor made a grave mistake by not protecting their terms and

practices and people like you are now able to take advantage of that.

Connolly, PT

Co-Owner

PT Plus of Oak Creek

Re: where are we going?

>

>

>

>

> In defense of Doug, he is speaking from a " Wall Street Perspective "

which

> is make money and make a lot of it. I guess my point is he does not

have the

> ownership of the profession as we do, therefore it is/may be hard for

him to

> understand our passion and desire to be seen as a professional and

autonomous

> practitioner and fight these battles instead of continuously giving in

to

> gain a piece of the pie ($$$). Doug you say " It's that or they do it

the

> wrong way without you " , I don't see it that way, I see it as they are

doing our

> profession and the public an injustice and if we continue to stand for

it, it

> will go exactly the direction that you are heading things. I

personally do

> not like that direction and this is why I choose to give $$ to the APTA

and

> the PAC to continue to gain the professional autonomy and respect that

we

> deserve.

>

> I personally feel, as do many of the others on this list serve, that the

> profession belongs to us as PT's and we have to continue to fight and

move

> forward or we will most certainly head in the direction that you are

referring to

> and as you do business. I harbor no ill feelings toward you or any

other

> layperson who decides to open rehab agencies as a non-PT owner, but I

will

> continue to fight to put ownership in the hands of PT's across the

country. Might

> be a pipe dream or an idealist point of view, but it is my dream that

> someday it will happen.

>

> Respectfully,

>

> Ric Baird, MS, PT, ATC

> Interactive Physical Therapy & Fitness

> 4745 NW Hunters Ridge Circle

> Suite D

> Topeka, KS 66618

> (W)

> (F)

> Ric@...

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I agree. We must all stick together. Get to your representatives and

inform them. Those kinds of situations are exactly why we get our

collective butts kicked by huge chains, hospital systems and POPTS.

Connolly, PT

Co-Owner

PT Plus of Oak Creek

Re: where are we going?

>

>

> In defense of Doug, he is speaking from a " Wall Street Perspective "

which

> is make money and make a lot of it. I guess my point is he does not have

the

> ownership of the profession as we do, therefore it is/may be hard for him

to

> understand our passion and desire to be seen as a professional and

autonomous

> practitioner and fight these battles instead of continuously giving in to

> gain a piece of the pie ($$$). Doug you say " It's that or they do it

the

> wrong way without you " , I don't see it that way, I see it as they are

doing our

> profession and the public an injustice and if we continue to stand for

it, it

> will go exactly the direction that you are heading things. I personally

do

> not like that direction and this is why I choose to give $$ to the APTA

and

> the PAC to continue to gain the professional autonomy and respect that we

> deserve.

>

> I personally feel, as do many of the others on this list serve, that the

> profession belongs to us as PT's and we have to continue to fight and move

> forward or we will most certainly head in the direction that you are

referring to

> and as you do business. I harbor no ill feelings toward you or any other

> layperson who decides to open rehab agencies as a non-PT owner, but I will

> continue to fight to put ownership in the hands of PT's across the

country. Might

> be a pipe dream or an idealist point of view, but it is my dream that

> someday it will happen.

>

> Respectfully,

>

> Ric Baird, MS, PT, ATC

> Interactive Physical Therapy & Fitness

> 4745 NW Hunters Ridge Circle

> Suite D

> Topeka, KS 66618

> (W)

> (F)

> Ric@...

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see this as an ethical-legal thing. I would suggest that it is EASIER for a

PT owned practice to cheat the rules and impose unethical behaviors on the

business because they are insiders to the process.

As a business owner, I am blessed to provide a place where PT's can worry about

patient care and not the concerns of running the business, which has become so

consuming that it's all I do all day, from marketing, to expansion, to

coordination of clinics and departments. The staff we have seems so happy to

work in a clinic that is so low stress for them in terms of many of the PT owned

places that pushed productivity harder and forced modalities on everyone, etc...

To say that I am hurting the cause of PT's to become an autonomous, direct

access profession is ridiculous to me. I am all for giving the PT's the credit

and respect they deserve. I don't look at it as emotionally as you guys, but I

for sure see the logic and merits of it. We can all be advocates for the

profession regardless of our backgrounds. Judge me on my ethics and not my

credentials-or lack thereof. There will always be the Scrushys out there, he

just happened to be a guy who grew his company into a monster and then got got

caught cheating the system. I'll bet you for every non-PT owned company that is

indicted for unethical behavior there are 10 that are PT owned that get

indicted. So what.

It is irrelevant really. The bottom line is that people from both sides can be

unethical or ethical, follow the rules or break them. As well, we can all work

together to advance the profession and make it more well respected, but to fight

the battle against people who aren't PT's and to say they shouldn't own

clinics...sounds like you are taking your eyes off of the real agenda to fight a

battle on the front of your own egos to me.

I may be way off base, but I'm feeling attacked here from a guy who knows

nothing about me and is basing everything about my company on the initials after

my name??

Sac Spine & PT

Re: where are we going?

>

>

>

>

> In defense of Doug, he is speaking from a " Wall Street Perspective "

which

> is make money and make a lot of it. I guess my point is he does not

have the

> ownership of the profession as we do, therefore it is/may be hard for

him to

> understand our passion and desire to be seen as a professional and

autonomous

> practitioner and fight these battles instead of continuously giving in

to

> gain a piece of the pie ($$$). Doug you say " It's that or they do it

the

> wrong way without you " , I don't see it that way, I see it as they are

doing our

> profession and the public an injustice and if we continue to stand for

it, it

> will go exactly the direction that you are heading things. I

personally do

> not like that direction and this is why I choose to give $$ to the APTA

and

> the PAC to continue to gain the professional autonomy and respect that

we

> deserve.

>

> I personally feel, as do many of the others on this list serve, that the

> profession belongs to us as PT's and we have to continue to fight and

move

> forward or we will most certainly head in the direction that you are

referring to

> and as you do business. I harbor no ill feelings toward you or any

other

> layperson who decides to open rehab agencies as a non-PT owner, but I

will

> continue to fight to put ownership in the hands of PT's across the

country. Might

> be a pipe dream or an idealist point of view, but it is my dream that

> someday it will happen.

>

> Respectfully,

>

> Ric Baird, MS, PT, ATC

> Interactive Physical Therapy & Fitness

> 4745 NW Hunters Ridge Circle

> Suite D

> Topeka, KS 66618

> (W)

> (F)

>

Ric@...<mailto:Ric@...<mailto:Ric@...<\

mailto:Ric@...>>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see this as an ethical-legal thing. I would suggest that it is EASIER for a

PT owned practice to cheat the rules and impose unethical behaviors on the

business because they are insiders to the process.

As a business owner, I am blessed to provide a place where PT's can worry about

patient care and not the concerns of running the business, which has become so

consuming that it's all I do all day, from marketing, to expansion, to

coordination of clinics and departments. The staff we have seems so happy to

work in a clinic that is so low stress for them in terms of many of the PT owned

places that pushed productivity harder and forced modalities on everyone, etc...

To say that I am hurting the cause of PT's to become an autonomous, direct

access profession is ridiculous to me. I am all for giving the PT's the credit

and respect they deserve. I don't look at it as emotionally as you guys, but I

for sure see the logic and merits of it. We can all be advocates for the

profession regardless of our backgrounds. Judge me on my ethics and not my

credentials-or lack thereof. There will always be the Scrushys out there, he

just happened to be a guy who grew his company into a monster and then got got

caught cheating the system. I'll bet you for every non-PT owned company that is

indicted for unethical behavior there are 10 that are PT owned that get

indicted. So what.

It is irrelevant really. The bottom line is that people from both sides can be

unethical or ethical, follow the rules or break them. As well, we can all work

together to advance the profession and make it more well respected, but to fight

the battle against people who aren't PT's and to say they shouldn't own

clinics...sounds like you are taking your eyes off of the real agenda to fight a

battle on the front of your own egos to me.

I may be way off base, but I'm feeling attacked here from a guy who knows

nothing about me and is basing everything about my company on the initials after

my name??

Sac Spine & PT

Re: where are we going?

>

>

>

>

> In defense of Doug, he is speaking from a " Wall Street Perspective "

which

> is make money and make a lot of it. I guess my point is he does not

have the

> ownership of the profession as we do, therefore it is/may be hard for

him to

> understand our passion and desire to be seen as a professional and

autonomous

> practitioner and fight these battles instead of continuously giving in

to

> gain a piece of the pie ($$$). Doug you say " It's that or they do it

the

> wrong way without you " , I don't see it that way, I see it as they are

doing our

> profession and the public an injustice and if we continue to stand for

it, it

> will go exactly the direction that you are heading things. I

personally do

> not like that direction and this is why I choose to give $$ to the APTA

and

> the PAC to continue to gain the professional autonomy and respect that

we

> deserve.

>

> I personally feel, as do many of the others on this list serve, that the

> profession belongs to us as PT's and we have to continue to fight and

move

> forward or we will most certainly head in the direction that you are

referring to

> and as you do business. I harbor no ill feelings toward you or any

other

> layperson who decides to open rehab agencies as a non-PT owner, but I

will

> continue to fight to put ownership in the hands of PT's across the

country. Might

> be a pipe dream or an idealist point of view, but it is my dream that

> someday it will happen.

>

> Respectfully,

>

> Ric Baird, MS, PT, ATC

> Interactive Physical Therapy & Fitness

> 4745 NW Hunters Ridge Circle

> Suite D

> Topeka, KS 66618

> (W)

> (F)

>

Ric@...<mailto:Ric@...<mailto:Ric@...<\

mailto:Ric@...>>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

You are missing the point. I am not talking about ethics. I am talking

about PTs in autonomous practice and how non-PT owners are hurting the move

toward that. Not attacking you...attacking the concept. Did not mean to

offend. As a non-PT how could you or would you understand? I am glad your

staff is happy and I am glad you do not pressure them into performance goals

that hurt morale, ethics, and customer service. You are an exception to the

rule. My point is that non-PT ownership of a future autonomous profession

will set it back.

Re: where are we going?

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > In defense of Doug, he is speaking from a " Wall Street Perspective "

> which

> > is make money and make a lot of it. I guess my point is he does not

> have the

> > ownership of the profession as we do, therefore it is/may be hard

for

> him to

> > understand our passion and desire to be seen as a professional and

> autonomous

> > practitioner and fight these battles instead of continuously giving

in

> to

> > gain a piece of the pie ($$$). Doug you say " It's that or they do

it

> the

> > wrong way without you " , I don't see it that way, I see it as they

are

> doing our

> > profession and the public an injustice and if we continue to stand

for

> it, it

> > will go exactly the direction that you are heading things. I

> personally do

> > not like that direction and this is why I choose to give $$ to the

APTA

> and

> > the PAC to continue to gain the professional autonomy and respect

that

> we

> > deserve.

> >

> > I personally feel, as do many of the others on this list serve, that

the

> > profession belongs to us as PT's and we have to continue to fight

and

> move

> > forward or we will most certainly head in the direction that you are

> referring to

> > and as you do business. I harbor no ill feelings toward you or any

> other

> > layperson who decides to open rehab agencies as a non-PT owner, but

I

> will

> > continue to fight to put ownership in the hands of PT's across the

> country. Might

> > be a pipe dream or an idealist point of view, but it is my dream

that

> > someday it will happen.

> >

> > Respectfully,

> >

> > Ric Baird, MS, PT, ATC

> > Interactive Physical Therapy & Fitness

> > 4745 NW Hunters Ridge Circle

> > Suite D

> > Topeka, KS 66618

> > (W)

> > (F)

> >

Ric@...<mailto:Ric@...<mailto:Ric@....

com>

> >

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

You are missing the point. I am not talking about ethics. I am talking

about PTs in autonomous practice and how non-PT owners are hurting the move

toward that. Not attacking you...attacking the concept. Did not mean to

offend. As a non-PT how could you or would you understand? I am glad your

staff is happy and I am glad you do not pressure them into performance goals

that hurt morale, ethics, and customer service. You are an exception to the

rule. My point is that non-PT ownership of a future autonomous profession

will set it back.

Re: where are we going?

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > In defense of Doug, he is speaking from a " Wall Street Perspective "

> which

> > is make money and make a lot of it. I guess my point is he does not

> have the

> > ownership of the profession as we do, therefore it is/may be hard

for

> him to

> > understand our passion and desire to be seen as a professional and

> autonomous

> > practitioner and fight these battles instead of continuously giving

in

> to

> > gain a piece of the pie ($$$). Doug you say " It's that or they do

it

> the

> > wrong way without you " , I don't see it that way, I see it as they

are

> doing our

> > profession and the public an injustice and if we continue to stand

for

> it, it

> > will go exactly the direction that you are heading things. I

> personally do

> > not like that direction and this is why I choose to give $$ to the

APTA

> and

> > the PAC to continue to gain the professional autonomy and respect

that

> we

> > deserve.

> >

> > I personally feel, as do many of the others on this list serve, that

the

> > profession belongs to us as PT's and we have to continue to fight

and

> move

> > forward or we will most certainly head in the direction that you are

> referring to

> > and as you do business. I harbor no ill feelings toward you or any

> other

> > layperson who decides to open rehab agencies as a non-PT owner, but

I

> will

> > continue to fight to put ownership in the hands of PT's across the

> country. Might

> > be a pipe dream or an idealist point of view, but it is my dream

that

> > someday it will happen.

> >

> > Respectfully,

> >

> > Ric Baird, MS, PT, ATC

> > Interactive Physical Therapy & Fitness

> > 4745 NW Hunters Ridge Circle

> > Suite D

> > Topeka, KS 66618

> > (W)

> > (F)

> >

Ric@...<mailto:Ric@...<mailto:Ric@....

com>

> >

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

You are missing the point. I am not talking about ethics. I am talking

about PTs in autonomous practice and how non-PT owners are hurting the move

toward that. Not attacking you...attacking the concept. Did not mean to

offend. As a non-PT how could you or would you understand? I am glad your

staff is happy and I am glad you do not pressure them into performance goals

that hurt morale, ethics, and customer service. You are an exception to the

rule. My point is that non-PT ownership of a future autonomous profession

will set it back.

Re: where are we going?

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > In defense of Doug, he is speaking from a " Wall Street Perspective "

> which

> > is make money and make a lot of it. I guess my point is he does not

> have the

> > ownership of the profession as we do, therefore it is/may be hard

for

> him to

> > understand our passion and desire to be seen as a professional and

> autonomous

> > practitioner and fight these battles instead of continuously giving

in

> to

> > gain a piece of the pie ($$$). Doug you say " It's that or they do

it

> the

> > wrong way without you " , I don't see it that way, I see it as they

are

> doing our

> > profession and the public an injustice and if we continue to stand

for

> it, it

> > will go exactly the direction that you are heading things. I

> personally do

> > not like that direction and this is why I choose to give $$ to the

APTA

> and

> > the PAC to continue to gain the professional autonomy and respect

that

> we

> > deserve.

> >

> > I personally feel, as do many of the others on this list serve, that

the

> > profession belongs to us as PT's and we have to continue to fight

and

> move

> > forward or we will most certainly head in the direction that you are

> referring to

> > and as you do business. I harbor no ill feelings toward you or any

> other

> > layperson who decides to open rehab agencies as a non-PT owner, but

I

> will

> > continue to fight to put ownership in the hands of PT's across the

> country. Might

> > be a pipe dream or an idealist point of view, but it is my dream

that

> > someday it will happen.

> >

> > Respectfully,

> >

> > Ric Baird, MS, PT, ATC

> > Interactive Physical Therapy & Fitness

> > 4745 NW Hunters Ridge Circle

> > Suite D

> > Topeka, KS 66618

> > (W)

> > (F)

> >

Ric@...<mailto:Ric@...<mailto:Ric@....

com>

> >

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

I'm not attacking non PT owned clinics. I apologize if it came

across as such. I don't think I'm " morally superior " for having a PT

education. I'm just recalling a corporation that prides themself on

unethical behavior that just happens to be run by non PT's. Next

time you want to cast the ethical or moral stone, watch where you

cast it. It's not about moral superiority but in what is best for

the patient. Non-PT's and PT's can exist on the same level and

neither thinks they are morally superior. The only difference is

that PT's, OT's, and ST's keep the patient in mind first and

business second, whereas non-therapists keep in mind business first

and the individual second. Personally, I would be curious as to what

your background (and other PT's involved in rehab ownership) is in

rehabilitation.

Professionally,

Mike Connors, MPT

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just because an owner is not a therapist doesn't mean that the business and

the related industry is going to hell in a handbasket. The converse is also

true, Therapist ownership does not guaranty that the business is going to be run

perfectly. As many know, I am a CPA. In my industry, CPA's have

historically owned Accounting Practices. That did not prevent Arthur Andersen

CPA owners

from shredding documents and committing massive fraud in the Enron deal.

I will say this however-the operations of a therapy business ought to be run

by a therapist. The vision of a therapy company (which is usually provided by

a CEO) ought to come from a therapist. But in a lot of cases, the financial

direction of the therapy company should be handled by someone other than a

therapist. And since the CFO of any organization is a valuable person, it might

be prudent to include them as a part of the ownership of the business.

One other point, CEO, COO and CFO's conjure up an image of big business. If

you look inside of any organization, these positions are there in some form.

In most therapy owned clinics, these titles don't exist. But the function is

still there. The question then becomes, do I need some of these functions

handled internally or, can they be handled in some other fashion. Many

successful therapy companies wind up growing and eventually need these functions

formalized. Without this, they stagnate or get out of control. I guess my

point in

all of this rambling is that someone is always going to dream the Healthsouth

dream and build a bigger company. As this growth occurs, it might take a

little more vision than a core group of therapist owners. I run a billing

service. At some point as we grow, I envision adding a non financial person to

my

business because my vision is limited. I would absolutely hate to have my

company limited by my abilities. In order to grow, serve and be a better

steward

of our resources, I think I will be bringing on people of backgrounds

different from my own in order to better serve my client's needs. That might

mean

bringing on a therapist. Because my company is financial in nature, I could

exclude someone else from ownership because they are " not of the same

background "

as I am. If I were to do this, I think I would be indirectly telling this

person that they are not worthy in my eyes.

Sorry if this post is offensive to some. I do want to say that this list

serve has been an incredible source of information, inspiration and emotional

support for me over the 7 years that K. has made it available. As we head

into 2005, I wish each and every one of you a great New Year and God's richest

blessings on you and your family!

Jim Hall, CPA <///><

General Manager

Rehab Management Services, LLC

Cedar Rapids, IA

319/447-5625

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just because an owner is not a therapist doesn't mean that the business and

the related industry is going to hell in a handbasket. The converse is also

true, Therapist ownership does not guaranty that the business is going to be run

perfectly. As many know, I am a CPA. In my industry, CPA's have

historically owned Accounting Practices. That did not prevent Arthur Andersen

CPA owners

from shredding documents and committing massive fraud in the Enron deal.

I will say this however-the operations of a therapy business ought to be run

by a therapist. The vision of a therapy company (which is usually provided by

a CEO) ought to come from a therapist. But in a lot of cases, the financial

direction of the therapy company should be handled by someone other than a

therapist. And since the CFO of any organization is a valuable person, it might

be prudent to include them as a part of the ownership of the business.

One other point, CEO, COO and CFO's conjure up an image of big business. If

you look inside of any organization, these positions are there in some form.

In most therapy owned clinics, these titles don't exist. But the function is

still there. The question then becomes, do I need some of these functions

handled internally or, can they be handled in some other fashion. Many

successful therapy companies wind up growing and eventually need these functions

formalized. Without this, they stagnate or get out of control. I guess my

point in

all of this rambling is that someone is always going to dream the Healthsouth

dream and build a bigger company. As this growth occurs, it might take a

little more vision than a core group of therapist owners. I run a billing

service. At some point as we grow, I envision adding a non financial person to

my

business because my vision is limited. I would absolutely hate to have my

company limited by my abilities. In order to grow, serve and be a better

steward

of our resources, I think I will be bringing on people of backgrounds

different from my own in order to better serve my client's needs. That might

mean

bringing on a therapist. Because my company is financial in nature, I could

exclude someone else from ownership because they are " not of the same

background "

as I am. If I were to do this, I think I would be indirectly telling this

person that they are not worthy in my eyes.

Sorry if this post is offensive to some. I do want to say that this list

serve has been an incredible source of information, inspiration and emotional

support for me over the 7 years that K. has made it available. As we head

into 2005, I wish each and every one of you a great New Year and God's richest

blessings on you and your family!

Jim Hall, CPA <///><

General Manager

Rehab Management Services, LLC

Cedar Rapids, IA

319/447-5625

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...