Guest guest Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 possibly incorporate a screen with a check off of self care and other tasks and if there are not any needs then an eval is not necessary. It would be quick, less expensive and there would be documentation in place that these things were addressed and not needed. Bubba Klostermann OT, CVE, CEAS CEO, WORK & REHAB 4546 South 14 th Abilene, Texas 79605 phone: fax: email: bubklo@... This e-mail and any files transmitted with it are the property of WORK & REHAB, are confidential, and are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom this e-mail is addressed. If you are not one of the named recipient(s) or otherwise have reason to believe that you have received this message in error, please notify the sender and delete this message immediately from your computer. Any other use, retention, dissemination, forwarding, printing, or copying of this e-mail is strictly prohibited. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 Ty, Our hospital only covers weekends with PT services and SLP services when a pt. is NPO and in need of a swallow study. PT's are regularly scheduled and SLP's are " on-call " . We do not provide any weekend coverage for OT at all and this works fine from both patient and physician standpoint. Hope this helps. Chad Chad W. Yoakam, MS, PT Manager of Rehabilitation Services Livingston HealthCare Orthopedic and Rehabilitation Institute ________________________________ From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf Of Tyler Sent: Monday, December 11, 2006 11:07 PM To: PTManager Subject: Acute Care Occupational Therapy On Weekends? A little background: * 160 bed Acute Care hospital with one full-time and one on-call OT on the weekdays, and one on-call OT on the weekends. * When ordering therapies, most of our physicians write " PT/OT Evaluate and Treat " . The implication is that, perhaps, there is an overutilization of overall therapy services - weekends notwithstanding. * Over the last year or so, our " on call " OT's have always been called in on the weekends, especially if there are new Evals. * Some are questioning the value(good or bad) to our patients, hospital, and staff of calling in the OT's on the weekends - especially if another clinician (such as a PT) determines that the OT Eval order can wait until the weekday. This post is to ask what other facilities are doing relative to OT coverage on the weekends. You can see some of the above considerations involved. Thank you! Ty Keeter DPT, MHA Providence Health & Services Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2006 Report Share Posted December 13, 2006 Ty, We do the same at our facility. In our policy, we have a 48-72 hour window (there is also a gero-pysch unit at our facility) to address OT evaluations which we are usually able to meet without OT coverage on the weekends. Thanks! DiMarino, PT Operations Coordinator Lake Hospital System-LakeWest ________________________________ From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf Of Chad Yoakam Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2006 6:50 PM To: PTManager Subject: RE: Acute Care Occupational Therapy On Weekends? Ty, Our hospital only covers weekends with PT services and SLP services when a pt. is NPO and in need of a swallow study. PT's are regularly scheduled and SLP's are " on-call " . We do not provide any weekend coverage for OT at all and this works fine from both patient and physician standpoint. Hope this helps. Chad Chad W. Yoakam, MS, PT Manager of Rehabilitation Services Livingston HealthCare Orthopedic and Rehabilitation Institute ________________________________ From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> [mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> ] On Behalf Of Tyler Sent: Monday, December 11, 2006 11:07 PM To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> Subject: Acute Care Occupational Therapy On Weekends? A little background: * 160 bed Acute Care hospital with one full-time and one on-call OT on the weekdays, and one on-call OT on the weekends. * When ordering therapies, most of our physicians write " PT/OT Evaluate and Treat " . The implication is that, perhaps, there is an overutilization of overall therapy services - weekends notwithstanding. * Over the last year or so, our " on call " OT's have always been called in on the weekends, especially if there are new Evals. * Some are questioning the value(good or bad) to our patients, hospital, and staff of calling in the OT's on the weekends - especially if another clinician (such as a PT) determines that the OT Eval order can wait until the weekday. This post is to ask what other facilities are doing relative to OT coverage on the weekends. You can see some of the above considerations involved. Thank you! Ty Keeter DPT, MHA Providence Health & Services Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2006 Report Share Posted December 13, 2006 Ty and Chad, Our hospital staffs OT's in the same manner as PT's on the weekend except that there is no " OT on-call " on Sunday, as there is for PT. It has worked well for us and for the pt's, ensuring that the full spectrum of needs have been addressed prior to d/c. Furthermore, we are better able to iron out any kind of d/c considerations that may be appropriate from a self-care standpoint. Thanks, Curtis >>> chad.yoakam@... 12/12/06 05:50PM >>> Ty, Our hospital only covers weekends with PT services and SLP services when a pt. is NPO and in need of a swallow study. PT's are regularly scheduled and SLP's are " on-call " . We do not provide any weekend coverage for OT at all and this works fine from both patient and physician standpoint. Hope this helps. Chad Chad W. Yoakam, MS, PT Manager of Rehabilitation Services Livingston HealthCare Orthopedic and Rehabilitation Institute ________________________________ From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf Of Tyler Sent: Monday, December 11, 2006 11:07 PM To: PTManager Subject: Acute Care Occupational Therapy On Weekends? A little background: * 160 bed Acute Care hospital with one full-time and one on-call OT on the weekdays, and one on-call OT on the weekends. * When ordering therapies, most of our physicians write " PT/OT Evaluate and Treat " . The implication is that, perhaps, there is an overutilization of overall therapy services - weekends notwithstanding. * Over the last year or so, our " on call " OT's have always been called in on the weekends, especially if there are new Evals. * Some are questioning the value(good or bad) to our patients, hospital, and staff of calling in the OT's on the weekends - especially if another clinician (such as a PT) determines that the OT Eval order can wait until the weekday. This post is to ask what other facilities are doing relative to OT coverage on the weekends. You can see some of the above considerations involved. Thank you! Ty Keeter DPT, MHA Providence Health & Services Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2006 Report Share Posted December 16, 2006 HI Chad, I was wondering, how do you justify this to JCAHO? Meaning, how do you justify that you are not providing different levels of care to OT patients based off the day of the week? I have a feeling that this situation of not having coverage on the weekend will become more commonplace with the staffing shortages most of the country is starting to see. Thanks, Jill Piazza Florida Hospital DeLand Acute Care Occupational Therapy On Weekends? A little background: * 160 bed Acute Care hospital with one full-time and one on-call OT on the weekdays, and one on-call OT on the weekends. * When ordering therapies, most of our physicians write " PT/OT Evaluate and Treat " . The implication is that, perhaps, there is an overutilization of overall therapy services - weekends notwithstanding. * Over the last year or so, our " on call " OT's have always been called in on the weekends, especially if there are new Evals. * Some are questioning the value(good or bad) to our patients, hospital, and staff of calling in the OT's on the weekends - especially if another clinician (such as a PT) determines that the OT Eval order can wait until the weekday. This post is to ask what other facilities are doing relative to OT coverage on the weekends. You can see some of the above considerations involved. Thank you! Ty Keeter DPT, MHA Providence Health & Services Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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