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This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

**************Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-duffy/

2050827?NCID=aolcmp00300000002598)

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Share on other sites

,

You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the choir.

The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups and

present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the " unfortunate

patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know the

truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their bottom

line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control referrals to

make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met with the

Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in mind, the

Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians and bean

counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should consider

refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office due to

the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data collected by

BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data suggested

that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and consisted, on

average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction and

functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients were

better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were shocked.

But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the patients

who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the shortest

anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated, troublesome

patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The RFPs

operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen three

times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than 3 weeks.

Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise is the

preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients since

the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny is high.

It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance companies

and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs show

very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function is to

protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no idea who

their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their state

legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage of PT

talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to another,

simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more money,

they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession, don't

stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it what it

is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has been

suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our will to

fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet most PTs

do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt a

mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the public. And

we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash basis so

that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with physicians,

Medicare and insurance companies.

Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

President, ArPTA

_____

From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf

Of PATowne@...

Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

To: PTManager

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--

campos-duffy/

2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

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:

I am not sure your reply is to my original copy and paste from from the Ortho's

journal, but it sounds like it is.

I just wanted to tell you, in case it was not obvious, that I am, obviously,

with you on this one!

As a matter of fact, unless you work for a POPT, you all should be thinking like

that, pretty much.

The main point, however, to me, in their text, was the sense of " defeat " in

their words when they say the APTA is putting most of its resources behind

fighting it, while them (orthos and AMA presumably) have to worry about other

equally important issues, therefore passing the idea that, perhaps, eventually,

we (PTs) will get this corrected (to our terms).

This message and any of its attachments is private and confidential and intended

solely for the recipient(s) named above.

It may contain Protected Health Information (PHI), which is protected by State

and Federal Law. If you received this message in error,

please contact the sender immediately for remedial measures. If you accept

this message you agree to store it in a safe, protected and confidential

manner, according to HIPAA standards.

Armin Loges, P.T.

Tampa, FL

armin@...

www.restoretherapies.com

Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

**************Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-duffy/

2050827?NCID=aolcmp00300000002598)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rob, you are 100% right on the POPTS issue, but I must jump in here to

correct something that is often repeated incorrectly in many POPTS

discussions:

You stated:

" RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession, don't

stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

what it

is, we will all be working for doctors one day. "

POPTS or RFP is definitely wrong on many fronts (access, patient choice,

conflict of interest, financial harm/uneven playing field, etc.), but we

as a profession, should stop stating or inferring that PT's who work in

such a setting are practicing unethically. That is simply not true and

only serves to foster misunderstanding.

Look at all the APTA published documents on this issue, and you will be

hard-pressed to find such a statement. At worst, we can state, along

with the AMA, that the potential for unethical behavior exists to a

greater degree because of the avoidable conflict of interest.

We need a unified message in order to eliminate POPTS - and we don't

have it yet- even amongst the elite in our field.

As a group, lets continue to focus on killing this 30+ year malady

callled POPTS by unifying our message based on these other reasons

listed above from APTA documents(2005 white paper), and not broad-based

misdirected attacks on ethics.

Walsh, MS, PT, OCS

Georgia delegate

> ,

>

> You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the

choir.

> The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups and

> present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the

" unfortunate

> patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know

the

> truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their

bottom

> line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control

referrals to

> make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met

with the

> Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in

mind, the

> Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians and

bean

> counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should

consider

> refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office

due to

> the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

> Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data collected

by

> BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data

suggested

> that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and

consisted, on

> average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction

and

> functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients were

> better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were

shocked.

> But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

> controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the

patients

> who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the

shortest

> anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated,

troublesome

> patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The RFPs

> operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen

three

> times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than 3

weeks.

> Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise is

the

> preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients

since

> the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny is

high.

>

> It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

> evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance

companies

> and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs

show

> very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

> lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

> Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function is

to

> protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no idea

who

> their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their state

> legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage

of PT

> talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to

another,

> simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more

money,

> they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

>

> RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

> unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession,

don't

> stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

what it

> is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has

been

> suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our

will to

> fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet most

PTs

> do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt

a

> mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the

public. And

> we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash

basis so

> that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with

physicians,

> Medicare and insurance companies.

>

> Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

> President, ArPTA

>

> _____

>

> From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On

Behalf

> Of PATowne@...

> Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

> To: PTManager

> Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

>

>

> This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

is

> evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

miserably by

> 78%

> and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

> legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and

charge

> as

> physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

should not

> be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

patients

> that

> they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

>

> Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

were

> basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any

real

> direction.

>

> I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns

and

> comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

Let's get

>

> the real facts on the table.

>

> A. Towne, PT

>

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Guest guest

,

Point taken, but I respectfully disagree. While we could spend days

debating the " ethics " of POPTS (referral for profit) and the therapists who

work in them, the fact is this: the therapists who work in these situations

went to school to become therapists. They sat for a national exam to become

therapists. They became state licensed to practice as physical therapists.

In doing so they voluntarily joined the profession of physical therapy.

Referral for profit is inherently wrong. That is why it is illegal for a

physician to own a pharmacy or a durable medical equipment company. It is

wrong. Referral for profit is the single biggest threat to our profession

since the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. The therapists who choose to work in

these settings are willing participants in activities that stand to

jeopardize the future of our entire profession. They have chosen to ally

themselves with the enemy. Currently, there are 10,000 vacant jobs for PTs

in the United States. Why, then, would a therapist need to " sleep with the

enemy? " It is a choice. APTA has refrained from branding these therapists

as unethical because APTA is a membership organization. It cannot

selectively make such an assertion. You are absolutely correct in your

statements that we need a unified message. We have had a unified message

now, for several years. That message has been that " Referral for profit

offers the 'potential' for unethical behavior. " Our message has been that

the therapists who work in them cannot be held responsible for that. They

have simply found themselves in a position of absolute subservience and

suppression by the physicians they work for. Perhaps we could say they are

actually helping our profession by putting therapists out of work by forcing

closure of those annoying private practices, thereby freeing more PTs up to

get honorable jobs in hospitals and nursing homes. I must ask, " how is this

message resonating so far? " The fact is, this message is not working at

all.

The unified message should be that RFP and the therapists who work in them

are unethical and RFP should be illegal in all areas involving referral

relationships where the MD stands to gain financially from making a

referral. If I indicate that a therapist is practicing unethically, does

that necessarily mean that they are performing the actions of a licensed

physical therapist unethically? No, not at all. If you define ethics as

simply relating to the involvement a therapist has with a patient in the

clinic, then you are establishing an ethics " blind spot. " What about if you

look at the bigger picture? These individuals are a part of our profession

and they are participating in a system that is harming the profession to

which they belong. That, to me, is unethical and should be identified as

such. Your argument is that doing so is misdirected because it might hurt

someone's feelings. Well, most of us would agree that selling babies into

slavery is pretty high on the list of unethical things. Your argument is

akin to saying that the fellow who dresses the babies up so they will look

nice on the auction block should not be called unethical because he is doing

a fine job in dressing up those babies. It is only the system that is bad,

not the baby dresser. We should develop a " unified message " against the

system, but for heaven's sake, don't hurt the baby dresser's feelings.

Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

_____

From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf

Of dwcycle

Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 8:02 PM

To: PTManager

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

Rob, you are 100% right on the POPTS issue, but I must jump in here to

correct something that is often repeated incorrectly in many POPTS

discussions:

You stated:

" RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession, don't

stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

what it

is, we will all be working for doctors one day. "

POPTS or RFP is definitely wrong on many fronts (access, patient choice,

conflict of interest, financial harm/uneven playing field, etc.), but we

as a profession, should stop stating or inferring that PT's who work in

such a setting are practicing unethically. That is simply not true and

only serves to foster misunderstanding.

Look at all the APTA published documents on this issue, and you will be

hard-pressed to find such a statement. At worst, we can state, along

with the AMA, that the potential for unethical behavior exists to a

greater degree because of the avoidable conflict of interest.

We need a unified message in order to eliminate POPTS - and we don't

have it yet- even amongst the elite in our field.

As a group, lets continue to focus on killing this 30+ year malady

callled POPTS by unifying our message based on these other reasons

listed above from APTA documents(2005 white paper), and not broad-based

misdirected attacks on ethics.

Walsh, MS, PT, OCS

Georgia delegate

> ,

>

> You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the

choir.

> The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups and

> present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the

" unfortunate

> patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know

the

> truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their

bottom

> line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control

referrals to

> make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met

with the

> Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in

mind, the

> Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians and

bean

> counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should

consider

> refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office

due to

> the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

> Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data collected

by

> BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data

suggested

> that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and

consisted, on

> average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction

and

> functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients were

> better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were

shocked.

> But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

> controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the

patients

> who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the

shortest

> anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated,

troublesome

> patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The RFPs

> operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen

three

> times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than 3

weeks.

> Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise is

the

> preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients

since

> the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny is

high.

>

> It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

> evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance

companies

> and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs

show

> very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

> lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

> Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function is

to

> protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no idea

who

> their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their state

> legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage

of PT

> talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to

another,

> simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more

money,

> they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

>

> RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

> unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession,

don't

> stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

what it

> is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has

been

> suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our

will to

> fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet most

PTs

> do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt

a

> mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the

public. And

> we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash

basis so

> that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with

physicians,

> Medicare and insurance companies.

>

> Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

> President, ArPTA

>

> _____

>

> From: HYPERLINK

" mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com " PTManager@...

[mailto:HYPERLINK

" mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com " PTManager@...] On

Behalf

> Of PATowne@...

> Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

> To: HYPERLINK

" mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com " PTManager@...

> Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

>

>

> This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

is

> evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

miserably by

> 78%

> and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

> legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and

charge

> as

> physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

should not

> be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

patients

> that

> they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

>

> Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

were

> basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any

real

> direction.

>

> I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns

and

> comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

Let's get

>

> the real facts on the table.

>

> A. Towne, PT

>

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

You wrote:

Perhaps we could say they are

actually helping our profession by putting therapists out of work by forcing

closure of those annoying private practices, thereby freeing more PTs up to

get honorable jobs in hospitals and nursing homes. I must ask, " how is this

message resonating so far? " The fact is, this message is not working at

all.

As a facility based practitioner I do not know any practice environment that is

more or less " honorable " than any other, in fact one could say that the honor

brought to a practice environment is the honor brought by the therapist themself

and not the building they work in. I resent your hopefully tongue in cheek

accusation about those colleagues who choose to provide care in facilities. they

provide a vital services to persons in need at that stage of their illness or

post injury recovery.

If we do not stop this type of dialogue and raise it to a level of

professionalism that we all can participate in, POPTS will be the least of our

problems.

Some facts:

1. A POPTS is not considered unethical because by its mere exitance does not

insure that the patient is in any way harmed. If you know where they are harmed,

just like any setting, you should report them. Education is clear integral part

of this issue. But if you have a therapist that doesn't see themselves as a

member of the professional society of physical therapists, then why wold you

think that they would understand what they are doing to the profession? I do not

like POPTS either, but when colleagues who have first hand knowledge of abuse do

not report or encourage their patients to do so because they are afraid of the

loss of a referral source or sources, well your argument becomes a bit hollow.

2. Studies have shown that while POPTS and Corp owned practices are issues in

the market place, so to is the increase in PT owned practices. It is a function

of the marketplace and what it will support in terms of the number of

practitioners in any one area. thats not healthcare, its economics. So what do

we do, stop opening up our own practices? Of course not, but lets realize all

the factors affecting us.

I again ask my colleagues on this and any other list serv to raise the level of

discourse. Dumpng on eachother only shows our lack of understanding of the

bigger picture.

Jim Dunleavy PT, MS

Director, Rehabilitation Services

Trinitas Hospital

, NJ 07207

Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

>

>

> This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

is

> evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

miserably by

> 78%

> and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

> legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and

charge

> as

> physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

should not

> be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

patients

> that

> they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

>

> Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

were

> basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any

real

> direction.

>

> I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns

and

> comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

Let's get

>

> the real facts on the table.

>

> A. Towne, PT

>

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

I have to agree with my esteemed colleague Mr. Dunleavy on the issue of

attempting to characterize the professionalism of any of my colleagues based

solely on choice of practice setting. The characterization that those who

work in institutional settings are somehow less is an absurd argument.

Different practice environments present their own challenges. I've known

many colleagues who are as equally dedicated to their practice within their

respective institution as I am to my private practice and this demands

respect.

I do however take issue with regard to the ethics of practicing in a

referral for profit arrangement. While it can be argued that participating

in this arrangement does not necessarily violate the APTA Code of Ethics it

can be argued that this is not an all encompassing document with regard to

ethics. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines Ethics as follows: " the

discipline dealing with what is good and bad and with moral duty and

obligation " . Based on this broader definition I would argue that the

inherent and well documented potential for abuse posed by referral for

profit and its economic impact on consumers, the lack of incentive of those

profiting from these arrangements as " additional revenue centers " to

re-invest in our profession as argued by McMenamin, PT present serious

challenges to the inherent " obligation " of a professional to act in the best

interest of their patient, their profession and society as whole. With that

in mind I don't see it as a stretch to call into question the ethical

implications of practicing in a referral for profit arrangement.

I am also not completely clear on the Mr. Dunleavy's statement regarding

" harm " . If he is referring to the potential for physical harm, I agree that

there is probably no increased likelihood of physical harm in the referral

for profit environment than any other. However I do see the tremendous and

again well documented potential for economic harm to the patient and society

as a whole and therefore have to disagree with his position on this

particular point.

Thanks Jim for trying to raise the level of discourse. We need to examine

and discuss these issue objectively and based on the facts not just

unsubstantiated assertions and innuendo.

Mark F. Schwall, PT

Future Physical Therapy, PC

1594 Route 9

Unit 2

Toms River, NJ 08755

Fax

Skype mfschwall

President

New Jersey Society of Independent Physical Therapists

2123 Route 35

Sea Girt, NJ 08750

From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf

Of JIMDPT@...

Sent: Sunday, March 02, 2008 11:39 AM

To: PTManager

Subject: Re: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

You wrote:

Perhaps we could say they are

actually helping our profession by putting therapists out of work by forcing

closure of those annoying private practices, thereby freeing more PTs up to

get honorable jobs in hospitals and nursing homes. I must ask, " how is this

message resonating so far? " The fact is, this message is not working at

all.

As a facility based practitioner I do not know any practice environment that

is more or less " honorable " than any other, in fact one could say that the

honor brought to a practice environment is the honor brought by the

therapist themself and not the building they work in. I resent your

hopefully tongue in cheek accusation about those colleagues who choose to

provide care in facilities. they provide a vital services to persons in need

at that stage of their illness or post injury recovery.

If we do not stop this type of dialogue and raise it to a level of

professionalism that we all can participate in, POPTS will be the least of

our problems.

Some facts:

1. A POPTS is not considered unethical because by its mere exitance does not

insure that the patient is in any way harmed. If you know where they are

harmed, just like any setting, you should report them. Education is clear

integral part of this issue. But if you have a therapist that doesn't see

themselves as a member of the professional society of physical therapists,

then why wold you think that they would understand what they are doing to

the profession? I do not like POPTS either, but when colleagues who have

first hand knowledge of abuse do not report or encourage their patients to

do so because they are afraid of the loss of a referral source or sources,

well your argument becomes a bit hollow.

2. Studies have shown that while POPTS and Corp owned practices are issues

in the market place, so to is the increase in PT owned practices. It is a

function of the marketplace and what it will support in terms of the number

of practitioners in any one area. thats not healthcare, its economics. So

what do we do, stop opening up our own practices? Of course not, but lets

realize all the factors affecting us.

I again ask my colleagues on this and any other list serv to raise the level

of discourse. Dumpng on eachother only shows our lack of understanding of

the bigger picture.

Jim Dunleavy PT, MS

Director, Rehabilitation Services

Trinitas Hospital

, NJ 07207

Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

>

>

> This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

is

> evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

miserably by

> 78%

> and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

> legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and

charge

> as

> physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

should not

> be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

patients

> that

> they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

>

> Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

were

> basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any

real

> direction.

>

> I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns

and

> comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

Let's get

>

> the real facts on the table.

>

> A. Towne, PT

>

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Guest guest

On this same line of referral for profit,

should we also not be condemning the HealthSouths, Novacare/Select

Medical, Physiotherapy Associates, etc who are the big profit, push

the numbers, who cares about care, but it's all about the bottom line

companies.

I have worked for a group of orthopedic surgeons in the past. Rehab

was about the money, but it also was about patient care. The 4 of us

who worked for these doc's and out PTA's had complete autonomy of

patient care. Our doc's didn't do patient picking to get the " best

outcomes " ; in fact, in a lot of cases, we got the hard cases because

we were expected to help get these folks better therefore improving

patient satisfaction.

I will never again work as a lackey for anyone, POPT,RFP,big

corporate profitteers, or PTIP who are inappropriately billing.

Lindberg, PT

Louisville, CO

>

> ,

>

> Point taken, but I respectfully disagree. While we could spend days

> debating the " ethics " of POPTS (referral for profit) and the

therapists who

> work in them, the fact is this: the therapists who work in these

situations

> went to school to become therapists. They sat for a national exam

to become

> therapists. They became state licensed to practice as physical

therapists.

> In doing so they voluntarily joined the profession of physical

therapy.

> Referral for profit is inherently wrong. That is why it is illegal

for a

> physician to own a pharmacy or a durable medical equipment

company. It is

> wrong. Referral for profit is the single biggest threat to our

profession

> since the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. The therapists who choose

to work in

> these settings are willing participants in activities that stand to

> jeopardize the future of our entire profession. They have chosen

to ally

> themselves with the enemy. Currently, there are 10,000 vacant jobs

for PTs

> in the United States. Why, then, would a therapist need to " sleep

with the

> enemy? " It is a choice. APTA has refrained from branding these

therapists

> as unethical because APTA is a membership organization. It cannot

> selectively make such an assertion. You are absolutely correct in

your

> statements that we need a unified message. We have had a unified

message

> now, for several years. That message has been that " Referral for

profit

> offers the 'potential' for unethical behavior. " Our message has

been that

> the therapists who work in them cannot be held responsible for

that. They

> have simply found themselves in a position of absolute subservience

and

> suppression by the physicians they work for. Perhaps we could say

they are

> actually helping our profession by putting therapists out of work

by forcing

> closure of those annoying private practices, thereby freeing more

PTs up to

> get honorable jobs in hospitals and nursing homes. I must

ask, " how is this

> message resonating so far? " The fact is, this message is not

working at

> all.

>

> The unified message should be that RFP and the therapists who work

in them

> are unethical and RFP should be illegal in all areas involving

referral

> relationships where the MD stands to gain financially from making a

> referral. If I indicate that a therapist is practicing

unethically, does

> that necessarily mean that they are performing the actions of a

licensed

> physical therapist unethically? No, not at all. If you define

ethics as

> simply relating to the involvement a therapist has with a patient

in the

> clinic, then you are establishing an ethics " blind spot. " What

about if you

> look at the bigger picture? These individuals are a part of our

profession

> and they are participating in a system that is harming the

profession to

> which they belong. That, to me, is unethical and should be

identified as

> such. Your argument is that doing so is misdirected because it

might hurt

> someone's feelings. Well, most of us would agree that selling

babies into

> slavery is pretty high on the list of unethical things. Your

argument is

> akin to saying that the fellow who dresses the babies up so they

will look

> nice on the auction block should not be called unethical because he

is doing

> a fine job in dressing up those babies. It is only the system that

is bad,

> not the baby dresser. We should develop a " unified message "

against the

> system, but for heaven's sake, don't hurt the baby dresser's

feelings.

>

> Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

>

>

>

> _____

>

>

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Rob,

I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and have been a PT for near 19

years, therefore, I feel I can speak the following. I know several PTs working

in physician owned practices who practice ethically and practically. I say this

only for the fact that not all PTs are practicing unethically, as you state, and

not all of these practices are " cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the

fact that our association would harm these PTs and their livlihood as well as

those you describe. I want to stick up for these PTs who are hard working and

ethical in their practices. Mark my word...there are many hospital based PT

departments as well as privately owned practices out there who are practicing as

you described. There are hospital based departments who are part of a hospital

organization who own their own insurance company and limit who their clients can

see for therapy. I suffer from this. I also have issue with physician offices

having ATCs seeing patients and billing these as PT services. This is more

alarming to me. PTs using aides and billing for PT services as well as billing

for two patients seen at the same time is also more alarming to me. These are

issues we need to address along with our association. In my experience, the

abuse of utilizing and billing for aides and ATCs time with the patients has

done more for the prediciment our profession is in since the BBA of 98.

Insurances and patients want a PT working with them not aides and ATCs. This

needs to be our first concern. My two cents.

Matt Dvorak, PT

Yankton, SD

________________________________

From: PTManager on behalf of Jordan

Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

To: PTManager

Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

,

You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the choir.

The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups and

present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the " unfortunate

patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know the

truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their bottom

line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control referrals to

make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met with the

Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in mind, the

Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians and bean

counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should consider

refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office due to

the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data collected by

BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data suggested

that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and consisted, on

average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction and

functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients were

better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were shocked.

But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the patients

who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the shortest

anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated, troublesome

patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The RFPs

operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen three

times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than 3 weeks.

Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise is the

preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients since

the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny is high.

It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance companies

and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs show

very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function is to

protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no idea who

their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their state

legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage of PT

talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to another,

simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more money,

they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession, don't

stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it what it

is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has been

suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our will to

fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet most PTs

do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt a

mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the public. And

we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash basis so

that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with physicians,

Medicare and insurance companies.

Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

President, ArPTA

_____

From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

[mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> ] On

Behalf

Of PATowne@... <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com>

Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--

<http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel-->

campos-duffy/

2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

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Guest guest

Matt:

Nice to read the various opinions that come across this server.

It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs that are out there, and

just how they are truly motivated solely by the betterment of their patients and

the entire healthcare.

As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a physician like that 2 days ago.

True story! Now. Keep in mind that he practices on the space next to mine.

Sends me 2 patients per year, but now offers me a full case load if I open

practice inside of his new building.

Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to own MRIs, Labs etc?

Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental office there as well?

Wouldn't that make a wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the betterment of their

patients?

The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL THERAPISTS, dentists stood

up for themselves, united, and nowadays only dentists are legal practice owners

of dental practices.

Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has not served us well. Only

200 years after the creation of the profession, we decide to take a vision of

our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become independent.

Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still consider the " need " to remain a

technician - named physical therapist.

200 years later, we are still trying to find out if we can bill for

Iontophoresis if the milliseconds don't add up right, we are still having to

fight to bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

And most of all, some colleagues like you are outraged of some of us that treat

two patients simultaneously. Without getting into the minutia of this last

statement, which could take all gigabytes of this server for sure, have you

considered the fact that statements like yours " ...as well as billing for two

patients seen at the same time is also more alarming to me " are not guided by

clinical decision but by some centenary rule, which is not universal by the way,

but Medicare imposed.

When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the 4 clients he has in

different stages of his care, only because you are all present at the same time

in his office?

Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth between surgeries (2) is not

getting paid by one of them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform manual PT in one patient

while I have another one in HP and E-stim, and I find it even more ludicrous to

not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to break medicare rules, but I

am certainly criticizing such arguments as being the holy ground of ethical

behavior. Because, to drag my feet to add extra seconds of Ionto treatment sure

sounds like unethical if you ask me.

I have been practicing for 16 years in this country. Before that, I practiced

for one year in mine. And I am afraid I am yet to see one physical therapy

carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have worked in large and small

hospitals, large and small SNFs, large hospital based rehabs, Home Health, PT

owned private practices, Corporate outpatient PT clinics, " amateur " owned PT

Clinics, I staffed a POPT once long ago (shame on me!), I rented space inside a

Chiro's office, which kind of resembles a COPT if you think about it - this one

deserves explanation: in my country at the time we did not have chiros,

therefore I had no clue what they were. Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into

it, we almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would be entertaining for

some of you...)

All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to have in healthcare. You may

think its ok. But the proof is in the fact that if orthos' cannot have their

POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA and have the ATCs or the PTAs or

whomever, just as long as they can bill like PT.

Another shocking fact! I just realized this now that I am in private practice:

The MD owned PT clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH BETTER!) than I get as

a private practice owner. Explain that one! (retorical).

Why are we billing our services based on the antiquated AMA model?

These should be the questions asked.

Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically necessary to my patient, use a

set of electrodes that cost me 7.00 and not be able to bill for it?

These should be the questions asked.

Why physicians/chiros/etc etc can bill PT if I am the PT and not them?

These should be the questions asked.

Why is it a problem to treat two patients simultaneously? Are you incapable of

such multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the service just like the

dentist did? Is the dentist going to let you go for free?

We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need to change them!

Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee schedules.

When are we going to rebel against this system of subservience and free

ourselves to do what's best for our patients and be compensated with dignity

without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our profession?

When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

These are my 99 cents!

Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense. Lets rebel together!

Armin Loges, P.T.

Tampa, FL

From: Matt Dvorak

Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

To: PTManager

Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

Rob,

I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and have been a PT for near 19

years, therefore, I feel I can speak the following. I know several PTs working

in physician owned practices who practice ethically and practically. I say this

only for the fact that not all PTs are practicing unethically, as you state, and

not all of these practices are " cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the

fact that our association would harm these PTs and their livlihood as well as

those you describe. I want to stick up for these PTs who are hard working and

ethical in their practices. Mark my word...there are many hospital based PT

departments as well as privately owned practices out there who are practicing as

you described. There are hospital based departments who are part of a hospital

organization who own their own insurance company and limit who their clients can

see for therapy. I suffer from this. I also have issue with physician offices

having ATCs seeing patients and billing these as PT services. This is more

alarming to me. PTs using aides and billing for PT services as well as billing

for two patients seen at the same time is also more alarming to me. These are

issues we need to address along with our association. In my experience, the

abuse of utilizing and billing for aides and ATCs time with the patients has

done more for the prediciment our profession is in since the BBA of 98.

Insurances and patients want a PT working with them not aides and ATCs. This

needs to be our first concern. My two cents.

Matt Dvorak, PT

Yankton, SD

________________________________

From: PTManager on behalf of Jordan

Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

To: PTManager

Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

,

You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the choir.

The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups and

present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the " unfortunate

patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know the

truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their bottom

line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control referrals to

make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met with the

Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in mind, the

Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians and bean

counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should consider

refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office due to

the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data collected by

BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data suggested

that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and consisted, on

average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction and

functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients were

better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were shocked.

But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the patients

who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the shortest

anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated, troublesome

patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The RFPs

operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen three

times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than 3 weeks.

Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise is the

preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients since

the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny is high.

It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance companies

and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs show

very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function is to

protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no idea who

their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their state

legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage of PT

talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to another,

simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more money,

they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession, don't

stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it what it

is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has been

suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our will to

fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet most PTs

do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt a

mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the public. And

we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash basis so

that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with physicians,

Medicare and insurance companies.

Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

President, ArPTA

_____

From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

[mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> ] On

Behalf

Of PATowne@... <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com>

Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--

<http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel-->

campos-duffy/

2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

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Guest guest

Armin: I fully agree to your statement (statements!). I have been a PT in

private practise since 1985 and I have come across MDs like you have a lot. One

MD wanted me to come in the evening and sign the notes of an ATC doing PT work

in the daytime...now this was almost 10 years ago but I almost slapped him when

the MD came with that proposal. Of course, I lost a referral source...but that

is OK as it took me 1 year to recover from the loss. I feel that Direct Access

is the only slap to the MD control over our destiny! I think MDs are actually

afaraid of PTs as we are truly musculo-skeletal specialists.

Hiten Dave' PT

--------- Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--

<http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel-->

campos-duffy/

2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

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Guest guest

Armin,

Can't argue with you on your points except one....It's illegal under Medicare to

bill simultaneous treatments. Of course your point of working with a patient

while another is on e-stim. My understanding is that it is a federal offense to

do so, and I have seen a PT in my area, who I know well, lose his license for

doing so. I agree with your model of the dentist and this is what our

profession needs. If you are seeing any other patient at the same time as a

medicare patient, you have two choices: bill as group therapy if it allows, or

you can only bill for one patient modality at once. I didn't make the rules,

and I don't agree with them all. I also feel your pain with the physician next

door.

Matt Dvorak, PT

Yankton, SD

________________________________

From: PTManager on behalf of Armin Loges, P.T.

Sent: Wed 3/5/2008 11:16 AM

To: PTManager

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

Matt:

Nice to read the various opinions that come across this server.

It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs that are out there, and

just how they are truly motivated solely by the betterment of their patients and

the entire healthcare.

As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a physician like that 2 days ago.

True story! Now. Keep in mind that he practices on the space next to mine. Sends

me 2 patients per year, but now offers me a full case load if I open practice

inside of his new building.

Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to own MRIs, Labs etc?

Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental office there as well?

Wouldn't that make a wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the betterment of their

patients?

The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL THERAPISTS, dentists stood

up for themselves, united, and nowadays only dentists are legal practice owners

of dental practices.

Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has not served us well. Only

200 years after the creation of the profession, we decide to take a vision of

our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become independent.

Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still consider the " need " to remain a

technician - named physical therapist.

200 years later, we are still trying to find out if we can bill for

Iontophoresis if the milliseconds don't add up right, we are still having to

fight to bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

And most of all, some colleagues like you are outraged of some of us that treat

two patients simultaneously. Without getting into the minutia of this last

statement, which could take all gigabytes of this server for sure, have you

considered the fact that statements like yours " ...as well as billing for two

patients seen at the same time is also more alarming to me " are not guided by

clinical decision but by some centenary rule, which is not universal by the way,

but Medicare imposed.

When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the 4 clients he has in

different stages of his care, only because you are all present at the same time

in his office?

Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth between surgeries (2) is not

getting paid by one of them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform manual PT in one patient

while I have another one in HP and E-stim, and I find it even more ludicrous to

not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to break medicare rules, but I am

certainly criticizing such arguments as being the holy ground of ethical

behavior. Because, to drag my feet to add extra seconds of Ionto treatment sure

sounds like unethical if you ask me.

I have been practicing for 16 years in this country. Before that, I practiced

for one year in mine. And I am afraid I am yet to see one physical therapy

carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have worked in large and small

hospitals, large and small SNFs, large hospital based rehabs, Home Health, PT

owned private practices, Corporate outpatient PT clinics, " amateur " owned PT

Clinics, I staffed a POPT once long ago (shame on me!), I rented space inside a

Chiro's office, which kind of resembles a COPT if you think about it - this one

deserves explanation: in my country at the time we did not have chiros,

therefore I had no clue what they were. Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into

it, we almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would be entertaining for

some of you...)

All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to have in healthcare. You may

think its ok. But the proof is in the fact that if orthos' cannot have their

POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA and have the ATCs or the PTAs or

whomever, just as long as they can bill like PT.

Another shocking fact! I just realized this now that I am in private practice:

The MD owned PT clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH BETTER!) than I get as

a private practice owner. Explain that one! (retorical).

Why are we billing our services based on the antiquated AMA model?

These should be the questions asked.

Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically necessary to my patient, use a

set of electrodes that cost me 7.00 and not be able to bill for it?

These should be the questions asked.

Why physicians/chiros/etc etc can bill PT if I am the PT and not them?

These should be the questions asked.

Why is it a problem to treat two patients simultaneously? Are you incapable of

such multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the service just like the

dentist did? Is the dentist going to let you go for free?

We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need to change them!

Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee schedules.

When are we going to rebel against this system of subservience and free

ourselves to do what's best for our patients and be compensated with dignity

without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our profession?

When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

These are my 99 cents!

Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense. Lets rebel together!

Armin Loges, P.T.

Tampa, FL

From: Matt Dvorak

Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

Rob,

I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and have been a PT for near 19

years, therefore, I feel I can speak the following. I know several PTs working

in physician owned practices who practice ethically and practically. I say this

only for the fact that not all PTs are practicing unethically, as you state, and

not all of these practices are " cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the

fact that our association would harm these PTs and their livlihood as well as

those you describe. I want to stick up for these PTs who are hard working and

ethical in their practices. Mark my word...there are many hospital based PT

departments as well as privately owned practices out there who are practicing as

you described. There are hospital based departments who are part of a hospital

organization who own their own insurance company and limit who their clients can

see for therapy. I suffer from this. I also have issue with physician offices

having ATCs seeing patients and billing these as PT services. This is more

alarming to me. PTs using aides and billing for PT services as well as billing

for two patients seen at the same time is also more alarming to me. These are

issues we need to address along with our association. In my experience, the

abuse of utilizing and billing for aides and ATCs time with the patients has

done more for the prediciment our profession is in since the BBA of 98.

Insurances and patients want a PT working with them not aides and ATCs. This

needs to be our first concern. My two cents.

Matt Dvorak, PT

Yankton, SD

________________________________

From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> on behalf

of Jordan

Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

,

You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the choir.

The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups and

present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the " unfortunate

patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know the

truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their bottom

line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control referrals to

make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met with the

Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in mind, the

Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians and bean

counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should consider

refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office due to

the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data collected by

BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data suggested

that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and consisted, on

average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction and

functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients were

better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were shocked.

But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the patients

who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the shortest

anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated, troublesome

patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The RFPs

operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen three

times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than 3 weeks.

Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise is the

preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients since

the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny is high.

It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance companies

and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs show

very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function is to

protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no idea who

their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their state

legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage of PT

talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to another,

simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more money,

they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession, don't

stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it what it

is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has been

suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our will to

fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet most PTs

do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt a

mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the public. And

we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash basis so

that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with physicians,

Medicare and insurance companies.

Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

President, ArPTA

_____

From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

<mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> [mailto:PTManager

<mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> ] On

Behalf

Of PATowne@... <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com> <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com>

Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

<mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du>

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du> >

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Armin,

Setting aside for a moment complaints of controlled referrals (referral for

profit) which no reasonable person supports...

When complaining about billing rules (and, of course, when billing!) we must,

really must, understand what the CPT coding system means when it differentiates

between " constant attendance " and " supervised " services. E-stim is a supervised

service, meaning that you CAN bill for your time treating one patient while

another is on e-stim. That's because, according to the code rules, you are being

paid for the analysis/set-up/education/etc. portion of e-stim, not for the time

the patient is on it. Here's a quote from the APTA Q & A that may help:

Q: Which electrical stimulation code should I utilize (97014 vs 97032)?

A: The 97014 code (unattended electrical stimulation) should be used for the

vast majority of electrical stimulation that is applied. The 97032 (attended

electrical stimulation) code should be used when motor point stimulation is

being applied and the physical therapist is with the patient constantly

throughout the procedure.

IMHO you can have two patients in the clinic simultaneously, toggle back and

forth between them, and bill for the one-on-one skilled time you spend with each

one. (If the converse were true you'd be allowed to stack ten patients up with

HPs and e-stim and bill each your hourly rate! I'm sure you're not advocating

for that.)

Along that line, the way I read the CPT code book, since ionto is a

constant-attendance intervention, we are being paid for the skilled care we

provide one-on-one to the patient during an ionto treatment--in other words the

analysis/set-up/education/etc. portion, not the time the patient sits alone

while the machine runs. Adding seconds to the treatment time should do nothing

to the bill.

The surgeon you alluded to, not incidentally, gets a fee for the procedure

itself---his remuneration is not based on the minutes he may take to complete

the procedure. The CPT code experts established what they feel to be an

appropriate number of minutes for that procedure, on average. In most cases,

surgeon follow-up visits and related supplies are included in that code (similar

in concept to our expensive, buffered, ionto electrodes).

All of us should be very careful about our language on these issues.

(Lastly, as we discuss the money, I would like to see at least a passing remark

every once in a while recognizing PATIENTS' rights in determining service value.

I think we all know that it's not all about us and insurers, but many times you

couldn't guess it by our conversation.)

Dave Milano, PT, Director of Rehab Services

Laurel Health System

32-36 Central Ave.

Wellsboro, PA 16901

dmilano@...

Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

"

http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du<http\

://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du> <

http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du<http\

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Guest guest

On a side note, I am curious to know how many of you would favor a flat fee

across the board per PT eval and sessions.

And if favored, how much you would consider it fair.

Thanks.

Armin Loges, PT

Tampa, FL

Armin Loges, P.T.

armin@...

www.restoretherapies.com

From: hitendave@...

Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2008 12:36 PM

To: PTManager ; PTManager

Cc: Armin Loges, P.T. ; hitendave@...

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

Armin: I fully agree to your statement (statements!). I have been a PT in

private practise since 1985 and I have come across MDs like you have a lot. One

MD wanted me to come in the evening and sign the notes of an ATC doing PT work

in the daytime...now this was almost 10 years ago but I almost slapped him when

the MD came with that proposal. Of course, I lost a referral source...but that

is OK as it took me 1 year to recover from the loss. I feel that Direct Access

is the only slap to the MD control over our destiny! I think MDs are actually

afaraid of PTs as we are truly musculo-skeletal specialists.

Hiten Dave' PT

--------- Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--

<http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel-->

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I can't say I support a flat fee, but...

....to install a toilet in my house is $255 - parts not included - one hour of

work...

....to change an electrical receptacle in my house is $165 - one hour of work...

If we truly did an hour's worth of work (not juggling multiple patients),

what are we worth?

BCBS of land thinks 4 ther-ex codes (for example) is worth ~$92,

while Medicare believes it is worth ~$110.

My rent/overhead and salary costs are multiple times more than any local

plumbers or electricians, but the general public and insurance companies deem

P.T. services worth less when compared.

So, you tell me, what would a good flat fee be? (regionally adjusted)

Let's say $200/hour. Cash only - no billing (plumbers and electricians are

C.O.D.)

Let's say I work alone:

$200 x 8 patients x 5 days x 48 weeks = $384,000. Figure out the costs from

there.

Not bad - no billing company - minimal employees - nominal rent - no insurance

companies.

Maybe I could make an honest living as a P.T. in private practice :-)

Just a few things to think about.

B. Rohr, P.T.

--------- Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--

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Guest guest

I hear you, .

Your point is right on. But it falls back into branding and PR of PTs as a

whole and our place in society and in healthcare. And I think that has been sang

into the choir by all of us. Even the APTA heard it.

My question was more of a practical one.

Lets say you were not held to the traditional rules that some colleagues so

eloquently reminded me of.

(Thanks, Dave Milano - I think you took word-by-word literacy, while I was

trying to make a point, rather than being specific. But that's how it goes.

Your reply was nonetheless very accurate.)

But lets say someone came up with a network of PTs that took a flat fee per

session (forget for a second the reality of it), regardless of time and resource

used to treat that pt that one session.

How much would it be?

Like you said:

UHC thinks it is 35.00.

BCBS thinks is roughly 92.00.

MCB around 110.00.

We all know we are, one time or another, taking less than what we think is fair.

What do practicioners think its fair?

Lets include the fact that you could only use PTA's (no techs, aides, ATCs or

anyone else), but you could treat more than one patient at a time, according to

what you, the PT, think is clinically correct and safe for your patients.

How much?

Thinking outside of the today's rules of CPT codes, minute rules, group therapy

etc.

As a private practice owner, you all should have a number that you would be

happy with. Or ok with at least.

If you work for a practice or for a hospital, you should have a similar number.

What is it?

Armin Loges, P.T.

Tampa, FL

armin@...

www.restoretherapies.com

From: krohr1@...

Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2008 9:06 PM

To: PTManager

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

I can't say I support a flat fee, but...

....to install a toilet in my house is $255 - parts not included - one hour of

work...

....to change an electrical receptacle in my house is $165 - one hour of work...

If we truly did an hour's worth of work (not juggling multiple patients),

what are we worth?

BCBS of land thinks 4 ther-ex codes (for example) is worth ~$92,

while Medicare believes it is worth ~$110.

My rent/overhead and salary costs are multiple times more than any local

plumbers or electricians, but the general public and insurance companies deem

P.T. services worth less when compared.

So, you tell me, what would a good flat fee be? (regionally adjusted)

Let's say $200/hour. Cash only - no billing (plumbers and electricians are

C.O.D.)

Let's say I work alone:

$200 x 8 patients x 5 days x 48 weeks = $384,000. Figure out the costs from

there.

Not bad - no billing company - minimal employees - nominal rent - no insurance

companies.

Maybe I could make an honest living as a P.T. in private practice :-)

Just a few things to think about.

B. Rohr, P.T.

--------- Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it is

evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail miserably by

78%

and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and charge

as

physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we should not

be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their patients

that

they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received were

basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any real

direction.

I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns and

comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes. Let's get

the real facts on the table.

A. Towne, PT

************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL Living.

(HYPERLINK

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-du>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--

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200/hour. good luck with that. in comparing our services to plumbers and

electricians many seem to conveniently forget that MUCH of the value of our

services to our patients stem from the fact that it is 'free'.

a medicare pt who has met their deductible and has a good supplemental has

neck pain and their doc or friend or whoever suggests therapy andd they find

out that it is covered thru medicare. the PT evals and recommends 2 - 3 x/week

x 4 weeks. they will more than likely make all their appts, even if relief is

minimal or temporary.

take the same pt and tell him cash money , 200/tx, 100/ tx...hell 50 a

treatment and you will be lucky to see them once a month even if they deem it

helpful.

ace jackson

prform rehab

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

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Armin,

Most of us can relate to your frustration in regard to all of the rules

and regulations. However, we cannot pick the rules we want to follow

and ignore the others simply because it's different in another country

or because we don't see the logic in them. We, as a profession, should

direct our efforts towards changing the rules that we collectively want

changed. The APTA is our voice.

We should try and follow the lead of dentisits if we feel that only PT's

should own PT clinics. We should try and change the CPT definitions to

include tech/ATC delivery of one-to-one care if we believe this will add

benefit to our profession. Etc. etc. etc.

Ignoring the rules we don't agree with is not the answer.

Thanks,

Jon Mark Pleasant, PT

>

> Matt:

>

> Nice to read the various opinions that come across this server.

> It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

> And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs that are out

there, and just how they are truly motivated solely by the betterment of

their patients and the entire healthcare.

> As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a physician like that 2

days ago. True story! Now. Keep in mind that he practices on the space

next to mine. Sends me 2 patients per year, but now offers me a full

case load if I open practice inside of his new building.

> Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to own MRIs, Labs

etc?

> Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental office there as

well? Wouldn't that make a wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the

betterment of their patients?

> The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL THERAPISTS,

dentists stood up for themselves, united, and nowadays only dentists are

legal practice owners of dental practices.

> Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has not served us

well. Only 200 years after the creation of the profession, we decide to

take a vision of our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become independent.

> Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still consider the " need "

to remain a technician - named physical therapist.

> 200 years later, we are still trying to find out if we can bill for

Iontophoresis if the milliseconds don't add up right, we are still

having to fight to bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

> And most of all, some colleagues like you are outraged of some of us

that treat two patients simultaneously. Without getting into the minutia

of this last statement, which could take all gigabytes of this server

for sure, have you considered the fact that statements like yours " ...as

well as billing for two patients seen at the same time is also more

alarming to me " are not guided by clinical decision but by some

centenary rule, which is not universal by the way, but Medicare imposed.

> When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the 4 clients he has

in different stages of his care, only because you are all present at the

same time in his office?

> Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth between surgeries (2) is

not getting paid by one of them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

> I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform manual PT in one

patient while I have another one in HP and E-stim, and I find it even

more ludicrous to not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to

break medicare rules, but I am certainly criticizing such arguments as

being the holy ground of ethical behavior. Because, to drag my feet to

add extra seconds of Ionto treatment sure sounds like unethical if you

ask me.

> I have been practicing for 16 years in this country. Before that, I

practiced for one year in mine. And I am afraid I am yet to see one

physical therapy carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have worked in

large and small hospitals, large and small SNFs, large hospital based

rehabs, Home Health, PT owned private practices, Corporate outpatient PT

clinics, " amateur " owned PT Clinics, I staffed a POPT once long ago

(shame on me!), I rented space inside a Chiro's office, which kind of

resembles a COPT if you think about it - this one deserves explanation:

in my country at the time we did not have chiros, therefore I had no

clue what they were. Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into it, we

almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would be entertaining for

some of you...)

> All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to have in healthcare.

You may think its ok. But the proof is in the fact that if orthos'

cannot have their POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA and have

the ATCs or the PTAs or whomever, just as long as they can bill like PT.

> Another shocking fact! I just realized this now that I am in private

practice: The MD owned PT clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH

BETTER!) than I get as a private practice owner. Explain that one!

(retorical).

> Why are we billing our services based on the antiquated AMA model?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically necessary to my

patient, use a set of electrodes that cost me 7.00 and not be able to

bill for it?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why physicians/chiros/etc etc can bill PT if I am the PT and not them?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why is it a problem to treat two patients simultaneously? Are you

incapable of such multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the

service just like the dentist did? Is the dentist going to let you go

for free?

> We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need to change them!

> Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee schedules.

> When are we going to rebel against this system of subservience and

free ourselves to do what's best for our patients and be compensated

with dignity without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our

profession?

> When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

> These are my 99 cents!

> Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense. Lets rebel together!

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Armin Loges, P.T.

> Tampa, FL

>

>

>

>

>

>

> From: Matt Dvorak

> Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

> To: PTManager

> Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

>

> Rob,

> I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and have been a PT for

near 19 years, therefore, I feel I can speak the following. I know

several PTs working in physician owned practices who practice ethically

and practically. I say this only for the fact that not all PTs are

practicing unethically, as you state, and not all of these practices are

" cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the fact that our association

would harm these PTs and their livlihood as well as those you describe.

I want to stick up for these PTs who are hard working and ethical in

their practices. Mark my word...there are many hospital based PT

departments as well as privately owned practices out there who are

practicing as you described. There are hospital based departments who

are part of a hospital organization who own their own insurance company

and limit who their clients can see for therapy. I suffer from this. I

also have issue with physician offices having ATCs seeing patients and

billing these as PT services. This is more alarming to me. PTs using

aides and billing for PT services as well as billing for two patients

seen at the same time is also more alarming to me. These are issues we

need to address along with our association. In my experience, the abuse

of utilizing and billing for aides and ATCs time with the patients has

done more for the prediciment our profession is in since the BBA of 98.

Insurances and patients want a PT working with them not aides and ATCs.

This needs to be our first concern. My two cents.

> Matt Dvorak, PT

> Yankton, SD

>

> ________________________________

>

> From: PTManager on behalf of Jordan

> Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

> To: PTManager

> Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

> ,

>

> You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the

choir.

> The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups and

> present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the

" unfortunate

> patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know the

> truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their

bottom

> line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control

referrals to

> make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met

with the

> Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in

mind, the

> Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians and

bean

> counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should

consider

> refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office

due to

> the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

> Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data collected

by

> BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data

suggested

> that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and

consisted, on

> average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction

and

> functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients were

> better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were

shocked.

> But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

> controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the

patients

> who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the

shortest

> anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated,

troublesome

> patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The RFPs

> operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen

three

> times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than 3

weeks.

> Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise is

the

> preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients

since

> the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny is

high.

>

> It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

> evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance

companies

> and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs

show

> very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

> lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

> Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function is

to

> protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no idea

who

> their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their state

> legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage

of PT

> talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to

another,

> simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more

money,

> they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

>

> RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

> unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession, don't

> stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

what it

> is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has

been

> suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our

will to

> fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet most

PTs

> do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt a

> mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the

public. And

> we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash

basis so

> that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with

physicians,

> Medicare and insurance companies.

>

> Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

> President, ArPTA

>

> _____

>

> From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

[mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> ]

On Behalf

> Of PATowne@... <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com>

> Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

> To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

> This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

is

> evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

miserably by

> 78%

> and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

> legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and

charge

> as

> physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

should not

> be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

patients

> that

> they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

>

> Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

were

> basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any

real

> direction.

>

> I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns

and

> comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

Let's get

>

> the real facts on the table.

>

> A. Towne, PT

>

> ************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL

Living.

> (HYPERLINK

>

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo\

s-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo\

s-du>

>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rach\

el--

<http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--\

>

> campos-duffy/

> 2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

>

>

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Guest guest

Armin

I like you man. You have a spine. I could not agree more. I wish

70,000 APTA members had the guts to stand together to fight the

ridiculous suppression we face and DEMAND changes! Way too many in

our profession choose to fold like cheap suits and say " just follow

the rules. "

Rob Jordan

Sent from iPhone

On Mar 6, 2008, at 4:14 PM, " jonmarkpleasant "

wrote:

>

> Armin,

>

> Most of us can relate to your frustration in regard to all of the

> rules

> and regulations. However, we cannot pick the rules we want to follow

> and ignore the others simply because it's different in another country

> or because we don't see the logic in them. We, as a profession, should

> direct our efforts towards changing the rules that we collectively

> want

> changed. The APTA is our voice.

>

> We should try and follow the lead of dentisits if we feel that only

> PT's

> should own PT clinics. We should try and change the CPT definitions to

> include tech/ATC delivery of one-to-one care if we believe this will

> add

> benefit to our profession. Etc. etc. etc.

>

> Ignoring the rules we don't agree with is not the answer.

>

> Thanks,

>

> Jon Mark Pleasant, PT

>

>

> >

> > Matt:

> >

> > Nice to read the various opinions that come across this server.

> > It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

> > And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs that are out

> there, and just how they are truly motivated solely by the

> betterment of

> their patients and the entire healthcare.

> > As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a physician like that 2

> days ago. True story! Now. Keep in mind that he practices on the space

> next to mine. Sends me 2 patients per year, but now offers me a full

> case load if I open practice inside of his new building.

> > Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to own MRIs, Labs

> etc?

> > Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental office there as

> well? Wouldn't that make a wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the

> betterment of their patients?

> > The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL THERAPISTS,

> dentists stood up for themselves, united, and nowadays only dentists

> are

> legal practice owners of dental practices.

> > Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has not served us

> well. Only 200 years after the creation of the profession, we decide

> to

> take a vision of our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become

> independent.

> > Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still consider the " need "

> to remain a technician - named physical therapist.

> > 200 years later, we are still trying to find out if we can bill for

> Iontophoresis if the milliseconds don't add up right, we are still

> having to fight to bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

> > And most of all, some colleagues like you are outraged of some of us

> that treat two patients simultaneously. Without getting into the

> minutia

> of this last statement, which could take all gigabytes of this server

> for sure, have you considered the fact that statements like yours

> " ...as

> well as billing for two patients seen at the same time is also more

> alarming to me " are not guided by clinical decision but by some

> centenary rule, which is not universal by the way, but Medicare

> imposed.

> > When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the 4 clients he has

> in different stages of his care, only because you are all present at

> the

> same time in his office?

> > Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth between surgeries

> (2) is

> not getting paid by one of them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

> > I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform manual PT in

> one

> patient while I have another one in HP and E-stim, and I find it even

> more ludicrous to not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to

> break medicare rules, but I am certainly criticizing such arguments as

> being the holy ground of ethical behavior. Because, to drag my feet to

> add extra seconds of Ionto treatment sure sounds like unethical if you

> ask me.

> > I have been practicing for 16 years in this country. Before that, I

> practiced for one year in mine. And I am afraid I am yet to see one

> physical therapy carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have

> worked in

> large and small hospitals, large and small SNFs, large hospital based

> rehabs, Home Health, PT owned private practices, Corporate

> outpatient PT

> clinics, " amateur " owned PT Clinics, I staffed a POPT once long ago

> (shame on me!), I rented space inside a Chiro's office, which kind of

> resembles a COPT if you think about it - this one deserves

> explanation:

> in my country at the time we did not have chiros, therefore I had no

> clue what they were. Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into it, we

> almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would be entertaining for

> some of you...)

> > All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to have in

> healthcare.

> You may think its ok. But the proof is in the fact that if orthos'

> cannot have their POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA and

> have

> the ATCs or the PTAs or whomever, just as long as they can bill like

> PT.

> > Another shocking fact! I just realized this now that I am in private

> practice: The MD owned PT clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH

> BETTER!) than I get as a private practice owner. Explain that one!

> (retorical).

> > Why are we billing our services based on the antiquated AMA model?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically necessary to my

> patient, use a set of electrodes that cost me 7.00 and not be able to

> bill for it?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why physicians/chiros/etc etc can bill PT if I am the PT and not

> them?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why is it a problem to treat two patients simultaneously? Are you

> incapable of such multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the

> service just like the dentist did? Is the dentist going to let you go

> for free?

> > We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need to change them!

> > Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee schedules.

> > When are we going to rebel against this system of subservience and

> free ourselves to do what's best for our patients and be compensated

> with dignity without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our

> profession?

> > When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

> > These are my 99 cents!

> > Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense. Lets rebel

> together!

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > Armin Loges, P.T.

> > Tampa, FL

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > From: Matt Dvorak

> > Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

> > To: PTManager

> > Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> >

> > Rob,

> > I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and have been a PT

> for

> near 19 years, therefore, I feel I can speak the following. I know

> several PTs working in physician owned practices who practice

> ethically

> and practically. I say this only for the fact that not all PTs are

> practicing unethically, as you state, and not all of these practices

> are

> " cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the fact that our

> association

> would harm these PTs and their livlihood as well as those you

> describe.

> I want to stick up for these PTs who are hard working and ethical in

> their practices. Mark my word...there are many hospital based PT

> departments as well as privately owned practices out there who are

> practicing as you described. There are hospital based departments who

> are part of a hospital organization who own their own insurance

> company

> and limit who their clients can see for therapy. I suffer from this. I

> also have issue with physician offices having ATCs seeing patients and

> billing these as PT services. This is more alarming to me. PTs using

> aides and billing for PT services as well as billing for two patients

> seen at the same time is also more alarming to me. These are issues we

> need to address along with our association. In my experience, the

> abuse

> of utilizing and billing for aides and ATCs time with the patients has

> done more for the prediciment our profession is in since the BBA of

> 98.

> Insurances and patients want a PT working with them not aides and

> ATCs.

> This needs to be our first concern. My two cents.

> > Matt Dvorak, PT

> > Yankton, SD

> >

> > ________________________________

> >

> > From: PTManager on behalf of Jordan

> > Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

> > To: PTManager

> > Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> > ,

> >

> > You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the

> choir.

> > The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups

> and

> > present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the

> " unfortunate

> > patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know

> the

> > truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their

> bottom

> > line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control

> referrals to

> > make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met

> with the

> > Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in

> mind, the

> > Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians

> and

> bean

> > counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should

> consider

> > refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office

> due to

> > the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

> > Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data

> collected

> by

> > BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data

> suggested

> > that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and

> consisted, on

> > average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction

> and

> > functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients

> were

> > better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were

> shocked.

> > But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

> > controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the

> patients

> > who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the

> shortest

> > anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated,

> troublesome

> > patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The

> RFPs

> > operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen

> three

> > times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less

> than 3

> weeks.

> > Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise

> is

> the

> > preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients

> since

> > the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for

> scrutiny is

> high.

> >

> > It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

> > evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance

> companies

> > and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs

> show

> > very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

> > lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

> > Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function

> is

> to

> > protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no

> idea

> who

> > their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their

> state

> > legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage

> of PT

> > talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to

> another,

> > simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more

> money,

> > they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

> >

> > RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are

> practicing

> > unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession,

> don't

> > stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

> what it

> > is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has

> been

> > suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our

> will to

> > fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet

> most

> PTs

> > do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must

> adopt a

> > mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the

> public. And

> > we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash

> basis so

> > that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with

> physicians,

> > Medicare and insurance companies.

> >

> > Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

> > President, ArPTA

> >

> > _____

> >

> > From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> [mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%

> 40yahoogroups.com> ]

> On Behalf

> > Of PATowne@... <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com>

> > Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

> > To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> > Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> > This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

> is

> > evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

> miserably by

> > 78%

> > and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind

> the

> > legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat

> and

> charge

> > as

> > physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

> should not

> > be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

> patients

> > that

> > they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients

> require.

> >

> > Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

> were

> > basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans

> any

> real

> > direction.

> >

> > I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization

> patterns

> and

> > comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

> Let's get

> >

> > the real facts on the table.

> >

> > A. Towne, PT

> >

> > ************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL

> Living.

> > (HYPERLINK

> >

> " http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo

> \

> s-du

> <http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo

> \

> s-du>

> >

> ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rach

> \

> el--

> <http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--

> \

> >

> > campos-duffy/

> > 2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

> >

> >

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Guest guest

These issues are valid and frankly very restricting to practice. I've had

the direct opportunity to interact in Washington DC with legislators in make

changes in laws etc. We directly effected the decisions of some the

legislators and got confirmations about this from them. Unfortunately, there

was a

max of 50 PT's (from the country) participating (1 month before) the Medicare

cap was to hit in Dec of 07. This was a crying shame. The Medicare cap (may

not effect everyone) is a huge factor in limiting and taking control away

from our practice......talk about a democracy!!. This issue among others are

not being confronted in volume by PT's; unless it directly effects their

practice. Pt's have gotten better with in part due to folks like Steve

,

Mike Matlack and many others, but we as a group (with numbers) need to talk

actions directly to the legislative bodies and more importantly give to the

PTPAC so the APTA has the funds to take action. These laws and limitations

will only increase, in proportion to the manpower from the MD's and Chiro's and

we'll have a tougher time. Remember, it is easy to propose a bill and get

it signed, but it nearly impossible to reverse it when it is signed. We have

to take a preventive model and attack the issues head on with numbers. MD's,

chiro's etc. will always try to eat from PT's. We have a lot of substance

in our practice of healthcare. I take a viewpoint that our actions will

determine our future and its a bright one if we step up and fight the

opposition.......and this goes for the PTA's as well.

Vinod Somareddy, DPT

In a message dated 3/7/2008 10:39:30 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,

kbisesi@... writes:

AMEN!!!

Armin,

You made some very good points. I totally agree with

you on several points, particularly " one on one "

treatment. Why should we only be able to see one

patient at a time? It can be done easily, within

reason. I'm not going to see a CVA along with a

complicated back patient. But why would you not

schedule two ACL post-ops together? Is the service

provided any different if a PT treats 2 knee's for an

hour each, both scheduled together, or for 2 hours one

after the other. If the treatment is different, you

are an utter novice. I can appreciate most PT's

respecting the legal side of one on one care because

that is the current written definition, but ethically,

it is perfectly feasible to see more than one patient

at a time. Ethically, only manual therapy needs

constant attended one on one service provision and it

is the most valuable service we provide. If PT's are

religiously interpreting the CPT manual as stated, and

" one on one care " and that " requiring the skills of a

therapist " we really are all overbilling - look at the

below scenario:

Picture yourself as a PT showing a patient a new

exercise (ther ex). You demonstrate the exercise, the

first two reps the patient demonstrates understanding

and correct mechanics. You have them perform 3 sets of

10. Does the patient require your skilled services to

count reps? No. You need to demonstrate the exercise,

establish that the patient is performing it correctly,

then assess the patient response to the exercise

afterwards. Do we bill for the total exercise time (3

sets of 10), yes. And we should. However, those that

harp on the AMA's definition of our services,

shouldn't. The point of this is, not all of our

services, such as therapeutic exercise are constant,

skilled PT by the AMA's definition. However, our skill

in establishing a patients exercise program and our

guidance is a skilled provision. The therapeutic

exercise code should not be deemed a constant

attendance, one-on-one code. If you read the CPT

manual, it falls under the section for therapeutic

prodecures for " one on one " care, but it's individual

definition does not specify this. Ther activity, and

neuro re-ed does specify " one-on-one " in their

respective individual definitions. Has anyone ever

question why this is? Ther ex may not need to be a

one-on-one code (excluding Medicare) already.

Bisesi MPT COMT

Winter Haven, Fl

--- " Armin Loges, P.T. " <_armin@restoretheraparmin@r_

(mailto:armin@...) >

wrote:

> Matt:

>

> Nice to read the various opinions that come across

> this server.

> It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

> And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs

> that are out there, and just how they are truly

> motivated solely by the betterment of their patients

> and the entire healthcare.

> As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a

> physician like that 2 days ago. True story! Now.

> Keep in mind that he practices on the space next to

> mine. Sends me 2 patients per year, but now offers

> me a full case load if I open practice inside of his

> new building.

> Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to

> own MRIs, Labs etc?

> Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental

> office there as well? Wouldn't that make a

> wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the betterment

> of their patients?

> The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL

> THERAPISTS, dentists stood up for themselves,

> united, and nowadays only dentists are legal

> practice owners of dental practices.

> Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has

> not served us well. Only 200 years after the

> creation of the profession, we decide to take a

> vision of our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become

> independent.

> Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still

> consider the " need " to remain a technician - named

> physical therapist.

> 200 years later, we are still trying to find out if

> we can bill for Iontophoresis if the milliseconds

> don't add up right, we are still having to fight to

> bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

> And most of all, some colleagues like you are

> outraged of some of us that treat two patients

> simultaneously. Without getting into the minutia of

> this last statement, which could take all gigabytes

> of this server for sure, have you considered the

> fact that statements like yours " ...as well as

> billing for two patients seen at the same time is

> also more alarming to me " are not guided by clinical

> decision but by some centenary rule, which is not

> universal by the way, but Medicare imposed.

> When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the

> 4 clients he has in different stages of his care,

> only because you are all present at the same time in

> his office?

> Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth

> between surgeries (2) is not getting paid by one of

> them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

> I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform

> manual PT in one patient while I have another one in

> HP and E-stim, and I find it even more ludicrous to

> not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to

> break medicare rules, but I am certainly criticizing

> such arguments as being the holy ground of ethical

> behavior. Because, to drag my feet to add extra

> seconds of Ionto treatment sure sounds like

> unethical if you ask me.

> I have been practicing for 16 years in this country.

> Before that, I practiced for one year in mine. And

> I am afraid I am yet to see one physical therapy

> carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have

> worked in large and small hospitals, large and small

> SNFs, large hospital based rehabs, Home Health, PT

> owned private practices, Corporate outpatient PT

> clinics, " amateur " owned PT Clinics, I staffed a

> POPT once long ago (shame on me!), I rented space

> inside a Chiro's office, which kind of resembles a

> COPT if you think about it - this one deserves

> explanation: in my country at the time we did not

> have chiros, therefore I had no clue what they were.

> Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into it, we

> almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would

> be entertaining for some of you...)

> All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to

> have in healthcare. You may think its ok. But the

> proof is in the fact that if orthos' cannot have

> their POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA

> and have the ATCs or the PTAs or whomever, just as

> long as they can bill like PT.

> Another shocking fact! I just realized this now

> that I am in private practice: The MD owned PT

> clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH BETTER!)

> than I get as a private practice owner. Explain

> that one! (retorical).

> Why are we billing our services based on the

> antiquated AMA model?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically

> necessary to my patient, use a set of electrodes

> that cost me 7.00 and not be able to bill for it?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why physicians/chiros/ Why physicians/chiros/

> the PT and not them?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why is it a problem to treat two patients

> simultaneously? Are you incapable of such

> multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the

> service just like the dentist did? Is the dentist

> going to let you go for free?

> We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need

> to change them!

> Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee

> schedules.

> When are we going to rebel against this system of

> subservience and free ourselves to do what's best

> for our patients and be compensated with dignity

> without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our

> profession?

> When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

> These are my 99 cents!

> Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense.

> Lets rebel together!

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Armin Loges, P.T.

> Tampa, FL

>

>

>

>

>

>

> From: Matt Dvorak

> Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

> To: _PTManager@yahoogrouPTMana_ (mailto:PTManager )

> Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic

> surgeons journal...

>

>

> Rob,

> I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and

> have been a PT for near 19 years, therefore, I feel

> I can speak the following. I know several PTs

> working in physician owned practices who practice

> ethically and practically. I say this only for the

> fact that not all PTs are practicing unethically, as

> you state, and not all of these practices are

> " cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the fact

> that our association would harm these PTs and their

> livlihood as well as those you describe. I want to

> stick up for these PTs who are hard working and

> ethical in their practices. Mark my word...there are

> many hospital based PT departments as well as

> privately owned practices out there who are

> practicing as you described. There are hospital

> based departments who are part of a hospital

> organization who own their own insurance company and

> limit who their clients can see for therapy. I

> suffer from this. I also have issue with physician

> offices having ATCs seeing patients and billing

> these as PT services. This is more alarming to me.

> PTs using aides and billing for PT services as well

> as billing for two patients seen at the same time is

> also more alarming to me. These are issues we need

> to address along with our association. In my

> experience, the abuse of utilizing and billing for

> aides and ATCs time with the patients has done more

> for the prediciment our profession is in since the

> BBA of 98. Insurances and patients want a PT working

> with them not aides and ATCs. This needs to be our

> first concern. My two cents.

> Matt Dvorak, PT

> Yankton, SD

>

> ____________ ________ ________ _

>

> From: _PTManager@yahoogrouPTMana_ (mailto:PTManager ) on

behalf of

> Jordan

> Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

> To: _PTManager@yahoogrouPTMana_ (mailto:PTManager )

> Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic

> surgeons journal...

>

> ,

>

> You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are

> preaching to the choir.

> The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful

> lobbying groups and

> present themselves in Washington as being the

> shepherds of the " unfortunate

> patients who need someone to protect their

> interests. " We all know the

> truth is that these MDs are concerned about one

> thing only...their bottom

> line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able

> to control referrals to

> make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our

> Association met with the

> Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of

> Arkansas. Keep in mind, the

>

=== message truncated ===

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Jon:

Truly with the due respect, APTA is us therefore it needs to go where we want to

go and not the other way around.

That's why we have petitions, etc.

We are still in a democracy, aren't we?

And first of all, don't take me wrong for one minute that I break the rules or

suggest anyone should.

But it doesn't mean we have all to be sheep and follow the heard without debate

or at least without complaining.

Perhaps you should see me as a black sheep: in the heard, but going to the wolf

kicking and complaining and trying to change this technician mentality.

If wasn't for black sheep, we all would still be content with NO direct access,

etc, etc, etc.

Also remember, Jon, a lot of people (PTs) disagree with Vision 2020 to this

date.

As far as " other " countries, U.S. physiotherapy has just started to catch up

within the last 15 years or so thanks to influence of " foreigners " in the likes

of Robin McKenzie, Stanley Paris, Mulligan, Kaltenborn, Maitland just to name a

few. Not taking the away the homegrown talent. But influence of new ideas is

good. Not bad.

And one more thing: how many of these rules consider the benefit of the patient?

And how many of these rules " gives to Ceasar what's from Cesar " ?

So, when you say we need to place our efforts changing the rules we collectively

want changed, perhaps we need a plebiscite in order to determine WHO " is " " WE "

and what " collectively " means.

Thanks for the debate.

This message and any of its attachments is private and confidential and intended

solely for the recipient(s) named above.

It may contain Protected Health Information (PHI), which is protected by State

and Federal Law. If you received this message in error,

please contact the sender immediately for remedial measures. If you accept

this message you agree to store it in a safe, protected and confidential

manner, according to HIPAA standards.

Armin Loges, P.T.

Tampa, FL

armin@...

www.restoretherapies.com

From: jonmarkpleasant

Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 7:14 PM

To: PTManager

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

Armin,

Most of us can relate to your frustration in regard to all of the rules

and regulations. However, we cannot pick the rules we want to follow

and ignore the others simply because it's different in another country

or because we don't see the logic in them. We, as a profession, should

direct our efforts towards changing the rules that we collectively want

changed. The APTA is our voice.

We should try and follow the lead of dentisits if we feel that only PT's

should own PT clinics. We should try and change the CPT definitions to

include tech/ATC delivery of one-to-one care if we believe this will add

benefit to our profession. Etc. etc. etc.

Ignoring the rules we don't agree with is not the answer.

Thanks,

Jon Mark Pleasant, PT

>

> Matt:

>

> Nice to read the various opinions that come across this server.

> It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

> And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs that are out

there, and just how they are truly motivated solely by the betterment of

their patients and the entire healthcare.

> As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a physician like that 2

days ago. True story! Now. Keep in mind that he practices on the space

next to mine. Sends me 2 patients per year, but now offers me a full

case load if I open practice inside of his new building.

> Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to own MRIs, Labs

etc?

> Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental office there as

well? Wouldn't that make a wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the

betterment of their patients?

> The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL THERAPISTS,

dentists stood up for themselves, united, and nowadays only dentists are

legal practice owners of dental practices.

> Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has not served us

well. Only 200 years after the creation of the profession, we decide to

take a vision of our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become independent.

> Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still consider the " need "

to remain a technician - named physical therapist.

> 200 years later, we are still trying to find out if we can bill for

Iontophoresis if the milliseconds don't add up right, we are still

having to fight to bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

> And most of all, some colleagues like you are outraged of some of us

that treat two patients simultaneously. Without getting into the minutia

of this last statement, which could take all gigabytes of this server

for sure, have you considered the fact that statements like yours " ...as

well as billing for two patients seen at the same time is also more

alarming to me " are not guided by clinical decision but by some

centenary rule, which is not universal by the way, but Medicare imposed.

> When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the 4 clients he has

in different stages of his care, only because you are all present at the

same time in his office?

> Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth between surgeries (2) is

not getting paid by one of them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

> I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform manual PT in one

patient while I have another one in HP and E-stim, and I find it even

more ludicrous to not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to

break medicare rules, but I am certainly criticizing such arguments as

being the holy ground of ethical behavior. Because, to drag my feet to

add extra seconds of Ionto treatment sure sounds like unethical if you

ask me.

> I have been practicing for 16 years in this country. Before that, I

practiced for one year in mine. And I am afraid I am yet to see one

physical therapy carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have worked in

large and small hospitals, large and small SNFs, large hospital based

rehabs, Home Health, PT owned private practices, Corporate outpatient PT

clinics, " amateur " owned PT Clinics, I staffed a POPT once long ago

(shame on me!), I rented space inside a Chiro's office, which kind of

resembles a COPT if you think about it - this one deserves explanation:

in my country at the time we did not have chiros, therefore I had no

clue what they were. Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into it, we

almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would be entertaining for

some of you...)

> All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to have in healthcare.

You may think its ok. But the proof is in the fact that if orthos'

cannot have their POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA and have

the ATCs or the PTAs or whomever, just as long as they can bill like PT.

> Another shocking fact! I just realized this now that I am in private

practice: The MD owned PT clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH

BETTER!) than I get as a private practice owner. Explain that one!

(retorical).

> Why are we billing our services based on the antiquated AMA model?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically necessary to my

patient, use a set of electrodes that cost me 7.00 and not be able to

bill for it?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why physicians/chiros/etc etc can bill PT if I am the PT and not them?

> These should be the questions asked.

> Why is it a problem to treat two patients simultaneously? Are you

incapable of such multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the

service just like the dentist did? Is the dentist going to let you go

for free?

> We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need to change them!

> Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee schedules.

> When are we going to rebel against this system of subservience and

free ourselves to do what's best for our patients and be compensated

with dignity without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our

profession?

> When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

> These are my 99 cents!

> Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense. Lets rebel together!

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Armin Loges, P.T.

> Tampa, FL

>

>

>

>

>

>

> From: Matt Dvorak

> Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

> To: PTManager

> Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

>

> Rob,

> I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and have been a PT for

near 19 years, therefore, I feel I can speak the following. I know

several PTs working in physician owned practices who practice ethically

and practically. I say this only for the fact that not all PTs are

practicing unethically, as you state, and not all of these practices are

" cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the fact that our association

would harm these PTs and their livlihood as well as those you describe.

I want to stick up for these PTs who are hard working and ethical in

their practices. Mark my word...there are many hospital based PT

departments as well as privately owned practices out there who are

practicing as you described. There are hospital based departments who

are part of a hospital organization who own their own insurance company

and limit who their clients can see for therapy. I suffer from this. I

also have issue with physician offices having ATCs seeing patients and

billing these as PT services. This is more alarming to me. PTs using

aides and billing for PT services as well as billing for two patients

seen at the same time is also more alarming to me. These are issues we

need to address along with our association. In my experience, the abuse

of utilizing and billing for aides and ATCs time with the patients has

done more for the prediciment our profession is in since the BBA of 98.

Insurances and patients want a PT working with them not aides and ATCs.

This needs to be our first concern. My two cents.

> Matt Dvorak, PT

> Yankton, SD

>

> ________________________________

>

> From: PTManager on behalf of Jordan

> Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

> To: PTManager

> Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

> ,

>

> You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the

choir.

> The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups and

> present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the

" unfortunate

> patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know the

> truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their

bottom

> line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control

referrals to

> make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met

with the

> Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in

mind, the

> Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians and

bean

> counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should

consider

> refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office

due to

> the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

> Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data collected

by

> BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data

suggested

> that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and

consisted, on

> average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction

and

> functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients were

> better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were

shocked.

> But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

> controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the

patients

> who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the

shortest

> anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated,

troublesome

> patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The RFPs

> operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen

three

> times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than 3

weeks.

> Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise is

the

> preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients

since

> the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny is

high.

>

> It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

> evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance

companies

> and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs

show

> very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

> lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

> Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function is

to

> protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no idea

who

> their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their state

> legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage

of PT

> talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to

another,

> simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more

money,

> they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

>

> RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are practicing

> unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession, don't

> stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

what it

> is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has

been

> suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our

will to

> fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet most

PTs

> do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt a

> mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the

public. And

> we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash

basis so

> that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with

physicians,

> Medicare and insurance companies.

>

> Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

> President, ArPTA

>

> _____

>

> From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

[mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> ]

On Behalf

> Of PATowne@... <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com>

> Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

> To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

>

> This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

is

> evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

miserably by

> 78%

> and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind the

> legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat and

charge

> as

> physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

should not

> be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

patients

> that

> they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients require.

>

> Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

were

> basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans any

real

> direction.

>

> I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization patterns

and

> comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

Let's get

>

> the real facts on the table.

>

> A. Towne, PT

>

> ************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL

Living.

> (HYPERLINK

>

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo\

s-du

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo\

s-du>

>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rach\

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>

> campos-duffy/

> 2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

>

>

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Guest guest

Regarding this: " ...it is perfectly [ethical] to see more than one patient at a

time. "

Of course it is, if the customer agrees.

Importantly, Medicare, and the CPT code book writers do agree, which is why we

have a " Group Therapy " code. Your beef, evidently, is that the CPT coding system

establishes an income ceiling (which is true, since there are only so many

minutes in an hour, and the hourly rate-equivalent is fixed.) But your

complaining is misdirected. It should be pointed at the third-party payment

system, not at the actions of payers.

We must all keep in mind that the customer is the only true arbiter of value.

Nobody should have the right to dictate pricing for a car, for bubble gum, or

for medical care, because nobody should have the right to squelch competition.

That's called the " market system " and it works, if we only keep our

system-loving hands off of it. Of course, for medical care in America today, the

customer is not the patient, rather government and insurance companies are. And

if we are going to allow third-party payers to play the role of customers, then

we should not be surprised at all that they act as customers, by working the

price angle. In the context of the current system, third party payers are

appropriately establishing cost controls.

Those of you who are not happy with all this (and I am one) should advocate for

abolishing our third-party systems in favor of Healthcare Savings accounts. That

would make the customer and patient one, allowing us to discover the REAL value

of our services. Perhaps there are patients out there who would pay $200.00/hour

for the shared attention of a physical therapist. With HSAs we could say God

bless them and the cowboys who charge that way. But we could also say God bless

those patients who decide they can do better elsewhere, and the providers who

appealed to them.

Now maybe a large number of providers would find themselves out of business

without the buffer of third-party payers. Well, God bless that, too. (My guess

is that that gets to the bottom of the issue. Providers, I believe, despite

their frenzied complaining about third-party payer tactics, ultimately fear the

market, and find the third-party system congenial to the pocketbook.)

Dave Milano, PT, Director of Rehab Services

Laurel Health System

RE: from the Orthopedic

> surgeons journal...

>

> ,

>

> You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are

> preaching to the choir.

> The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful

> lobbying groups and

> present themselves in Washington as being the

> shepherds of the " unfortunate

> patients who need someone to protect their

> interests. " We all know the

> truth is that these MDs are concerned about one

> thing only...their bottom

> line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able

> to control referrals to

> make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our

> Association met with the

> Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of

> Arkansas. Keep in mind, the

>

=== message truncated ===

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Guest guest

Armin,

I am not at all against anyone who voices discontent with our current

reimbursement/service delivery system. In fact, I am in agreement with

you that the rules governing reimbursement and service delivery are in

need of change.

The answer to your question: " how many of the rules consider the benefit

of the patient? " is.... few if any! As we all know, Money is the root

of the rules AND at the root of ignoring them.

For example: Medicare says that techs can perform treatments in acute

care (Part A) but not in outpatient (Part B). Why? Part A is DRG.

Medicare says go ahead use all the techs you like, you don't get paid

for those services anyway. However, under Part B where they have to pay

for every unit of service, Medicare employs a different rule stating

that only a PT/PTA can provide the service. These differences don't

consider the patient at all. They are based solely on MONEY(my

opinion).

Simillarly, the root of ingoring the rules is.......caaachiiing.....$

MONEY$. Staff PT's in private clinics (POPTS or otherwise) are often

incentivised based on thier billable CPT codes (More CPTs = more money).

Some clinics go so far as to demand 4 units of service for every patient

without asking, " does the patient really need 4 units of service? "

Clinic owners, may also fudge the rules, either to " earn a little more "

or because they are simply trying to stay afloat. I get it. MONEY.

It is easy to see some of the problems realted to the delivery and

remuneration of PT services but not so easy to fix them. Again, we are

both in agreement that they need fixing!

LOL. I had to look up the word plebiscite in the dictionary. I need to

read more or get a " word of the day " calendar. You have a better

command of the English language than I do. (This forum also needs spell

check!)

Cheers and have a great weekend!

Jon

> >

> > Matt:

> >

> > Nice to read the various opinions that come across this server.

> > It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

> > And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs that are out

> there, and just how they are truly motivated solely by the betterment

of

> their patients and the entire healthcare.

> > As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a physician like that 2

> days ago. True story! Now. Keep in mind that he practices on the space

> next to mine. Sends me 2 patients per year, but now offers me a full

> case load if I open practice inside of his new building.

> > Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to own MRIs, Labs

> etc?

> > Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental office there as

> well? Wouldn't that make a wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the

> betterment of their patients?

> > The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL THERAPISTS,

> dentists stood up for themselves, united, and nowadays only dentists

are

> legal practice owners of dental practices.

> > Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has not served us

> well. Only 200 years after the creation of the profession, we decide

to

> take a vision of our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become

independent.

> > Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still consider the " need "

> to remain a technician - named physical therapist.

> > 200 years later, we are still trying to find out if we can bill for

> Iontophoresis if the milliseconds don't add up right, we are still

> having to fight to bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

> > And most of all, some colleagues like you are outraged of some of us

> that treat two patients simultaneously. Without getting into the

minutia

> of this last statement, which could take all gigabytes of this server

> for sure, have you considered the fact that statements like yours

" ...as

> well as billing for two patients seen at the same time is also more

> alarming to me " are not guided by clinical decision but by some

> centenary rule, which is not universal by the way, but Medicare

imposed.

> > When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the 4 clients he has

> in different stages of his care, only because you are all present at

the

> same time in his office?

> > Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth between surgeries (2)

is

> not getting paid by one of them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

> > I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform manual PT in

one

> patient while I have another one in HP and E-stim, and I find it even

> more ludicrous to not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to

> break medicare rules, but I am certainly criticizing such arguments as

> being the holy ground of ethical behavior. Because, to drag my feet to

> add extra seconds of Ionto treatment sure sounds like unethical if you

> ask me.

> > I have been practicing for 16 years in this country. Before that, I

> practiced for one year in mine. And I am afraid I am yet to see one

> physical therapy carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have worked

in

> large and small hospitals, large and small SNFs, large hospital based

> rehabs, Home Health, PT owned private practices, Corporate outpatient

PT

> clinics, " amateur " owned PT Clinics, I staffed a POPT once long ago

> (shame on me!), I rented space inside a Chiro's office, which kind of

> resembles a COPT if you think about it - this one deserves

explanation:

> in my country at the time we did not have chiros, therefore I had no

> clue what they were. Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into it, we

> almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would be entertaining for

> some of you...)

> > All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to have in

healthcare.

> You may think its ok. But the proof is in the fact that if orthos'

> cannot have their POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA and

have

> the ATCs or the PTAs or whomever, just as long as they can bill like

PT.

> > Another shocking fact! I just realized this now that I am in private

> practice: The MD owned PT clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH

> BETTER!) than I get as a private practice owner. Explain that one!

> (retorical).

> > Why are we billing our services based on the antiquated AMA model?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically necessary to my

> patient, use a set of electrodes that cost me 7.00 and not be able to

> bill for it?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why physicians/chiros/etc etc can bill PT if I am the PT and not

them?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why is it a problem to treat two patients simultaneously? Are you

> incapable of such multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the

> service just like the dentist did? Is the dentist going to let you go

> for free?

> > We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need to change them!

> > Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee schedules.

> > When are we going to rebel against this system of subservience and

> free ourselves to do what's best for our patients and be compensated

> with dignity without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our

> profession?

> > When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

> > These are my 99 cents!

> > Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense. Lets rebel

together!

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > Armin Loges, P.T.

> > Tampa, FL

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > From: Matt Dvorak

> > Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

> > To: PTManager

> > Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> >

> > Rob,

> > I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and have been a PT

for

> near 19 years, therefore, I feel I can speak the following. I know

> several PTs working in physician owned practices who practice

ethically

> and practically. I say this only for the fact that not all PTs are

> practicing unethically, as you state, and not all of these practices

are

> " cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the fact that our

association

> would harm these PTs and their livlihood as well as those you

describe.

> I want to stick up for these PTs who are hard working and ethical in

> their practices. Mark my word...there are many hospital based PT

> departments as well as privately owned practices out there who are

> practicing as you described. There are hospital based departments who

> are part of a hospital organization who own their own insurance

company

> and limit who their clients can see for therapy. I suffer from this. I

> also have issue with physician offices having ATCs seeing patients and

> billing these as PT services. This is more alarming to me. PTs using

> aides and billing for PT services as well as billing for two patients

> seen at the same time is also more alarming to me. These are issues we

> need to address along with our association. In my experience, the

abuse

> of utilizing and billing for aides and ATCs time with the patients has

> done more for the prediciment our profession is in since the BBA of

98.

> Insurances and patients want a PT working with them not aides and

ATCs.

> This needs to be our first concern. My two cents.

> > Matt Dvorak, PT

> > Yankton, SD

> >

> > ________________________________

> >

> > From: PTManager on behalf of Jordan

> > Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

> > To: PTManager

> > Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> > ,

> >

> > You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the

> choir.

> > The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups

and

> > present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the

> " unfortunate

> > patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know

the

> > truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their

> bottom

> > line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control

> referrals to

> > make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met

> with the

> > Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in

> mind, the

> > Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians

and

> bean

> > counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should

> consider

> > refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office

> due to

> > the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

> > Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data

collected

> by

> > BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data

> suggested

> > that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and

> consisted, on

> > average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction

> and

> > functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients

were

> > better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were

> shocked.

> > But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

> > controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the

> patients

> > who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the

> shortest

> > anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated,

> troublesome

> > patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The

RFPs

> > operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen

> three

> > times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than

3

> weeks.

> > Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise

is

> the

> > preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients

> since

> > the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny

is

> high.

> >

> > It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

> > evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance

> companies

> > and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs

> show

> > very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

> > lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

> > Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function

is

> to

> > protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no

idea

> who

> > their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their

state

> > legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage

> of PT

> > talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to

> another,

> > simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more

> money,

> > they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

> >

> > RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are

practicing

> > unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession,

don't

> > stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

> what it

> > is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has

> been

> > suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our

> will to

> > fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet

most

> PTs

> > do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt

a

> > mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the

> public. And

> > we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash

> basis so

> > that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with

> physicians,

> > Medicare and insurance companies.

> >

> > Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

> > President, ArPTA

> >

> > _____

> >

> > From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> [mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

]

> On Behalf

> > Of PATowne@ <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com>

> > Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

> > To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> > Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> > This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

> is

> > evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

> miserably by

> > 78%

> > and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind

the

> > legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat

and

> charge

> > as

> > physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

> should not

> > be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

> patients

> > that

> > they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients

require.

> >

> > Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

> were

> > basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans

any

> real

> > direction.

> >

> > I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization

patterns

> and

> > comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

> Let's get

> >

> > the real facts on the table.

> >

> > A. Towne, PT

> >

> > ************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL

> Living.

> > (HYPERLINK

> >

>

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo\

\

> s-du

>

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo\

\

> s-du>

> >

>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rach\

\

> el--

>

<http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--\

\

> >

> > campos-duffy/

> > 2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

> >

> >

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Guest guest

Jon:

I hate when we all agree on everything. LOL.

I do not pretend to have the answers to any of this, but we need to admit our

discontents so we can get organized and change things or " die trying " .

The colony didn't get free from England because they were all happy with the

rule of the day. LOL

In my modest [and strongly biased] opinion, PTs need to disagree more, fight

more and complain more, amongst ourselves and with everyone else.

It is a big culture change.

Just to illustrate with some humor what I mean, where I went to school we have a

one year residency before you can get your license and is 3/4 spent in the

general hospital. Our first lessons are on how to pick " clinical " fights with

the residents of medicine, just to get " things " started right. LOL. But also to

thicken our skins and to learn to stand our ground and not take BS from anybody.

I would not say that would be the way to go here. Yet, at least. But the PT

culture is too subservient. And it translates across the board from

reimbursement to the fact that this is 2008 and direct access is still an issue!

It is no less than a shame to any physical therapist and a disgrace to the

public!

You are right about the money. Perhaps we will come to a change because moneys

are really going to get shorter and shorter to PTs in the current third party

payer system and such may actually force us to unite more.

Have a wonderful weekend.

(Don't be so hard on yourself! You are American: you are not suppose to know

English very well. LOL!!!!!!! JUST A JOKE! You set it up, I had to use it!)

Again, have a great weekend. We can pick up the fight on Monday.

Armin Loges, P.T.

TAMPA, FL

armin@...

www.restoretherapies.com

From: jonmarkpleasant

Sent: Friday, March 07, 2008 5:05 PM

To: PTManager

Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

Armin,

I am not at all against anyone who voices discontent with our current

reimbursement/service delivery system. In fact, I am in agreement with

you that the rules governing reimbursement and service delivery are in

need of change.

The answer to your question: " how many of the rules consider the benefit

of the patient? " is.... few if any! As we all know, Money is the root

of the rules AND at the root of ignoring them.

For example: Medicare says that techs can perform treatments in acute

care (Part A) but not in outpatient (Part B). Why? Part A is DRG.

Medicare says go ahead use all the techs you like, you don't get paid

for those services anyway. However, under Part B where they have to pay

for every unit of service, Medicare employs a different rule stating

that only a PT/PTA can provide the service. These differences don't

consider the patient at all. They are based solely on MONEY(my

opinion).

Simillarly, the root of ingoring the rules is.......caaachiiing.....$

MONEY$. Staff PT's in private clinics (POPTS or otherwise) are often

incentivised based on thier billable CPT codes (More CPTs = more money).

Some clinics go so far as to demand 4 units of service for every patient

without asking, " does the patient really need 4 units of service? "

Clinic owners, may also fudge the rules, either to " earn a little more "

or because they are simply trying to stay afloat. I get it. MONEY.

It is easy to see some of the problems realted to the delivery and

remuneration of PT services but not so easy to fix them. Again, we are

both in agreement that they need fixing!

LOL. I had to look up the word plebiscite in the dictionary. I need to

read more or get a " word of the day " calendar. You have a better

command of the English language than I do. (This forum also needs spell

check!)

Cheers and have a great weekend!

Jon

> >

> > Matt:

> >

> > Nice to read the various opinions that come across this server.

> > It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

> > And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs that are out

> there, and just how they are truly motivated solely by the betterment

of

> their patients and the entire healthcare.

> > As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a physician like that 2

> days ago. True story! Now. Keep in mind that he practices on the space

> next to mine. Sends me 2 patients per year, but now offers me a full

> case load if I open practice inside of his new building.

> > Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to own MRIs, Labs

> etc?

> > Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental office there as

> well? Wouldn't that make a wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the

> betterment of their patients?

> > The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL THERAPISTS,

> dentists stood up for themselves, united, and nowadays only dentists

are

> legal practice owners of dental practices.

> > Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has not served us

> well. Only 200 years after the creation of the profession, we decide

to

> take a vision of our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become

independent.

> > Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still consider the " need "

> to remain a technician - named physical therapist.

> > 200 years later, we are still trying to find out if we can bill for

> Iontophoresis if the milliseconds don't add up right, we are still

> having to fight to bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

> > And most of all, some colleagues like you are outraged of some of us

> that treat two patients simultaneously. Without getting into the

minutia

> of this last statement, which could take all gigabytes of this server

> for sure, have you considered the fact that statements like yours

" ...as

> well as billing for two patients seen at the same time is also more

> alarming to me " are not guided by clinical decision but by some

> centenary rule, which is not universal by the way, but Medicare

imposed.

> > When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the 4 clients he has

> in different stages of his care, only because you are all present at

the

> same time in his office?

> > Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth between surgeries (2)

is

> not getting paid by one of them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

> > I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform manual PT in

one

> patient while I have another one in HP and E-stim, and I find it even

> more ludicrous to not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to

> break medicare rules, but I am certainly criticizing such arguments as

> being the holy ground of ethical behavior. Because, to drag my feet to

> add extra seconds of Ionto treatment sure sounds like unethical if you

> ask me.

> > I have been practicing for 16 years in this country. Before that, I

> practiced for one year in mine. And I am afraid I am yet to see one

> physical therapy carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have worked

in

> large and small hospitals, large and small SNFs, large hospital based

> rehabs, Home Health, PT owned private practices, Corporate outpatient

PT

> clinics, " amateur " owned PT Clinics, I staffed a POPT once long ago

> (shame on me!), I rented space inside a Chiro's office, which kind of

> resembles a COPT if you think about it - this one deserves

explanation:

> in my country at the time we did not have chiros, therefore I had no

> clue what they were. Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into it, we

> almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would be entertaining for

> some of you...)

> > All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to have in

healthcare.

> You may think its ok. But the proof is in the fact that if orthos'

> cannot have their POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA and

have

> the ATCs or the PTAs or whomever, just as long as they can bill like

PT.

> > Another shocking fact! I just realized this now that I am in private

> practice: The MD owned PT clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH

> BETTER!) than I get as a private practice owner. Explain that one!

> (retorical).

> > Why are we billing our services based on the antiquated AMA model?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically necessary to my

> patient, use a set of electrodes that cost me 7.00 and not be able to

> bill for it?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why physicians/chiros/etc etc can bill PT if I am the PT and not

them?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why is it a problem to treat two patients simultaneously? Are you

> incapable of such multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the

> service just like the dentist did? Is the dentist going to let you go

> for free?

> > We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need to change them!

> > Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee schedules.

> > When are we going to rebel against this system of subservience and

> free ourselves to do what's best for our patients and be compensated

> with dignity without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our

> profession?

> > When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

> > These are my 99 cents!

> > Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense. Lets rebel

together!

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > Armin Loges, P.T.

> > Tampa, FL

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > From: Matt Dvorak

> > Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

> > To: PTManager

> > Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> >

> > Rob,

> > I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and have been a PT

for

> near 19 years, therefore, I feel I can speak the following. I know

> several PTs working in physician owned practices who practice

ethically

> and practically. I say this only for the fact that not all PTs are

> practicing unethically, as you state, and not all of these practices

are

> " cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the fact that our

association

> would harm these PTs and their livlihood as well as those you

describe.

> I want to stick up for these PTs who are hard working and ethical in

> their practices. Mark my word...there are many hospital based PT

> departments as well as privately owned practices out there who are

> practicing as you described. There are hospital based departments who

> are part of a hospital organization who own their own insurance

company

> and limit who their clients can see for therapy. I suffer from this. I

> also have issue with physician offices having ATCs seeing patients and

> billing these as PT services. This is more alarming to me. PTs using

> aides and billing for PT services as well as billing for two patients

> seen at the same time is also more alarming to me. These are issues we

> need to address along with our association. In my experience, the

abuse

> of utilizing and billing for aides and ATCs time with the patients has

> done more for the prediciment our profession is in since the BBA of

98.

> Insurances and patients want a PT working with them not aides and

ATCs.

> This needs to be our first concern. My two cents.

> > Matt Dvorak, PT

> > Yankton, SD

> >

> > ________________________________

> >

> > From: PTManager on behalf of Jordan

> > Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

> > To: PTManager

> > Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> > ,

> >

> > You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are preaching to the

> choir.

> > The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful lobbying groups

and

> > present themselves in Washington as being the shepherds of the

> " unfortunate

> > patients who need someone to protect their interests. " We all know

the

> > truth is that these MDs are concerned about one thing only...their

> bottom

> > line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able to control

> referrals to

> > make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our Association met

> with the

> > Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. Keep in

> mind, the

> > Boards of most large insurance carriers is composed of physicians

and

> bean

> > counters. We were trying to make the argument that BCBS should

> consider

> > refusing to pay for any PT services provided in a physician's office

> due to

> > the data you provided. We argued that abuse in POPTS (Referral for

> > Profit)should be a serious concern. Unfortunately, the data

collected

> by

> > BCBS does not suggest abuse (on the surface anyway). Their data

> suggested

> > that PT provided in a physician's office was less costly and

> consisted, on

> > average, of less visits to the PT. A survey of patient satisfaction

> and

> > functional outcomes seemed to support the assertion that patients

were

> > better off being seen in the RFP arrangement. At first, we were

> shocked.

> > But upon later examination, that made perfect sense. The physicians

> > controlled the referrals, so they were able to " cherry pick " the

> patients

> > who had the best insurance, the best potential outcomes, and the

> shortest

> > anticipated durations of care. All of the most complicated,

> troublesome

> > patients are referred out to private providers or hospitals. The

RFPs

> > operate on pure volume and tend to select the cases who can be seen

> three

> > times per week for 30 minutes at a time and discharged in less than

3

> weeks.

> > Modalities and hands-on treatment are seldom utilized and exercise

is

> the

> > preferred means of treatment. RFPs tend to avoid Medicare patients

> since

> > the regulations are cost-prohibitive and the potential for scrutiny

is

> high.

> >

> > It is my belief that we are at a defining point in our profession's

> > evolution. Physician ownership of PT and suppression by insurance

> companies

> > and Medicare are pushing us backward. Surprisingly, though, many PTs

> show

> > very little concern for what is happening. APTA is a very effective

> > lobbying organization, yet only a fraction of PTs are members of the

> > Association. Still fewer contribute to our PAC, whos sole function

is

> to

> > protect the interests of PT in Washington, D.C. Many PTs have no

idea

> who

> > their Senators or Congressmen are and even fewer know who their

state

> > legislative representatives are. We are facing a nationwide shortage

> of PT

> > talent and it is not uncommon for a PT to float from one job to

> another,

> > simply trying to make a few more bucks. Yet, when they do make more

> money,

> > they still can't seem to afford APTA dues. How rational is that?

> >

> > RFPs are unethical and the therapists who work in them are

practicing

> > unethically. We need to face that fact. If we, as a profession,

don't

> > stand up and shine a light on this unethical situation, and call it

> what it

> > is, we will all be working for doctors one day. Our profession has

> been

> > suppressed by physicians for so long that we seem to have lost our

> will to

> > fight. Currently, 45 states have some form of direct access, yet

most

> PTs

> > do not promote direct accessibility to their patients. We must adopt

a

> > mindset that allows us to " market " our services directly to the

> public. And

> > we must develop a means of providing services to patients on a cash

> basis so

> > that we no longer continue the subservient relationship with

> physicians,

> > Medicare and insurance companies.

> >

> > Rob Jordan, PT, MPT, GCS, OCS

> > President, ArPTA

> >

> > _____

> >

> > From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> [mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

]

> On Behalf

> > Of PATowne@ <mailto:PATowne%40aol.com>

> > Sent: Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:16 PM

> > To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> > Subject: Re: from the Orthopedic surgeons journal...

> >

> > This is pure rubbish. If one looks at the studies done by the GAO it

> is

> > evident that POPTS do not comply to Medicare standards and fail

> miserably by

> > 78%

> > and 91% respectfully with the 1994 and 2005 studies. Who is behind

the

> > legislative efforts to allow ATC's and personal trainers to treat

and

> charge

> > as

> > physical therapists but the Ortho's. No, it is pure GREED and we

> should not

> > be lulled into believing that they are SO concerned about their

> patients

> > that

> > they need to CONTROL the use and amount of PT their patients

require.

> >

> > Having practiced 50 years, I would say that the referrals received

> were

> > basically worthless regarding anything more than a simple Dx scans

any

> real

> > direction.

> >

> > I would love to see a real study of the charges, utilization

patterns

> and

> > comparison of outcomes by all providers using the 97000 CPT codes.

> Let's get

> >

> > the real facts on the table.

> >

> > A. Towne, PT

> >

> > ************-**Ideas to please picky eaters. Watch video on AOL

> Living.

> > (HYPERLINK

> >

>

" http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo\

\

> s-du

>

<http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campo\

\

> s-du>

> >

>

ffy/ " http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rach\

\

> el--

>

<http://living.-aol.com/video/-how-to-please--your-picky--eater/rachel--\

\

> >

> > campos-duffy/

> > 2050827?NCID=-aolcmp0030000000-2598)

> >

> >

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Guest guest

Dave, regarding HSA's, what Presidential candidate(s), if any, have

mentioned HSA's? (I haven't done the due diligence on them yet)

The Bush Administration has made them more attractive but the HSA

still has not hit the " tipping point " ; seems people are more

comfortable with the traditional insurance model.

But I obviously agree with you that we need some form of the HSA... if

set up correctly, it will create a true Free Market within the many

facets of health care. Right now we have a Shifting-of-Costs Market...

and I would argue that it hasn't improved our " healthcare " the way

many other industries have improved.. i.e. technology. In short, in my

opinion, the HSA will create incentives for both the Provider and the

Patient to provide and maintain the best " healthcare " . " Universal

Health Care " will not provide such incentives any more than our

current model will.

But I digress. Thanks-

Ty Keeter DPT, MHA

Director of Rehab

Boulder, Colorado

>

> > Matt:

> >

> > Nice to read the various opinions that come across

> > this server.

> > It is really great, so we all learn to disagree.

> > And off course we all hear about the wonderful POPTs

> > that are out there, and just how they are truly

> > motivated solely by the betterment of their patients

> > and the entire healthcare.

> > As a matter a fact, I just got approached by a

> > physician like that 2 days ago. True story! Now.

> > Keep in mind that he practices on the space next to

> > mine. Sends me 2 patients per year, but now offers

> > me a full case load if I open practice inside of his

> > new building.

> > Have you considered why is illegal for physicians to

> > own MRIs, Labs etc?

> > Now, consider this: why wouldn't they open a dental

> > office there as well? Wouldn't that make a

> > wonderful, one-stop-shop, place for the betterment

> > of their patients?

> > The reason for that is because, UNLIKE THE PHYSICAL

> > THERAPISTS, dentists stood up for themselves,

> > united, and nowadays only dentists are legal

> > practice owners of dental practices.

> > Unfortunately, at least in this country, history has

> > not served us well. Only 200 years after the

> > creation of the profession, we decide to take a

> > vision of our own (Vision 2020) and decide to become

> > independent.

> > Just to find out that a good bunch of " us " still

> > consider the " need " to remain a technician - named

> > physical therapist.

> > 200 years later, we are still trying to find out if

> > we can bill for Iontophoresis if the milliseconds

> > don't add up right, we are still having to fight to

> > bill evaluations (like in BCBS of NJ).

> > And most of all, some colleagues like you are

> > outraged of some of us that treat two patients

> > simultaneously. Without getting into the minutia of

> > this last statement, which could take all gigabytes

> > of this server for sure, have you considered the

> > fact that statements like yours " ...as well as

> > billing for two patients seen at the same time is

> > also more alarming to me " are not guided by clinical

> > decision but by some centenary rule, which is not

> > universal by the way, but Medicare imposed.

> > When you see your dentist, is he billing one of the

> > 4 clients he has in different stages of his care,

> > only because you are all present at the same time in

> > his office?

> > Or perhaps, the surgeon moving back and forth

> > between surgeries (2) is not getting paid by one of

> > them? Or the anesthesiologist as well?

> > I just miss to see the ethical misconduct to perform

> > manual PT in one patient while I have another one in

> > HP and E-stim, and I find it even more ludicrous to

> > not be able to bill it. I am not saying for us to

> > break medicare rules, but I am certainly criticizing

> > such arguments as being the holy ground of ethical

> > behavior. Because, to drag my feet to add extra

> > seconds of Ionto treatment sure sounds like

> > unethical if you ask me.

> > I have been practicing for 16 years in this country.

> > Before that, I practiced for one year in mine. And

> > I am afraid I am yet to see one physical therapy

> > carrying a stop watch, adding minutes. I have

> > worked in large and small hospitals, large and small

> > SNFs, large hospital based rehabs, Home Health, PT

> > owned private practices, Corporate outpatient PT

> > clinics, " amateur " owned PT Clinics, I staffed a

> > POPT once long ago (shame on me!), I rented space

> > inside a Chiro's office, which kind of resembles a

> > COPT if you think about it - this one deserves

> > explanation: in my country at the time we did not

> > have chiros, therefore I had no clue what they were.

> > Needless to say, less than 4 weeks into it, we

> > almost had a fist fight...(just thought this would

> > be entertaining for some of you...)

> > All in all, realize the monopoly the AMA wants to

> > have in healthcare. You may think its ok. But the

> > proof is in the fact that if orthos' cannot have

> > their POPTs, they are just as happy to back up NATA

> > and have the ATCs or the PTAs or whomever, just as

> > long as they can bill like PT.

> > Another shocking fact! I just realized this now

> > that I am in private practice: The MD owned PT

> > clinic gets paid much better rates (MUCH BETTER!)

> > than I get as a private practice owner. Explain

> > that one! (retorical).

> > Why are we billing our services based on the

> > antiquated AMA model?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why should I decide, per se, Ionto is clinically

> > necessary to my patient, use a set of electrodes

> > that cost me 7.00 and not be able to bill for it?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why physicians/chiros/­etc etc can bill PT if I am

> > the PT and not them?

> > These should be the questions asked.

> > Why is it a problem to treat two patients

> > simultaneously? Are you incapable of such

> > multitasking? And if so, didn't you provided the

> > service just like the dentist did? Is the dentist

> > going to let you go for free?

> > We don't need to break medicare rules, but we need

> > to change them!

> > Dentists have dental fee schedules. Not AMA fee

> > schedules.

> > When are we going to rebel against this system of

> > subservience and free ourselves to do what's best

> > for our patients and be compensated with dignity

> > without everyone and their cousin encroaching on our

> > profession?

> > When not one more PT think and act like a tech!

> > These are my 99 cents!

> > Chew me back, I can take it. But take no offense.

> > Lets rebel together!

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > Armin Loges, P.T.

> > Tampa, FL

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > From: Matt Dvorak

> > Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 5:53 PM

> > To: PTManager@yahoogrou­ps.com<mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> > Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic

> > surgeons journal...

> >

> >

> > Rob,

> > I am a PT working in a hospital based practice and

> > have been a PT for near 19 years, therefore, I feel

> > I can speak the following. I know several PTs

> > working in physician owned practices who practice

> > ethically and practically. I say this only for the

> > fact that not all PTs are practicing unethically, as

> > you state, and not all of these practices are

> > " cherry picking " . I say this to emphasize the fact

> > that our association would harm these PTs and their

> > livlihood as well as those you describe. I want to

> > stick up for these PTs who are hard working and

> > ethical in their practices. Mark my word...there are

> > many hospital based PT departments as well as

> > privately owned practices out there who are

> > practicing as you described. There are hospital

> > based departments who are part of a hospital

> > organization who own their own insurance company and

> > limit who their clients can see for therapy. I

> > suffer from this. I also have issue with physician

> > offices having ATCs seeing patients and billing

> > these as PT services. This is more alarming to me.

> > PTs using aides and billing for PT services as well

> > as billing for two patients seen at the same time is

> > also more alarming to me. These are issues we need

> > to address along with our association. In my

> > experience, the abuse of utilizing and billing for

> > aides and ATCs time with the patients has done more

> > for the prediciment our profession is in since the

> > BBA of 98. Insurances and patients want a PT working

> > with them not aides and ATCs. This needs to be our

> > first concern. My two cents.

> > Matt Dvorak, PT

> > Yankton, SD

> >

> > ____________­_________­_________­__

> >

> > From:

PTManager@yahoogrou­ps.com<mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> on

behalf of

> > Jordan

> > Sent: Thu 2/28/2008 12:03 PM

> > To: PTManager@yahoogrou­ps.com<mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com>

> > Subject: RE: from the Orthopedic

> > surgeons journal...

> >

> > ,

> >

> > You are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, you are

> > preaching to the choir.

> > The problem is that the AMA and AAOS are powerful

> > lobbying groups and

> > present themselves in Washington as being the

> > shepherds of the " unfortunate

> > patients who need someone to protect their

> > interests. " We all know the

> > truth is that these MDs are concerned about one

> > thing only...their bottom

> > line. The problem I am seeing is that they are able

> > to control referrals to

> > make their own outcomes look better. Recently, our

> > Association met with the

> > Board of Directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of

> > Arkansas. Keep in mind, the

> >

> === message truncated ===

>

> ____________­_________­_________­_________­_________­_________­_

> Be a better friend, newshound, and

> know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now.

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>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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