Guest guest Posted August 18, 2007 Report Share Posted August 18, 2007 Ditto. Our doc is resistive to writing any hold and it puts us in a jam come weekends when we make up our time and with limited PT and OT staff. Katesel Strimbeck PT, MS Glenmont, NY Katesels@... Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Well put. Our understanding also is that dialysis is not a sufficient reason to miss three hours for the day. We've made the same efforts to work around Xray for tests, as well as dialysis, with difficulty but it's doable. Dan Gaskell Carilion Clinic Roanoke, VA --------------------------------- Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2007 Report Share Posted August 20, 2007 The physiatrist really has to be on board with this and cannot be resistant to writing hold orders. We have been audited and are going through the process of denials right now, and our medical director is acutely aware of the importance of this. Someone might need to sit down with the doc (mabye the director of the unit?) and explain this, and how this can affect reimbursement, etc, and it is really not an option. Obviously the MD shouldn't be writing hold orders inappropriately, but if the pt cannot participate due to a (temporary) medical condition or has a stat test ordered, it has to be in there. No options! Sometimes we have encountered his partners who are covering for him and they are not as aware, and we simply explain the situation and often tell them what they should be documenting in their notes, because they don't understand the process. It has to be a team effort. Medicare really emphasizes this as well, so if the MD and the therapy team are not in sync, there will be problems if you are audited. Good luck! Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL >>> katesels@... 8/18/2007 3:06 PM >>> Ditto. Our doc is resistive to writing any hold and it puts us in a jam come weekends when we make up our time and with limited PT and OT staff. Katesel Strimbeck PT, MS Glenmont, NY Katesels@... Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Well put. Our understanding also is that dialysis is not a sufficient reason to miss three hours for the day. We've made the same efforts to work around Xray for tests, as well as dialysis, with difficulty but it's doable. Dan Gaskell Carilion Clinic Roanoke, VA --------------------------------- Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2007 Report Share Posted August 20, 2007 Ok, but lets say this scenario: The pt. refuses stating she is ill. The physician has not assessed to determine the impact of the illness on her participation in therapy. He has opined, and I agree, that it should be the people that have assessed this condition that decide if it warrants an excuse from participation in therapy. Should the physician make a visit everytime a patient has a physical complaint and asks to forgo therapy? I'm not certain why it would not be sufficient that the whole team document that the patient is vomitting for example. Jim Arceneaux, LOTR Palestine Regional Rehabilitation Hospital Weiss wrote: The physiatrist really has to be on board with this and cannot be resistant to writing hold orders. We have been audited and are going through the process of denials right now, and our medical director is acutely aware of the importance of this. Someone might need to sit down with the doc (mabye the director of the unit?) and explain this, and how this can affect reimbursement, etc, and it is really not an option. Obviously the MD shouldn't be writing hold orders inappropriately, but if the pt cannot participate due to a (temporary) medical condition or has a stat test ordered, it has to be in there. No options! Sometimes we have encountered his partners who are covering for him and they are not as aware, and we simply explain the situation and often tell them what they should be documenting in their notes, because they don't understand the process. It has to be a team effort. Medicare really emphasizes this as well, so if the MD and the therapy team are not in sync, there will be problems if you are audited. Good luck! Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL >>> katesels@... 8/18/2007 3:06 PM >>> Ditto. Our doc is resistive to writing any hold and it puts us in a jam come weekends when we make up our time and with limited PT and OT staff. Katesel Strimbeck PT, MS Glenmont, NY Katesels@... Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Well put. Our understanding also is that dialysis is not a sufficient reason to miss three hours for the day. We've made the same efforts to work around Xray for tests, as well as dialysis, with difficulty but it's doable. Dan Gaskell Carilion Clinic Roanoke, VA --------------------------------- Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2007 Report Share Posted August 20, 2007 Jim et. al. - I've been in several meetings of the Florida Society for Rehabilitation at which representatives of the Medicare intermediary have asked, " Why should this patient be in an IRF instead of just going to an SNF? " One major criteria for a facility to be certified as an Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility is that each patient is under the care of a rehabilitation doctor. Another criteria is that the patient " ...requires, receives, and tolerates... " three hours per day of skilled rehab services on five out of any seven consecutive days. If a retrospective audit of patient days and minutes shows that the facility has failed to provide this, then the facility can be decertified, and will cease to be an IRF. That would cause a loss of a high level rehab facility to the community. It would also cause the loss of jobs for therapists who really believe in providing intensive rehab. Of course, since IRFs need rehabilitation doctors, if the facility loses its certification, the Medical Director position is no longer necessary, either. Therefore, in addition to ensuring appropriate skilled professional services, each therapist and physician in an IRF carries part of the burden for ensuring the facility's compliance with standards. It's in their personal interest. Hope this helps! Dick Hillyer, PT W. Hillyer,PT, DPT, MBA, MSM Hillyer Consulting Cape Coral, FL _____ From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf Of Jim Arceneaux Sent: Monday, August 20, 2007 7:18 PM To: PTManager Subject: Re: Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Ok, but lets say this scenario: The pt. refuses stating she is ill. The physician has not assessed to determine the impact of the illness on her participation in therapy. He has opined, and I agree, that it should be the people that have assessed this condition that decide if it warrants an excuse from participation in therapy. Should the physician make a visit everytime a patient has a physical complaint and asks to forgo therapy? I'm not certain why it would not be sufficient that the whole team document that the patient is vomitting for example. Jim Arceneaux, LOTR Palestine Regional Rehabilitation Hospital Weiss <jweissingalls (DOT) <mailto:jweiss%40ingalls.org> org> wrote: The physiatrist really has to be on board with this and cannot be resistant to writing hold orders. We have been audited and are going through the process of denials right now, and our medical director is acutely aware of the importance of this. Someone might need to sit down with the doc (mabye the director of the unit?) and explain this, and how this can affect reimbursement, etc, and it is really not an option. Obviously the MD shouldn't be writing hold orders inappropriately, but if the pt cannot participate due to a (temporary) medical condition or has a stat test ordered, it has to be in there. No options! Sometimes we have encountered his partners who are covering for him and they are not as aware, and we simply explain the situation and often tell them what they should be documenting in their notes, because they don't understand the process. It has to be a team effort. Medicare really emphasizes this as well, so if the MD and the therapy team are not in sync, there will be problems if you are audited. Good luck! Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL >>> kateselsnycap (DOT) <mailto:katesels%40nycap.rr.com> rr.com 8/18/2007 3:06 PM >>> Ditto. Our doc is resistive to writing any hold and it puts us in a jam come weekends when we make up our time and with limited PT and OT staff. Katesel Strimbeck PT, MS Glenmont, NY Kateselsnycap (DOT) <mailto:Katesels%40nycap.rr.com> rr.com Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Well put. Our understanding also is that dialysis is not a sufficient reason to miss three hours for the day. We've made the same efforts to work around Xray for tests, as well as dialysis, with difficulty but it's doable. Dan Gaskell Carilion Clinic Roanoke, VA --------------------------------- Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 21, 2007 Report Share Posted August 21, 2007 I would agree. To have the physician be expected to write a hold order every time a patient is not feeling well enough to participate is overkill and places an excessive burden on both the physician and staff. Carol Rehder, PT Manager, Physical Therapy Genesis Medical Center rehder@genesis@... >>> " Jim Arceneaux " 8/20/2007 6:17 PM >>> Ok, but lets say this scenario: The pt. refuses stating she is ill. The physician has not assessed to determine the impact of the illness on her participation in therapy. He has opined, and I agree, that it should be the people that have assessed this condition that decide if it warrants an excuse from participation in therapy. Should the physician make a visit everytime a patient has a physical complaint and asks to forgo therapy? I'm not certain why it would not be sufficient that the whole team document that the patient is vomitting for example. Jim Arceneaux, LOTR Palestine Regional Rehabilitation Hospital Weiss wrote: The physiatrist really has to be on board with this and cannot be resistant to writing hold orders. We have been audited and are going through the process of denials right now, and our medical director is acutely aware of the importance of this. Someone might need to sit down with the doc (mabye the director of the unit?) and explain this, and how this can affect reimbursement, etc, and it is really not an option. Obviously the MD shouldn't be writing hold orders inappropriately, but if the pt cannot participate due to a (temporary) medical condition or has a stat test ordered, it has to be in there. No options! Sometimes we have encountered his partners who are covering for him and they are not as aware, and we simply explain the situation and often tell them what they should be documenting in their notes, because they don't understand the process. It has to be a team effort. Medicare really emphasizes this as well, so if the MD and the therapy team are not in sync, there will be problems if you are audited. Good luck! Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL >>> katesels@... 8/18/2007 3:06 PM >>> Ditto. Our doc is resistive to writing any hold and it puts us in a jam come weekends when we make up our time and with limited PT and OT staff. Katesel Strimbeck PT, MS Glenmont, NY Katesels@... Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Well put. Our understanding also is that dialysis is not a sufficient reason to miss three hours for the day. We've made the same efforts to work around Xray for tests, as well as dialysis, with difficulty but it's doable. Dan Gaskell Carilion Clinic Roanoke, VA --------------------------------- Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2007 Report Share Posted August 22, 2007 I guess my response to this one would be.. yes, it's a burden, but it still is the responsibility of all involved to document. Let me tell you first-hand that the denials process is a much bigger burden!! At the very least, the physician needs to document in his/her note that the patient missed therapy for whatever reason -- even if there is no hold order and even if the MD didn't physically assess the pt on this. That would indicate communication with the therapy staff. Aren't your physicians seeing the patients daily anyway? There needs to be 24-hr availability of a physician for a pt to be on inpt rehab anyway, so they should at least be able to document! This is also not meant to address pt refusals -- I am talking about those cases where there is actually a medical reason that the pt cannot participate (low BP, blood sugar levels, awaiting results of x-rays to r/o fractures, etc etc). We emphasize to our patients from day one that they are expected to come to all of their therapy sessions, and general malaise, etc is not enough to not come down. We tell them that if they don't feel like coming, we will be making up the session later in the day, so if it is just a matter of pt refusals, this may help reduce that. This way they know they can't just " get out " of it, because we'll get them in later anyway. Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL 60426 >>> rehder@... 8/21/2007 8:36 AM >>> I would agree. To have the physician be expected to write a hold order every time a patient is not feeling well enough to participate is overkill and places an excessive burden on both the physician and staff. Carol Rehder, PT Manager, Physical Therapy Genesis Medical Center rehder@genesis@... >>> " Jim Arceneaux " 8/20/2007 6:17 PM >>> Ok, but lets say this scenario: The pt. refuses stating she is ill. The physician has not assessed to determine the impact of the illness on her participation in therapy. He has opined, and I agree, that it should be the people that have assessed this condition that decide if it warrants an excuse from participation in therapy. Should the physician make a visit everytime a patient has a physical complaint and asks to forgo therapy? I'm not certain why it would not be sufficient that the whole team document that the patient is vomitting for example. Jim Arceneaux, LOTR Palestine Regional Rehabilitation Hospital Weiss wrote: The physiatrist really has to be on board with this and cannot be resistant to writing hold orders. We have been audited and are going through the process of denials right now, and our medical director is acutely aware of the importance of this. Someone might need to sit down with the doc (mabye the director of the unit?) and explain this, and how this can affect reimbursement, etc, and it is really not an option. Obviously the MD shouldn't be writing hold orders inappropriately, but if the pt cannot participate due to a (temporary) medical condition or has a stat test ordered, it has to be in there. No options! Sometimes we have encountered his partners who are covering for him and they are not as aware, and we simply explain the situation and often tell them what they should be documenting in their notes, because they don't understand the process. It has to be a team effort. Medicare really emphasizes this as well, so if the MD and the therapy team are not in sync, there will be problems if you are audited. Good luck! Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL >>> katesels@... 8/18/2007 3:06 PM >>> Ditto. Our doc is resistive to writing any hold and it puts us in a jam come weekends when we make up our time and with limited PT and OT staff. Katesel Strimbeck PT, MS Glenmont, NY Katesels@... Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Well put. Our understanding also is that dialysis is not a sufficient reason to miss three hours for the day. We've made the same efforts to work around Xray for tests, as well as dialysis, with difficulty but it's doable. Dan Gaskell Carilion Clinic Roanoke, VA --------------------------------- Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2007 Report Share Posted August 22, 2007 Availability 24 hours is one thing, but to expect the physician to have to document or write an order for when a pt. has a case of loose bowels is another. There is no requirement that the physician see the patient every day. Jim Arceneaux, LOTR Weiss wrote: I guess my response to this one would be.. yes, it's a burden, but it still is the responsibility of all involved to document. Let me tell you first-hand that the denials process is a much bigger burden!! At the very least, the physician needs to document in his/her note that the patient missed therapy for whatever reason -- even if there is no hold order and even if the MD didn't physically assess the pt on this. That would indicate communication with the therapy staff. Aren't your physicians seeing the patients daily anyway? There needs to be 24-hr availability of a physician for a pt to be on inpt rehab anyway, so they should at least be able to document! This is also not meant to address pt refusals -- I am talking about those cases where there is actually a medical reason that the pt cannot participate (low BP, blood sugar levels, awaiting results of x-rays to r/o fractures, etc etc). We emphasize to our patients from day one that they are expected to come to all of their therapy sessions, and general malaise, etc is not enough to not come down. We tell them that if they don't feel like coming, we will be making up the session later in the day, so if it is just a matter of pt refusals, this may help reduce that. This way they know they can't just " get out " of it, because we'll get them in later anyway. Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL 60426 >>> rehder@... 8/21/2007 8:36 AM >>> I would agree. To have the physician be expected to write a hold order every time a patient is not feeling well enough to participate is overkill and places an excessive burden on both the physician and staff. Carol Rehder, PT Manager, Physical Therapy Genesis Medical Center rehder@genesis@... >>> " Jim Arceneaux " 8/20/2007 6:17 PM >>> Ok, but lets say this scenario: The pt. refuses stating she is ill. The physician has not assessed to determine the impact of the illness on her participation in therapy. He has opined, and I agree, that it should be the people that have assessed this condition that decide if it warrants an excuse from participation in therapy. Should the physician make a visit everytime a patient has a physical complaint and asks to forgo therapy? I'm not certain why it would not be sufficient that the whole team document that the patient is vomitting for example. Jim Arceneaux, LOTR Palestine Regional Rehabilitation Hospital Weiss wrote: The physiatrist really has to be on board with this and cannot be resistant to writing hold orders. We have been audited and are going through the process of denials right now, and our medical director is acutely aware of the importance of this. Someone might need to sit down with the doc (mabye the director of the unit?) and explain this, and how this can affect reimbursement, etc, and it is really not an option. Obviously the MD shouldn't be writing hold orders inappropriately, but if the pt cannot participate due to a (temporary) medical condition or has a stat test ordered, it has to be in there. No options! Sometimes we have encountered his partners who are covering for him and they are not as aware, and we simply explain the situation and often tell them what they should be documenting in their notes, because they don't understand the process. It has to be a team effort. Medicare really emphasizes this as well, so if the MD and the therapy team are not in sync, there will be problems if you are audited. Good luck! Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL >>> katesels@... 8/18/2007 3:06 PM >>> Ditto. Our doc is resistive to writing any hold and it puts us in a jam come weekends when we make up our time and with limited PT and OT staff. Katesel Strimbeck PT, MS Glenmont, NY Katesels@... Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Well put. Our understanding also is that dialysis is not a sufficient reason to miss three hours for the day. We've made the same efforts to work around Xray for tests, as well as dialysis, with difficulty but it's doable. Dan Gaskell Carilion Clinic Roanoke, VA --------------------------------- Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2007 Report Share Posted August 23, 2007 This discussion is becoming quite an argument, I feel. Don't forget, neither myself or the others came up with these rules -- I feel they are unreasonable as well, so don't shoot the messengers. That said -- I will reiterate that while the MD may not have to write hold orders for every little thing, they should still be documenting it in their notes, and why a patient missed 3 hours that day! And, I won't say that those orders need to be written, but in the best case scenario, they would be. I cannot predict what each FI would do in an audit, so it's best to cover yourself as well as you can. Also, I guess I would finish by saying that you can't kill yourself trying to be responsible for what the MD writes. Just make sure the therapists are documenting the interdisciplinary communication. But you need to educate the docs on what needs to be there. I suppose we are lucky in our facility in that our MD's office is on the rehab unit, and at least one of them is always around. When they aren't here in the evening, the pt isn't getting therapy anyway. Jen Weiss, PT >>> jimpalestine@... 8/22/2007 6:31 PM >>> Availability 24 hours is one thing, but to expect the physician to have to document or write an order for when a pt. has a case of loose bowels is another. There is no requirement that the physician see the patient every day. Jim Arceneaux, LOTR Weiss wrote: I guess my response to this one would be.. yes, it's a burden, but it still is the responsibility of all involved to document. Let me tell you first-hand that the denials process is a much bigger burden!! At the very least, the physician needs to document in his/her note that the patient missed therapy for whatever reason -- even if there is no hold order and even if the MD didn't physically assess the pt on this. That would indicate communication with the therapy staff. Aren't your physicians seeing the patients daily anyway? There needs to be 24-hr availability of a physician for a pt to be on inpt rehab anyway, so they should at least be able to document! This is also not meant to address pt refusals -- I am talking about those cases where there is actually a medical reason that the pt cannot participate (low BP, blood sugar levels, awaiting results of x-rays to r/o fractures, etc etc). We emphasize to our patients from day one that they are expected to come to all of their therapy sessions, and general malaise, etc is not enough to not come down. We tell them that if they don't feel like coming, we will be making up the session later in the day, so if it is just a matter of pt refusals, this may help reduce that. This way they know they can't just " get out " of it, because we'll get them in later anyway. Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL 60426 >>> rehder@... 8/21/2007 8:36 AM >>> I would agree. To have the physician be expected to write a hold order every time a patient is not feeling well enough to participate is overkill and places an excessive burden on both the physician and staff. Carol Rehder, PT Manager, Physical Therapy Genesis Medical Center rehder@genesis@... >>> " Jim Arceneaux " 8/20/2007 6:17 PM >>> Ok, but lets say this scenario: The pt. refuses stating she is ill. The physician has not assessed to determine the impact of the illness on her participation in therapy. He has opined, and I agree, that it should be the people that have assessed this condition that decide if it warrants an excuse from participation in therapy. Should the physician make a visit everytime a patient has a physical complaint and asks to forgo therapy? I'm not certain why it would not be sufficient that the whole team document that the patient is vomitting for example. Jim Arceneaux, LOTR Palestine Regional Rehabilitation Hospital Weiss wrote: The physiatrist really has to be on board with this and cannot be resistant to writing hold orders. We have been audited and are going through the process of denials right now, and our medical director is acutely aware of the importance of this. Someone might need to sit down with the doc (mabye the director of the unit?) and explain this, and how this can affect reimbursement, etc, and it is really not an option. Obviously the MD shouldn't be writing hold orders inappropriately, but if the pt cannot participate due to a (temporary) medical condition or has a stat test ordered, it has to be in there. No options! Sometimes we have encountered his partners who are covering for him and they are not as aware, and we simply explain the situation and often tell them what they should be documenting in their notes, because they don't understand the process. It has to be a team effort. Medicare really emphasizes this as well, so if the MD and the therapy team are not in sync, there will be problems if you are audited. Good luck! Weiss, PT Inpatient Rehab Coordinator Ingalls Memorial Hospital Harvey, IL >>> katesels@... 8/18/2007 3:06 PM >>> Ditto. Our doc is resistive to writing any hold and it puts us in a jam come weekends when we make up our time and with limited PT and OT staff. Katesel Strimbeck PT, MS Glenmont, NY Katesels@... Re: Inpatient Rehab. 3 hours Well put. Our understanding also is that dialysis is not a sufficient reason to miss three hours for the day. We've made the same efforts to work around Xray for tests, as well as dialysis, with difficulty but it's doable. Dan Gaskell Carilion Clinic Roanoke, VA --------------------------------- Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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