Just wondering about your opinion on this. I'm a little concerned myself to tell you the truth. I've been looking at pursuing a career in PT. In the end I am looking at around 150k of debt if I do this. The loan calculator says monthly payments will be around 1750k a month. This is ~40% of earnings going on the assumption of making 55k a year before taxes. So the bottom line is looking like my current living situation which is pretty much "survival mode" will be continued even after I start my professional work.
So I have many questions. The vision of the APTA is that 2020 all PT work will be done by DPTs. The term "vision" is what bothers me. It's not necessarily a "mandate." Currently around 8% of practicing PTs are actually DPTs (http://www.apta.org/AM/Template.cfm...MPLATE=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm&CONTENTID=41545) The other 90% aren't DPTs.
Now there is a transition program which is "recommended." The APTA wants currently practicing PTs to participate to help establish more credibility among the PT profession. This of course costs money and resources. What if PT professionals choose not to do this?
So I guess the big question is... Is the DPT going to make the impact that the APTA is hoping (which is to create more "direct access" as well as autonomy for the PT)? Do currently practicing PTs believe it will? I've heard some say that the DPT is really just for "fluff." I guess to try and establish more credibility among the healthcare profession.
Well this is all nice but the bottom line is compensation is the same. Which an extra year of school another 25k is added to the total amount of debt to be paid.
My concern is this... I invest in the DPT program, inherit 150k of debt, than when the "vision" doesn't go as planned; the DPT is abandoned and essentially useless. It seems to me that this is all just an experiment. What do you think? Is a PT that has a DPT really that much better/more knowledgeable than a PT that has a Masters or even Bachelor's education? Please be honest. Thank you for your help.
So I have many questions. The vision of the APTA is that 2020 all PT work will be done by DPTs. The term "vision" is what bothers me. It's not necessarily a "mandate." Currently around 8% of practicing PTs are actually DPTs (http://www.apta.org/AM/Template.cfm...MPLATE=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm&CONTENTID=41545) The other 90% aren't DPTs.
Now there is a transition program which is "recommended." The APTA wants currently practicing PTs to participate to help establish more credibility among the PT profession. This of course costs money and resources. What if PT professionals choose not to do this?
So I guess the big question is... Is the DPT going to make the impact that the APTA is hoping (which is to create more "direct access" as well as autonomy for the PT)? Do currently practicing PTs believe it will? I've heard some say that the DPT is really just for "fluff." I guess to try and establish more credibility among the healthcare profession.
Well this is all nice but the bottom line is compensation is the same. Which an extra year of school another 25k is added to the total amount of debt to be paid.
My concern is this... I invest in the DPT program, inherit 150k of debt, than when the "vision" doesn't go as planned; the DPT is abandoned and essentially useless. It seems to me that this is all just an experiment. What do you think? Is a PT that has a DPT really that much better/more knowledgeable than a PT that has a Masters or even Bachelor's education? Please be honest. Thank you for your help.