Are you adding NCV to your chiropractic practice? Because no physician who underwent the standard 6 months to a year of residency/fellowship training to perform NCV/EMGs would ask that question. And physicians referring patients out for NCV/EMGs would rely on the physician performing that study to make that determination.
You're doing your patients a disservice to send them to a tech for a NCV if the tech can't recognize when the NCV are inadequate and then perform the EMG right then if needed. That's why NCV/EMGs are best performed by physicians with the standard minimum of 200elecrodiagnostic evals during their residency training.
Having a tech come to your office to do NCV is moneygrubbing plain and simple
I appreciate that you're asking, not just going forward with this.
NCV companies love to visit the offices of primary care doctors offices and chiropractors and try to sell them a NCV machine and talk about how much money you'll make from NCV.
However, they gloss over the fact the NCV have to be reviewed by an MD to be legally billed. They also gloss over the fact that the because the NCV techs can't do EMG, that people get misdiagnosed all the time with these tech-only NCV setups.
It's like needing a cardiology workup and your initial consulation is with a cardiology PA when you need the complete expertise of the cardiologist. If it was my heart, I'd want to see the cardiologist.
To continue with this discussion:
Are these machines "non-needle"? What information do they actually provide? Is there any clinical utility?
A family practice doc called the office yesterday and was asking if we do in-office "emg" type testing. He told the staff that these new machines do not use needles and thus are much more comfortable for patients. This doc is a "businessman". It was unclear whether he is selling, buying, or in cahoots with the local distributor.
Can any of you provide info/reference about this? I want to be appropriately informed. thanks. I have always referred patients to local neurologists for emg testing when I felt it was appropriate. thanks
I've also done medico-legal reviews/IME's on cases of EDX done by non-neuro/physiatry. I always notify state medical boards and the AANEM. These practitioners need to be shut down.
I've also done medico-legal reviews/IME's on cases of EDX done by non-neuro/physiatry. I always notify state medical boards and the AANEM. These practitioners need to be shut down.
I'm guessing the way around Board problems is that they have the techs come in and do the study, then a neuro or physiatrist reads/interprets off-site. It's not the off-site part that concerns me, but that there's no EMG component. From what I'm gathering in this thread, it is not appropriate to do just an NCV without at least having the option of adding the EMG. Do I have that correct?
1. It is not appropriate to do NCV without EMG, without mitigating circumstances.
2. It is not appropriate for a tech to do a study and an MD to interpret the study. I did that for a company in residency/fellowship- te quality of the data obtained was clinically useless.
NCV is merely an electrophysiologic extension of the exam. Watch someone test motor strength, sensation, reflexes, provocative maneuvers and then write the H&P. To have any value, the test must be done from start to finish by an appropriately trained MD/DO.
Thanks for the responses. Regarding point #2, aren't techs often, or at least sometimes, the ones doing the NCV part of the EMG/NCV? It's not uncommon for a patient to mention that a tech did the NCV then the doc came in and did the EMG.
I appreciate the clarification y'all have given on this issue. I knew the sales rep's offer didn't sound quite right.
Here is my opinion on this subject as someone who has done 2000+ electrodiagnostic studies.
1. Referring providers often do not know what NCS and EMG are, or how they are used. They just think the patient may need some type of electrodiagnostic testing. I have tried to educate many PCPs, and some get it, some don't.
2. Data obtained by a tech and sent out for an outside reading is a money grab with no concern for appropriate patient care. I called out a PCP one time who was doing this.
3. When the history and exam is performed by a physiatrist or neurologist, and the nerve conduction studies are obtained by the physician, it is reasonable in many cases to just do the nerve conduction studies (without doing EMG). We can discuss this more if needed. What is NOT okay, is for the patient to be sent for an electrodiagnostic test, and to have them get NCS done by a tech, with no possibility for getting EMG. Only after talking to the patient and doing a physical exam do I determine exactly what studies need to be performed.
I've worked with 2 insurance companies, an lmrp, and a review company to assist in policy and prosecution. Ncv without emg is typically not paid for unless precert by MD or DO. FP docs writing reports have been fined and monies needed to be returned. Licensure issues and medical boards gave also taken action.
I believe there is a FP doctor in NYC who billed medicare over 1 Million last year. She was audited. It appears she was billing a lot of these NCV w/o any training or evidence of certifications. If you can imagine, she will go down very quickly....
Example: Patient sent for CTS screen for N&T in hand. Results come back for moderate CTS with demyelinating/axonal features. Call and ask for waveforms to be sent and they reveal a positive deflection before the actual waveform on the motor study and what is likely submaximal stim. 0/2 by the tech, and the conclusion was clearly cut/paste by tech. Signed off by FP doc.
To continue with this discussion:
Are these machines "non-needle"? What information do they actually provide? Is there any clinical utility?
A family practice doc called the office yesterday and was asking if we do in-office "emg" type testing. He told the staff that these new machines do not use needles and thus are much more comfortable for patients. This doc is a "businessman". It was unclear whether he is selling, buying, or in cahoots with the local distributor.
Can any of you provide info/reference about this? I want to be appropriately informed. thanks. I have always referred patients to local neurologists for emg testing when I felt it was appropriate. thanks
1. It is not appropriate to do NCV without EMG, without mitigating circumstances.
2. It is not appropriate for a tech to do a study and an MD to interpret the study. I did that for a company in residency/fellowship- te quality of the data obtained was clinically useless.
NCV is merely an electrophysiologic extension of the exam. Watch someone test motor strength, sensation, reflexes, provocative maneuvers and then write the H&P. To have any value, the test must be done from start to finish by an appropriately trained MD/DO.
I appreciate that you're asking, not just going forward with this.
NCV companies love to visit the offices of primary care doctors offices and chiropractors and try to sell them a NCV machine and talk about how much money you'll make from NCV.
However, they gloss over the fact the NCV have to be reviewed by an MD to be legally billed. They also gloss over the fact that the because the NCV techs can't do EMG, that people get misdiagnosed all the time with these tech-only NCV setups.
It's like needing a cardiology workup and your initial consulation is with a cardiology PA when you need the complete expertise of the cardiologist. If it was my heart, I'd want to see the cardiologist.
We are trained to give as much quality care as MD's and DO's are.
Midlevels should never be doing solo initial consults on any patients particularly in specialty practices. Follow-ups and many other clinical services can be treated by PAs/NPs, but you're demonstrating extreme midlevel delusion to think you can do a cardiology consult on a complicated patient as well as a board certified cardiologist.needing a cardiology workup and your initial consolation is with a cardiology PA when you need the complete expertise of the cardiologist.
That's f#%king ridiculous !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
If your quoted statement were true, then the insurance companies wouldn't contract with any MD/DOs and just work with PA/NPs (at lower pay)
How the hell can 2 years of training at 40-50hrs/week plus a year or two of gleaning occasional tidbits working for a physician compare to
4years at 60-80hrs/week during med school and 6 years of residency/fellowship at 90hrs/week?
Completely different level of understanding.
PAs and NPs can be valuable members of a health care team, but it is in a supporting role.
Midlevels should never be doing solo initial consults on any patients particularly in specialty practices. Follow-ups and many other clinical services can be treated by PAs/NPs, but you're demonstrating extreme midlevel delusion to think you can do a cardiology consult on a complicated patient as well as a board certified cardiologist.
From your title, I suspect you're a primary care PA. Primary care evals of URIs, UTIs, HTN, and DM probably seem straightforward after a few years of doing them. That is a different universe from specialty care and the thousands of residency/fellowship hours spent evaluating and studying obscure pathology.
Midlevels can deliver good care in the right situations but don't delude yourself that you're a physician. If you want to be equal to a physician, don't bitch about it on an internet forum, go to medical school!
The arrogance and delusions of grandeur of the PAs will be their undoing. They are NOT capable of providing the same care as a MD/DO. But the post here helped me make up my mind.....need to hire a NP or PA at this time. I have a PA candidate for the job that is well trained and would make an excellent addition to my practice, but after the post above by the PA, I will from now on avoid PAs in my practice. Thanks for helping me clarify PA attitudes.
i have found that PAs are trained to think more like physicians, and therefore more likely to think of THEMSELVES as physicians. NPs have their core background in nursing, so there seems to be more of an acknowledgement of their role. pick your poison.
A PA in a town nearby was listed under the website section entitled "Our Physicians" and not given any other designation. He called himself "doctor" and all the patients thought he was a doctor.
On second throught perhaps I should not hire anyone.
Physician Assistants play an important role in healthcare delivery but there is a reason they must work under the supervision of a physician within the confines of the Board of Medicine (I'm not getting into the whole independent CRNA under Board of Nursing problem)...I'm going to assume you mis-typed when you made some of those statements assuming equal competency to a board-certified specialist because it does take away from your credibility...BTW, if I were you, I would change my monicker from PCP11 to PCPA11.
Hey guys let me introduce myself. I am a physician assistant. Just to reply to bedrock's comment. I find your comment somewhat discriminating . I hope you guys get the chance to work next to a PA in your future careers. We are trained to give as much quality care as MD's and DO's are. Just like everyone in this field, with practice we can be awesome practitioners. What you are saying is just like discriminating against an MD who has just began to do his residency/fellowship stating that this person would never be able to examine, diagnose, and treat. I hope you guys can change your mindset, because you will be working along PA's in your careers, who can definitely make your practices stronger... just saying.
With this thought in mind just wanted to ask you a quick question...
now... could someone please answer my questions about NCV's for diabetic neuropathy??? thanks!! Believe me, I just want to learn from you guys... I did not join this forum to argue about titles and training.
In Illinois PA's are regulated by the medical board. NP's by the nursing board. Had a group of independant CRNA's in our area practicing Interventional pain , nursing board not concerned. Doubt it would happen with a PA.
PCP11,
What exactly did think was going to happen when the first 7-8 sentences you posted on a forum for pain physicians were disparaging comments about physician attitudes towards PAs and only the last sentence was a medical question?
You're playing nice now, because you want an answer to your question, but 90% of your first post on this board was complaining about physician attitudes towards PAs. This is the very concern than many physicians have about midlevels. That they appear all sugar and sweet when they want an easy answer (without looking it up yourself) that we've learned through thousands of hours of reading and clinical experience, but inwardly thinking to themselves "I'm just as good at this as he is"
I believe PAs/NPs can be worthwhile members of various health care teams, but your words still reinforce my reservations about hiring a PA/NP for my practice.
ill take it one step further, are PAs and NPs ALLOWED on this forum? i though this was for physicians...and when i mean physician i mean those with MD/DO trainining