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deleted185747
Who really controls PT and OT? As a physiatrist I write for the needed therapy and a range for the number of visits as well as what needs to be primarily focused on. I am aware that any doctor can write for physical therapy or occupational therapy.
I was talking with someone who opened a home health company and coordinates patients who need therapy with the therapists who can provide the service. The people running the company push the therapists to extend and provide more than is needed and will brainstorm together about ways to extend the number of therapy sessions. This has the feel of an illegal operation and possibly even medicare fraud, but I don't really know for sure. They even brag about how good they are and that they use "unconventional" methods for treating their patients. Like I'm supposed to get excited about how well unconventional treatments work or something???
My question is how are these people policed? Therapists have a financial incentive to extend therapy visits. They even describe home health nurses telling patients which pills to take when multiple doctors prescribe pain medications and the patient does not know which pills ought to be taken. Are therapists allowed to do unconventional treatments? Do they have community standards as doctors do? If you send your patient to a physical therapist do you want that physical therapist telling your patient to take certain herbs and neutraceuticals? We doctors know the most (at least about conventional treatments, medications and disease) and some therapist who proclaims how good their treatment is should be stopped because even doctors cannot make guarantees or promises that anything will work. That is the reality. Yet I continue to ramble...
I was talking with someone who opened a home health company and coordinates patients who need therapy with the therapists who can provide the service. The people running the company push the therapists to extend and provide more than is needed and will brainstorm together about ways to extend the number of therapy sessions. This has the feel of an illegal operation and possibly even medicare fraud, but I don't really know for sure. They even brag about how good they are and that they use "unconventional" methods for treating their patients. Like I'm supposed to get excited about how well unconventional treatments work or something???
My question is how are these people policed? Therapists have a financial incentive to extend therapy visits. They even describe home health nurses telling patients which pills to take when multiple doctors prescribe pain medications and the patient does not know which pills ought to be taken. Are therapists allowed to do unconventional treatments? Do they have community standards as doctors do? If you send your patient to a physical therapist do you want that physical therapist telling your patient to take certain herbs and neutraceuticals? We doctors know the most (at least about conventional treatments, medications and disease) and some therapist who proclaims how good their treatment is should be stopped because even doctors cannot make guarantees or promises that anything will work. That is the reality. Yet I continue to ramble...