What's in a name? and does it matter?

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jonnylingo

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another clinic with "Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation" plastered all over, but no Physiatrists on staff. Is it worth the time to push AAPMR and governing bodies to protect "our" name, or is the effort futile?

One such effort: In Washington state, L&I forms used by PTs are labeled "Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation". Some Physiatrist are leading the charge to have Washington State L&I recognize our specialty as the only entity to use this title.

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So I sit on the specialty brand committee and the issue is that the words physical medicine and separately Rehabiliation are not unique and are descriptors. Physiatrist is correct unique Rehabiliation doctor term. Sort of like Eye doctor could be optho or optometry
 
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At my core rotation site (MS4 doing PM&R), our "PM&R" department is an NP who refers to an IR guy for pain procedures. No physiatrist or pain anes docs on site in 2+ years.
 
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another clinic with "Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation" plastered all over, but no Physiatrists on staff. Is it worth the time to push AAPMR and governing bodies to protect "our" name, or is the effort futile?

One such effort: In Washington state, L&I forms used by PTs are labeled "Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation". Some Physiatrist are leading the charge to have Washington State L&I recognize our specialty as the only entity to use this title.

PM&R was the dream of the 1980s ---round on some THA/TKA's in the AM, write PT/OT orders, bang out a few consults and then head to the clinic in the PM and see some amputees, do some non-image guided joint injections for OA and "motor point" injections for spasticity, sign a few handicap placards and wheelchair prescriptions, do a few EMG's and disability evals and get up and do it all over again.

Now every Noctor and Chiro is doing "Physical Medicine."
 
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Won’t hurt to ask. Aapmr has never been effective. Despite some excellent staffers.
they did a good job campaigning against midlevel rights to run inpatient rehab -- but agree, they need to be much better overall.
 
PM&R was the dream of the 1980s ---round on some THA/TKA's in the AM, write PT/OT orders, bang out a few consults and then head to the clinic in the PM and see some amputees, do some non-image guided joint injections for OA and "motor point" injections for spasticity, sign a few handicap placards and wheelchair prescriptions, do a few EMG's and disability evals and get up and do it all over again.

Now every Noctor and Chiro is doing "Physical Medicine."

and Pain was the dream of the '90s?

What's the dream of the 2020s (besides passive income and retire)?
 
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and Pain was the dream of the '90s?

What's the dream of the 2020s (besides passive income and retire)?

The 2020s will go down as the decade of innovation between industry partners and forwarding looking pain surgeons who together end the scourge of Modic-related back pain and the cluneal neuralgia epidemic.
 
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Full disclosure: I am in a fairly rural area with no PM&R doc for an hour's drive, so I did set up this rotation with the NP myself to see the general flow of a PM&R office. I actually did learn quite a bit, but many things seemed... odd. One example- Elderly pt fell and had X-ray in ER 2w prior to her appt. with us. X-ray showed incidental knee OA, which was completely asymptomatic, not related at all to her chief complaint our office. She was told that she would need to get the knee replaced soon because the OA was so bad that it was "bone on bone." We sent her to ortho based 100% on imaging.

Pretty sure that's not the way many of you would have handled that. Plenty of other strange things happened, but I digress
 
Full disclosure: I am in a fairly rural area with no PM&R doc for an hour's drive, so I did set up this rotation with the NP myself to see the general flow of a PM&R office. I actually did learn quite a bit, but many things seemed... odd. One example- Elderly pt fell and had X-ray in ER 2w prior to her appt. with us. X-ray showed incidental knee OA, which was completely asymptomatic, not related at all to her chief complaint our office. She was told that she would need to get the knee replaced soon because the OA was so bad that it was "bone on bone." We sent her to ortho based 100% on imaging.

Pretty sure that's not the way many of you would have handled that. Plenty of other strange things happened, but I digress
NP are referral coordinators which is why hospitals love them. They are cheap to pay but order a million films, any thing mentioned equals referral to that specialist
 
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NP are referral coordinators which is why hospitals love them. They are cheap to pay but order a million films, any thing mentioned equals referral to that specialist
Someone smarter than me could create an artificially not-so-intelligent program where a patient could insert symptoms into an app, which led to follow-up questions and automatically sent orders for labs/imaging/referrals.

If they can check themselves out at Walmart, they could get get x-rays pointed at the right part of their body, right??

I just saw a patient with two months of "hip" and leg pain described as tingling. She's s/p hip films, then pelvis CT, then MR pelvis. She had some labral changes, so the hip surgeon got consulted. He sent her to me for lumbar radic. :smack:
 
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Won’t hurt to ask. Aapmr has never been effective. Despite some excellent staffers.
Get the fat cats at the abpmr

Tell them there’s money hidden in there somewhere. Shouldn’t the board be protecting our licenses and good name?

Tho they prefer the easier money from extorting physicians
 
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“my chiro said he couldn’t believe I was still able to stand. With 3 weekly adjustments I should be able to walk just as well as I walked into the office”
 
“my chiro said he couldn’t believe I was still able to stand. With 3 weekly adjustments I should be able to walk just as well as I walked into the office”
Where was subluxation/rib out? One good neck crack to help that piriformis syndrome seen on X-ray
 
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