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The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

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Page 1: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

The PT/PTA RelationshipPTA Professional Issues

Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Page 2: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

ObjectivesO Define the differences in the roles of

the PT/PTAO Discuss how roles apply in multiple

settingsO Describe ways by which the

parameters of your scope of practice may be tested

O Discuss your relationships with PTs in your clinical experiences

Page 3: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Instructor: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

O From South Bend, INO Undergrad at Howard University in

Washington, DCO DPT at Northwestern UniversityO Have worked in outpatient orthopedic,

acute, subacute, inpatient rehab, wound care, and developmental disabilities

O Married to QuintinO Likes to sing, travel, dance, and read

(especially historical fiction)

Page 4: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

MethodsO Discussion

O Role play

O Case studies

O Question and answer

Page 5: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

APTA says(In official document HOD P06-01-18-19)

O The American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) is committed to promoting the physical therapist as the professional practitioner of physical therapy and promoting the physical therapist assistant as the only individual who assists the physical therapist in the provision of selected physical therapy interventions. APTA is further committed to incorporating this concept into all Association policies, positions, and program activities, wherever applicable.

O Professional: The term “professional,” when used in reference to physical therapy services, denotes the physical therapist.

Page 6: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

APTA also says(In official document HOD P06-01-18-19)

The physical therapist assistant is an educated individual who works under the direction and supervision of a physical therapist. The physical therapist assistant is the only individual who assists the physical therapist in accordance with APTA’s policies and positions in the delivery of selected physical therapy interventions. The physical therapist assistant is a graduate of a physical therapist assistant education program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education.

Page 7: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

PTA vs. PTPTA PT

O Successfully complete 2 years or 5 semesters associates degree

O Pass national exam for license/certification

O Work under the direction of a PT

O Measure changes in patient performance

O Successfully complete 6-7 years of undergrad/graduate coursework

O Pass national exam for license

O Evaluate patients in order to establish a plan of care according to MD prescription

O Periodically re-assess patient progress to advance plan of care

Page 8: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

PTA vs. PTPTA PT

O Instruct patients in exercise and document patient response

O Utilize procedural interventions, data collection and effective communication to carry out the established plan of care

O Must communicate with supervising physical therapist that modifications to plan of care are necessary

O Select and direct interventions to be carried out by PTAs

O Integrate examination, evaluation, diagnosis, prognosis, and intervention for optimal outcomes

O May modify plan of care as needed, with MD approval in some cases

Page 9: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

PTA vs. PTPTA PT

O Must adhere to the APTA PTA Code of Conduct

O Must adhere to the APTA PT Code of Conduct

THESE ARE VIRTUALLY IDENTICAL

Page 10: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

The difference is….

Ethical Standard number

Page 11: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

The PTA is allowed to:O Add/modify appropriate

interventionsO Collect data, i.e. objective measuresO Communicate with the health care

team for optimal outcomes

Page 12: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

APTA says(In official document Amended HOD P06-00-20-05)

The physical therapist’s scope of practice as defined by the American Physical Therapy Association Guide to Physical Therapist Practice includes interventions performed by physical therapists. These interventions include procedures performed exclusively by physical therapists and selected interventions that can be performed by the physical therapist assistant under the direction and supervision of the physical therapist. Interventions that require immediate and continuous examination and evaluation throughout the intervention are performed exclusively by the physical therapist. Such procedural interventions within the scope of physical therapist practice that are performed exclusively by the physical therapist include, but are not limited to, spinal and peripheral joint mobilization/manipulation, which are components of manual therapy, and sharp selective debridement, which is a component of wound management.

Page 13: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Supervision RequirementsIn order to carry out most selected

interventions, the APTA says that GENERAL SUPERVISON is required.

WHAT IS THAT???? That means the PT must be available by phone

Page 14: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Where are PTAs working?

Page 15: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Hospital owned outpatient clinic

Page 16: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Physical therapist owned outpatient clinic

Page 17: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Skilled nursing facility/physical therapy

clinic

Page 18: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Acute care physical therapy

Page 19: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Home health agency

Page 20: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Case 1: Free-Standing OP PT clinic

Page 21: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

You are working in a free-standing outpatient clinic. You have ten patients to see in your 8 hour work day and you’ve scheduled it out perfectly so that you can head to Chipoltle for lunch. Suddenly, your PT partner has to leave to pick up his daughter from school. Five of your ten patients have Medicare as their primary insurance. How should you adjust your plan?

Case 1: OP clinic

Page 22: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

In order to bill Medicare for your services, you must have a licensed physical therapist on-site and available to provide immediate assistance.

Possible response:

Page 23: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Case 2: Home Health Agency

Page 24: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

You are treating a patient at 21 Jump Street who had a total knee replacement 10 days ago. He had 90 degrees of knee flexion according to the evaluation conducted 2 days ago, he’s been doing LAQs, and he is now ready for more exercise. Can you give him a HEP? What are you going to tell the supervising PT?

Case 2 HHA

Page 25: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

You can add more exercises for the patient’s home exercise program, as long as the PT plan of care states strengthening and ROM are to be added. Let the PT know how the patient responds to the new exercises in your assessment.

Possible response:

Page 26: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Please READ:O Dreeben page 24

O Curtis – Chapter 1

O “So Close and Yet So Far”- Nancy R. Kirsch, PT, DPT, PhD

Page 27: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

Questions?

Comments?

Concerns?QUESTIONS????

Page 28: The PT/PTA Relationship PTA Professional Issues Presenter: L. Kay Garrison, PT, DPT

ReferencesO Thompson, Terri N. (2007). Guideline for

Visits and PTA Supervision [Electronic version]. Advance for Physical Therapy and Rehab Medicine, Vol. 18, Issue 18, page 67.

O American Physical Therapy Association. (2010, October 05). PT/PTA Teamwork: Models in Delivery of Care, Retrieved December 10, 2010 from http://www.apta.org/.