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Provison of Medical Administration. PO 001.02. Learning Objectives. The Physical Therapist Technician will understand and be able to perform the following medical administrative tasks: Receive a patient on arrival Create patient charts Chart documentation Complete post-treatment procedures.
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Provison of Medical Administration PO 001.02
Learning Objectives • The Physical Therapist Technician will understand and be able to perform the following medical administrative tasks: • Receive a patient on arrival • Create patient charts • Chart documentation • Complete post-treatment procedures
Continued . . . • PTTs will also be able to explain and apply: • The concept of informed consent and it’s importance • The use of outcome measures • The prioritization of patient referrals to PT • Referral paperwork for required orthoses or clinic transfers • Patient discharges accordingly
Informed Consent • Consent by a patient to undergo or participate in a medical treatment after the patient understands the risks involved • Informed consent allows the patient to participate in choices about their health care • In order for the patient's consent to be valid, they must be considered competent to make the decision at hand and consent must be voluntary
Elements of Informed Consent • It is generally accepted that complete informed consent includes a discussion of the following elements: • The nature of the decision/procedure • Reasonable alternatives to the proposed intervention • The relevant risks, benefits, and uncertainties related to each alternative • Assessment of patient understanding • The acceptance of the intervention by the patient
WCPT and Informed Consent • WCPT requires that PTs shall inform the patient/client verbally, and where required, in writing of the nature, expected duration and cost of intervention/treatment prior to the performance of such activities • The physical therapist shall document in the clinical notes when consent is received, implied or expressed. Once consent has been received, the intervention/treatment plan may be instituted
Patient Informed Consent • Patients, wherever possible, are given information as to the PT treatments proposed, so that the patient is: • Aware of the findings of the examination/assessment • Given an opportunity to ask questions and discuss with the PTT the preferred interventions/treatments, including any significant side effects
Continued . . . • Given the opportunity to decline particular modalities in the plan of intervention/treatment • Given the opportunity to discontinue intervention/treatment • Encouraged to be involved in the examination/assessment process and to volunteer information that may have a bearing on the physical therapy program
What Happens if the Patient Does Not Give Informed Consent? • If after the PTT describes the intended treatment and the patient decides that they are not comfortable or do not want that specific treatment then: • The patient is not treated • The PTT can come up with an alternative treatment plan to present to the patient • The refusal of treatment needs to be recorded in the patient’s chart
PT Referral Process • Referrals to the physical therapy department will come from a doctor • The patient will arrive at the PT department with their referral paperwork • The patient will then either be seen immediately if a senior PT tech is available or;
PT Referral Process Continued . . . • The patient will be assigned a priority and an appointment will be scheduled accordingly • The initial assessments of patients will be carried out by a senior PT tech • After a treatment plan is prescribed by the senior PTT, the patient will be given to a junior PTT to conduct the treatment
Initial Assessment Process • When a patient presents for an initial assessment, the PT tech is responsible for the following: • Accepting referral paperwork • Assigning a priority to the patient • Creating a patient chart • Selecting the appropriate outcome measure tool • Scheduling the appointment • Logging the patient into the referral log book • Have the patient complete the appropriate baseline function assessment
Referral Admission Book • When patients arrive to the PT department with a referral form, the PTT tech that accepts the paperwork needs to record the patient’s information in the admission book • This is a document that is held in the PT department that is used to keep record of the patients and services provided • It is important to filled out the admission book for all patients to ensure there is an accurate reflection of the case load at the PT department
General MSK Screening • Upon presentation of a new PT referral, the PTT should ensure that the patient is screened for general musculoskeletal conditions • This can be done with a generic form given to all patients when the first arrive to the PT department • This form should be included in the patient’s chart and accessible for the PTT who will verify the patient doesn’t have any general contraindications
Priority System • Although the length of time a member has experienced symptoms serves as a biological marker or reference point, the severity and the nature of symptoms determine the clinical status and the priority level • Important to assign all patients the appropriate priority to ensure care is given to those most in need
Acute (Priority 1) • Symptoms have been present for less than 10 days, and if the patient is experiencing at least five of these six conditions: • Neurological symptoms • Severe pain (8-10 NRS) • Not able to work • Difficulty performing activities of daily living • Unable to participate in physical training • Altered sleeping patterns due to pain • In such a case, an appointment must be scheduled within two working days • A member who is to be deployed or is post-casting or post-surgery, must be considered a priority one
Sub-acute (Priority 2) • Symptoms have been present for 10 days to seven weeks, and the patient is experiencing at least four of these five conditions: • Neurological symptoms • Moderate pain (5-7 NRS) • Able to work with restrictions • Able to perform activities of daily living • Able to participate in limited physical training • In such a case, an appointment must be scheduled within ten days
Chronic (Priority 3) • Symptoms have been present for more than seven weeks, and if the patient is experiencing at least three of these four conditions: • No neurological symptoms • Minor pain (0-4 NRS) • Able to work without restrictions • Able to participate in unrestricted physical training • In such a case, an appointment must be scheduled within four weeks
Medical Emergency • When symptoms are of sufficient severity that the patient may need to be seen immediately by the physiotherapist • For this to occur, the referring practitioner should contact the physiotherapy department directly to discuss the case with the senior physical therapist technician
Operational Priority • When a member requires physiotherapy services prior to operational deployment • The appropriate clinical priority (1, 2 or 3) must be given, but due to operational considerations, increased scheduling priority may be given
PT Scheduling • Scheduling is essential to maintain client flow and departmental organization • Patient appointments need to be recorded either electronically or on a calendar/log book • The schedule should be organized by day, time and for each PTT • More time is required for an initial assessment than a follow-up appointments: • Initial assessments (I/A) = 60 mins • Follow-ups(F/U) = 30 mins
Initial Assessments • Once the patient has been given an initial assessment appointment, they will be seen for an evaluation by the senior PTT • A detailed initial assessment will be conducted to evaluate the patient’s current status and determine the treatment plan • After, the senior PTT will complete a treatment plan form and will pass the patient on to a junior PTT to carry out the treatment
Charting • Charting is the task of creating a patient’s medical record • Contains information regarding the patient’s previous and current medical conditions and treatment • Begins when the patient arrives at the healthcare facility, at which time the patient’s name, address and other information is registered into the admission book and chart
General Charting Guidelines • Records must be legible, accurate, and appropriate • Must be permanent ink and include original signatures, printed names and date • A log of all PTTs signatures and initials should be maintained for cross reference purposes • All errors must be crossed out with a single line • They should be initialized by the PTT that made the error and amendment
“SOAPIE” Charting • A problem-oriented charting system • Begins with the patient’s medical history and assessment • A problem list is created based on the patient’s assessment by the senior PT tech, and a care plan is developed that details how the PTT is going to address each problem • Progress notes are written after each treatment session and at discharge
SOAPIE • Information is entered into the chart using SOAPIE format: • Subjective findings • Objective findings • Assessment data • Plan • Intervention • Evaluation
S-Subjective Data • This is information that the patient tells you about their condition • The patient’s chief complaint • Why they are getting PT? • Often refers to where, when and how much pain the patient is suffering • Examples: • S:"I have a 10 out of 10 pain level “ • S: “I get pain in my left knee when I go up the stairs”
Chief Complaint • The symptom or group of symptoms which cause the patient to seek medical attention • The chief complaint drives the exam • This information is recorded as part of the subjective exam (Under the “S”) • Usually written in the patient's own words or in the words of a caregiver
O- Objective Data • This is the information that is based on clinical examination or testing • Quantifiable or measurable data • Includes information such as: • ROM • Strength testing • Swelling or girth measurements • Functional movements • Outcome measures/tests
A- Assessment Data • Includes your conclusion based on subjective and objective data: • Is the patient better, worse or no different? • It will include the medical diagnosis given to the patient by the doctor • Can also include a differential diagnosis (DDX) if appropriate: • A list of other possible diagnoses usually in order of most to least likely • Examples: • A: Patient is a 37 year old man on post-operative day 2 for a below knee amputation • A: Back pain improving. DDX- Disc herniation
P- Plan • The strategy for addressing the patient’s problem • Determined by the doctor or the senior PT tech and then passed on to a junior PT tech • Treatment should be specific and include all parameters • Examples: • P: Managed with ultra sound (1mHz, Continuous, 0.8w/cm², 5 mins) • P: Managed neck pain with ROM exercises (c/s flexion, extension, rotation and side flexion-10/3x/day)
I- Intervention • Includes the measures taken to care for the patient (the actual treatment provided) • Each treatment needs to be recorded • Any changes to the treatment plan also need to be indicated • Examples: • I: TENS (as per tx plan) x15 mins • I: AROM to wrist and elbow (flex, extension, pronation and supination)- 10 reps/2 sets
E- Evaluation • Includes the patient’s response to the treatment as well as the effectiveness • Can include the patient’s subjective response as well as an objective measure • Re-test the concordant sign and report results • Examples: • E: Patient reported reduced pain of 3/10 pain with squat • E: Tolerated treatment well. No report of pain.
Outcome Measures • Testing used to objectively determine the change in function of a patient during the course of treatment • During the initial assessment baseline function is measured using a validated instrument • Once treatment has commenced, the same instrument can be used to determine progress and efficacy of treatment • Important for tracking patient progress as well as quality of care
Continued . . . • Outcome measures require three criteria: • Should test the particular aspect of function that it is intended to test = VALIDITY • The results should be the same (or similar) regardless of who administers the test or when it is administered = RELIBILITY • The test or scale should be able to detect change in function over time = RESPONSIVINESS
PT Outcome Measures • There are numerous tests that can be used to determine outcome measures, however the following are best used by the ANA PTT: • Upper Extremity Functional Scale (UEFS) • Lower Extremity Functional Scale (LEFS) • Neck Disability Index (NDI) • Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire • Numeric Rating Scale for Pain (NRS) • Oxford Scale for Strength
Upper Extremity Functional Scale • Self-administered questionnaire which can be used to measure the impact of upper extremity disorders • Reports on 20 daily activities involving the upper extremity • Patients answer the question "Today, do you or would you have any difficulty at all with:" in regards to eight different activities • Max Score = 80 (High functioning) • Min Score = 0 (Low functioning)
Lower Extremity Functional Scale • Intended for use on adults with lower extremity conditions • A self-administered questionnaire • Patients answer the question "Today, do you or would you have any difficulty at all with:" in regards to twenty different activities • Max Score = 80 (High functioning) • Min Score = 0 (Low functioning)
Neck Disability Index • A patient-completed, condition-specific functional status questionnaire with 10 items • Intended population: • Chronic neck pain • musculoskeletal neck pain • whiplash injuries • Cervical radiculopathy • Each section is scored on a 0 to 5 rating scale • 0 = 'No pain' • 5 = 'Worst imaginable pain' • The points summed to a total score • Maximum score of 50