accountability
Posted: Mon Nov 15, 2010 7:24 am
This is a cross post of a discussion that I brought up on HP. So I hope it can stimulate some discussion here. Ok charlie, Ezer, counting on you lads.
Help me too please and decipher this study. I'm rusty. Is this the one you mentioned before ?
Here is the link to the study:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2872169/
that Rhonda and Mary Pat did and I think it was the one and only one referenced or that anyone can reference right now. The point that I am try to make after much deliberation and I plan on writing about it more, is that regardless of even if some studies are now being done, there needs to better documentation of outcomes. Follow up of patients 3,6,12 months after being discharged to see how they are doing. Are they going to another PT? are they in a pain management clinic? What is there level of functionig like? Are they seeing other doctors? Are they considering other treatments? Communication and follow-up of outcomes is necessary for many reasons: to understand the benefit short term and long term of PT. What happens to patients aftewards, and hopefully too there is more communication between the specialties. Right now, people are jumping around like fleas between doctors, not knowing what to do and the cost is alarming on all fronts. I have been a pt patient on and off for four years In my case, it is a pain management tool. So, that should be documented. And then when you stop pt, you should be followed up. ANd if you don't stop PT- it should be documented as to how often you come in for maintenance. And then those studies should be published. And then they should look at what caused the fall-out. Was it cost? was it lack of progression in PT? was it that they got better? was it that they were referred for PNE testing ? That is how a body of knowledge is developed, published and disseminated into the wider field of [/b]medicine so primary doctors can read about it, obs/uros can read about it.
THe role of PT has to be defined at some point by measurable outcomes. That's too the only way we have hopes of insurance covering it more as well as getting disability claims. I plan to write more about this in a blog. But that's where I'm coming from . As a nurse and all other medical professionals, you are obligated to document your outcomes and you can't go around saying 'I cure x % of people without follow-up. It just can't be done that way. Yes there is hope. But let's get more information out there.
Cora
Help me too please and decipher this study. I'm rusty. Is this the one you mentioned before ?
Here is the link to the study:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2872169/
that Rhonda and Mary Pat did and I think it was the one and only one referenced or that anyone can reference right now. The point that I am try to make after much deliberation and I plan on writing about it more, is that regardless of even if some studies are now being done, there needs to better documentation of outcomes. Follow up of patients 3,6,12 months after being discharged to see how they are doing. Are they going to another PT? are they in a pain management clinic? What is there level of functionig like? Are they seeing other doctors? Are they considering other treatments? Communication and follow-up of outcomes is necessary for many reasons: to understand the benefit short term and long term of PT. What happens to patients aftewards, and hopefully too there is more communication between the specialties. Right now, people are jumping around like fleas between doctors, not knowing what to do and the cost is alarming on all fronts. I have been a pt patient on and off for four years In my case, it is a pain management tool. So, that should be documented. And then when you stop pt, you should be followed up. ANd if you don't stop PT- it should be documented as to how often you come in for maintenance. And then those studies should be published. And then they should look at what caused the fall-out. Was it cost? was it lack of progression in PT? was it that they got better? was it that they were referred for PNE testing ? That is how a body of knowledge is developed, published and disseminated into the wider field of [/b]medicine so primary doctors can read about it, obs/uros can read about it.
THe role of PT has to be defined at some point by measurable outcomes. That's too the only way we have hopes of insurance covering it more as well as getting disability claims. I plan to write more about this in a blog. But that's where I'm coming from . As a nurse and all other medical professionals, you are obligated to document your outcomes and you can't go around saying 'I cure x % of people without follow-up. It just can't be done that way. Yes there is hope. But let's get more information out there.
Cora