Manual Therapy Interventions for the Physical Therapist Assistant – Lumbopelvic & Lower Quarter

When: Saturday, March 12, 2022 from 8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. MT

Where: Regis University, Peter Claver Hall- Room 409

Presenters: Ben Swink, PT, DPT, OCS, FAAOMPT
                     Shane O’Malley, PT, DPT, OCS, COMT

Hosted by: Colorado PT-PAC - All proceeds from this event will go to the PT-PAC to help influence legislative issues affecting PTs in Colorado.

Description: Selective manual therapy techniques are an integral part of a physical therapist assistant’s collaborative scope of work. This course is the first part in our PTA series and will provide a fundamental foundation on specified manual therapy in addition to the current guidelines and recommendations for the PTA. Course content will explore different osteokinematic mobilizations both passive and active, proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation techniques, assisted neurodynamic, and soft tissue techniques as they relate to the lumbopelvic region and the lower quarter. This lab course will be designed to maximize hands-on practice with short lectures and group discussion.

During the lab, participants will have expert supervision and guidance from multiple Fellows of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Manual Physical Therapists and active clinicians. Download Flyer

This course meets Colorado standards for 8 hours of Category I Professional Development Activity.

Click here for more information and to register! 

 

Your Comments Needed on Revisions to Guide to Physical Therapist Practice

Recommended changes touch on direct access, movement system, career advancement, and more. Get your comments in by Feb. 11.

APTA is updating the Guide to Physical Therapist Practice, and we need your input as our next step in finalizing the new version.

A work group of APTA staff and members reviewed the Guide content and drafted recommended updates based on current practice. It's time for a wide review from the profession, and your feedback is critical before the revisions proceed. You may comment on all or selected changes.

Among the changes presented for review:

  • Improvements to organization. The revision links main chapter content to each chapter's more detailed compendium (and back).

  • A new chapter about career advancement and clinical specialization. While the current Guide briefly describes opportunities for PTs to become board-certified clinical specialists and PTAs to gain advanced proficiency, the new chapter offers more detail on the areas of specialty practice for PTs, the process for becoming a clinical specialist — including completing a residency, and the PTA Advanced Proficiency Pathways.

  • Discussion of direct access to physical therapist services. Accessing services without a referral has not been described in the Guide. This draft includes direct access among other models of service delivery.

  • Inclusion of movement system concepts. The proposed Guide revision introduces the concept and current definition of the movement system, including the movement screen and the movement system diagnostic framework.

  • A move away from "patient and client" terminology. The distinction between "patient" and "client" has been a challenge in many ways since the Guide's original edition, so the revision moves from those previous labels to "individual," "group," and "community." The Patient/Client Management Model itself retains its terminology.

  • Focus on population health. As the profession recognizes that physical therapist practice is evolving from largely "one to one" care to "one to many," to broaden the reach of physical therapist services and realize APTA's vision to "improve the health of society," the concepts of social determinants of health, population health, and telehealth are added to this version of the Guide.

Note: You must login to access the draft revisions and survey. Only APTA members may provide comments on the Guide, and a login is required to access the comment instrument. The deadline for commenting is Feb. 11. If you have questions or additional comments related to this review of the Guide, please contact [email protected].

 

2022 Fee Schedule Calculator, Summary of Medicare Payment Changes Now Available

Get a handle on how CMS changes to the fee schedule, coding, and other issues will affect your practice.

The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services introduced a range of changes in 2022, some of which tweak the calculations used to determine payment. APTA can help you navigate the new landscape.

The association has updated one of its most popular resources — the outpatient therapy fee schedule calculator that helps participating and nonparticipating PTs determine 2022 Medicare payment and compare rates with the previous year. The resource, presented as a spreadsheet, incorporates the 50% multiple procedure payment reduction for values under the Medicare physician fee schedule and applies and applies the phase-in of sequestration on Medicare payments as well as the Merit-based Incentive Payment System adjustment factor.

Click here to read more. 

 

New APTA Member Benefit Clarifies Use of Remote Therapeutic Monitoring Codes

An APTA-advocated fee schedule change opened up new codes to PTs. Our practice advisory helps you put them to use.

In a final 2022 Medicare Fee Schedule rule that didn't contain many bright spots, one win, pushed for by APTA, stood out: PTs can now bill five remote therapeutic monitoring (RTM) codes related to cost, set-up, and monitoring of devices that measure patient therapy adherence and therapy response. APTA now offers a practice advisory to help you put those codes to use.

The focus of the new resource is on two sets of CPT codes: 98975, 98976, 98977, related to RTM services; and 98980 and 98981, related to RTM treatment management services. The codes were created to account for devices that allow patients to self-report, manually enter, and digitally upload nonphysiologic data related to musculoskeletal system status, respiratory system status, therapy adherence, and therapy response.

Click here to read more. 

 

CMS Listens to APTA, Eases Code Restrictions for Manual Therapy and Compression

APTA continues to advocate for changes that reflect the realities of physical therapy and patient-centered care.

In another win for providers trying to square best practices with coding rules, CMS has announced that manual therapy can be reported in the same session as codes related to application of a multi-layer compression system.

Specifically, according to the most recent National Correct Coding Initiative edits to chapter 4, section G.17 of the policy manual, providers generally can now use CPT codes 29581-29584 (multi-layer compression systems) during the same episode as code 97140 (manual therapy) — a combination that often makes clinical sense, but wasn't always permitted.

Click here to read more. 

 
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