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Physical Therapy at Walter Reed Army Medical Center
Veterans who are injured in Iraq often receive physical therapy at
Walter Reed.
By Donald E Tepper
The Walter Reed Army Medical Center (WRAMC) is the hub of the Walter
Reed Health Care System (WRHCS), which includes 10 facilities in three
states. At Walter Reed, the physical therapy service addresses all
aspects of rehabilitation including neurorehab, pediatrics, orthopedics,
amputees, and vestibular. The service is divided into five major
sections: inpatient (all inpatients except for orthopedic), orthopedic
inpatient, outpatient, amputee, and aquatic therapy.
Clinics and Teams
WRAMC's physical therapy service has eight military physical
therapists (PTs) and 11 civilian PTs. It also has seven civilian
physical therapy assistants (PTAs) and seven military physical therapy
technicians. The physical therapy staff engages in approximately 4,000
patient visits a month, averaging 3.5 visits per patient.
| Walter Reed's Mission |
The five-point mission of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center is
to:
- Develop leadership in clinical readiness for combat and contingency
missions.
- Exploit advances in wellness, prevention, and disease outcomes
management for maximum quality of life and health.
- Serve as the Army's center of gravity for complex care, clinical
education, and clinical research.
- Become the national leader in outcomes-focused integration of
primary and specialty care.
- Partner with other services and agencies to promote excellence in
military health care with prudent stewardship of resources.
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The physical therapy service at WRAMC operates or participates in
various clinics. PTs attend balance clinic performing vestibular
evaluation and treatment and working with otolaryngologists,
audiologists, and neurologists. In the "Golden Years" clinic, patients
work with an interdisciplinary team that includes a physical therapist,
geriatrician, geriatric psychiatrist, nurse practitioner, occupational
therapist, social worker, medical resident, and pharmacist. The physical
therapy service also provides COPD pulmonary rehabilitation and
gym/sports programs.
In addition, WRAMC's physical therapists provide support to other
health care specialties. Ltc Barbara Ashby Springer, PT, PhD, OCS, SCS,
says, "We're part of the mastectomy team. We provide pre-operative and
post-operative care. We also work closely with neurosurgeons and attend
their clinics as well. We are involved in many interdisciplinary
meetings involving neurology, orthopedics, physical medicine and rehab,
general medicine, surgery, cardiothoracic, CCU, and cardiac stepdown."
Springer is WRAMC's chief of physical therapy service. She also is the
physical therapy consultant to the North Atlantic Regional Medical
Command (NARMC), which includes 10 clinics in the WRHCS and 15
facilities in the NARMC. She recently replaced Col Billie J Mielcarek,
who assumed position as Commander, US Army Medical Department Activity,
Ft George Meade, Maryland. Col Mielcarek is the first Army PT to command
a hospital.
The Focus Shifts
The focus of the physical therapy services provided at WRAMC has
shifted during recent years, Springer reports. "We used to see anybody
who was a beneficiary. We then were given guidance by the hospital that
our priority would be active duty service members coming back from
Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and
all other active duty personnel. After those categories comes anyone
signed up with TRICARE Prime [the Department of Defense's worldwide
health care program for active duty and retired uniformed services
members and their families], then those over the age of 65."
Due to the recent guidance and to the continuing overseas military
operations, Springer estimates that approximately half the patients now
seen by her service are as a result of the war in Iraq, and those
numbers are climbing. In January 2004, for example, there were
approximately 950 post-deployment physical therapy patient visits. This
had risen to 1,430 by March and to approximately 1,827 by
June.
The nature of the injuries--and, thus, the type of interventions
required--also has shifted as a result of recent military operations.
"We've seen at least 242 active-duty personnel with amputations at
WRAMC. All but about 20 have been battle injuries; approximately 130 are
major amputees-to at least the first major joint or above. Many are
caused by improvised explosive devices, rocket propelled grenades,
regular grenades, and landmines. Because [the torsos of] our military
personnel are protected by Kevlar, their limbs [increasingly] are
affected. Because they have such excellent medical care on the field,
their lives are being saved. They're seen in Iraq for emergency care.
Then they get air-evac'd out, first to Landstuhl, Germany, then to
Walter Reed."
Brian Murphy, PT, MPT, agrees that the nature of injuries has
shifted. Murphy, president of APTA's Veterans Affairs Section, is
clinical manager of rehabilitation and acting director of the George E
Wahlen Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VASLC) in Salt
Lake City.
Murphy notes that PTs' special services are being called on
increasingly as a result of the ongoing war in Iraq. "Because of the
improvements in body armor, soldiers are surviving blast injuries that
in past conflicts would have killed them, but they are losing limbs," he
reports.
Transition of the Patient
Steve Springer, Ltc Springer's husband and a retired Army officer, is
nurse case manager at WRAMC's Amputee Center. He says, "I work on the
transition of the patient from inpatient to outpatient status,
developing a long-term plan of care. It involves coordination with all
the specialty areas, with the biggest impact on physical therapy,
occupational therapy, and prosthetics. We work very closely to make sure
that the clinical criteria are met before we return the patients to
their long-term rehabilitation, which is usually near their home of
record or another health care facility."
Military personnel with amputations have three options, Springer
explains: 1) request to stay on active duty in the same job they held
before the injury, 2) stay in the military but request another job that
is not as physically demanding, or 3) separate with a medical
disability. Most, he says, do separate and are placed in the Veterans
Administration system at whichever center is closest to their retirement
location. "On a case-by-case basis, we bring them back here for care and
research. If the VA hospital doesn't have a required specialty, we get
them back here. We work hand-in-hand with the VA," he says.
That was the case with Pfc Jessica Lynch. (See "Jessica Lynch's Story
of Recovery" above.) Burt Reed, PT, the owner of Mountain River Physical
Therapy in Mineral Wells, West Virginia, is the physical therapist who
has worked with Lynch since her discharge from Walter Reed. Reed recalls
that he initially spoke several times with one of Lynch's PTs on the
telephone. "She gave me a very detailed summary of where Jessica started
and where she was after 12 weeks at Walter Reed. Then we corresponded; I
outlined how we were going to continue the treatment plan. The PTs at
Walter Reed see Jessica occasionally, primarily for
orthotics."
Steve Springer addresses the provision of prosthetics for those with
amputations. He says, "We work with two contracting companies, one for
upper extremities, one for lower extremities. They come here weekly, and
longer term they coordinate with our patients once they're medically
retired. Whatever they need, they receive, plus the physical and
occupational therapy support and follow-up." Describing the VA
perspective, Murphy says, "Due to the number of these young personnel
with amputations coming back from both Iraq and Afghanistan, the VA and
the Department of Defense have made meeting their prosthetic needs a
high priority."
In remarks made in December 2003 after touring the physical therapy
facilities at Walter Reed, President George Bush said, "A grievous
injury, such as the loss of a limb, no longer means forced discharge. In
other words, the medical care is so good and the recovery process is so
technologically advanced that people are no longer forced out of the
military. Today, if wounded service members want to remain in uniform
and can do the job, the military tries to help them stay."
Murphy says that the patient population served at a VA facility
inspires the PTs and other health care practitioners. "It is
intrinsically motivating to work with people who have sacrificed so
much. As a veteran myself, I understand what it means to serve, and it
helps me to communicate to my staff the importance of what they
do."
Ltc Springer says, "We're trying to bring everyone who comes through
here up to the highest level possible. Service members are conditioned
like athletes to begin with, so we're trying to return them to that
level-even to active duty, if possible. We use a lot of the same
theories as in sports, as far as getting their strength back and their
core conditioning. We involve them in different drills and plyometrics,
running--if they want to--and arm-crank bicycles. Some even are signed
up for the New York City marathon."
"We have so many people who come through here who are so motivated.
We all consider it an honor and a privilege," she says.
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Donald Tepper is editor of PT Magazine.
PT Magazine - October 2004
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