APTA
issued a letter to
the producers of the Dr. Oz Show to express its dissatisfaction with the
show's recent segment on "Cutting-Edge Solutions for Back Pain." In
the letter, APTA President Paul A. Rockar, Jr, PT, DPT, MS, points out that, "While
modalities may be used by physical therapists as part of an overall treatment
plan, the focus of physical therapy treatment for back pain is on
evidence-based exercises to improve strength and flexibility, manual therapy to
improve the mobility of joints and soft tissues, and patient education on ways
to enhance recovery, prevent and relieve pain, and avoid recurrence."
"I
am so excited by the December issue and these 10 articles that I'm really
considering changing my path and going out to see if I can help develop acute
care specialization and become a practicing clinician again," says PTJ Editor in Chief Rebecca Craik, PT, PhD, FAPTA, at the conclusion of the latest Craikcast.
Joining
Craik this month in discussing the articles that complete the 2-part PTJ Special Series on Rehabilitation for
People With Critical Illness are coeditors Patricia
Ohtake, PT, PhD, Dale Needham, MD, and Dale Strasser, MD. The group also
discusses quality improvement research, a key topic of the articles in the
February edition of the critical care special series. The first part of the
series was published in the December 2012 issue.
As
part of APTA's strategic plan, one of the goals for 2013 is to better enable
physical therapists to consistently use best practice to improve the quality of
life of their patients and clients. To achieve this goal, APTA is supporting
the development of clinical practice evidence-based documents. This initiative
aims to provide structure, process, and resources for the development of
Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPG) and Clinical Practice Appraisals (CPA) that
enable the translation of research into physical therapist practice. In order
to facilitate the development of clinical practice documents and other high
quality evidence summaries, APTA is offering financial and training support to sections
for this purpose.
Proposals
for CPG/CPA development must focus on clinical practice areas that are
important and relevant to the practice of physical therapy. The proposal must
be supported and submitted by an APTA section. Each proposal will be considered
individually and will be awarded in part or in full depending on the priorities
of the association and the strength of the proposal.
Proposals
for the current review cycle are due on March 18. For more information or for a
copy of the proposal submission document, contact Anita Bemis-Dougherty, director,
Practice Department, at anitabemis-dougherty@apta.org or 800/999-2782,
ext 3176.
In a retrospective cohort obtained
from electronic medical records and insurance claims data, initial physical
therapy management following a new primary care low back pain (LBP)
consultation was not associated with increased health care costs or utilization
of specific services. The authors of this article, which appears
online in Archives of Physical Medicine
and Rehabilitation, write that additional research is needed to examine the
cost consequences of initial management decisions made following a new
consultation for LBP.
Records and data were examined on 2,184 patients aged 18 and older with a
new consultation for LBP from 2004-2008 in single health care delivery system
in the United States. Patients were categorized as receiving initial physical
therapy management if care occurred within 14 days after consultation.
Total health care costs for all LBP-related care received in the year
following consultation were calculated from claims data. Predictors of
utilization of emergency care, advanced imaging, epidural injections,
specialist visits, and surgery were identified using multivariate logistic
regression. Generalized linear model was used to compare LBP-related costs
based on physical therapy utilization and identify other cost determinants.
Initial physical therapy was received by 286 of 2,184 patients (13.1%) and
was not a determinant of LBP-related health care costs or utilization of
specific services in the year following consultation. Older age, mental health
or neck pain comorbidity and initial management with opioids were determinants
of cost and several utilization outcomes.
APTA
member Julie M. Fritz, PT, PhD, ATC,
is the article's lead author. APTA members Gerard
P. Brennan, PT, PhD, Stephen J.
Hunter, PT, DPT, OCS, and John S.
Magel, PT, DSc, OCS, FAAOMPT, are coauthors.
Monday,
February 11, is the deadline to submit nominations for the Federal Government Affairs Leadership Award and the APTA Public Service Award.
The
Federal Government Affairs Leadership Award is presented annually to an active
APTA member who has made significant contributions to APTA's federal government
affairs efforts, and has shown exemplary leadership in furthering the
association's objectives in the federal arena.
The APTA
Public Service Award is presented annually to individuals who have demonstrated
distinctive support for the physical therapy profession at a national level.
Individuals from the following categories are eligible for nomination of this
award: members of Congress, congressional staff members, members of a state
legislature, federal agency officials, health and legislative association
staff, and celebrities or other public figures.
APTA's
Board of Directors will select award recipients during its March 2013
conference call. Awards will be presented at the Federal Advocacy Forum to be
held April 14-16 in Washington, DC. Submit nominations by February 11 to Stephanie Sadowski.
APTA's summary of a recently released HIPAA final rule
includes important information for physical therapists related to modifications
of the Privacy, Security, and Enforcement Rules embedded in the HITECH
Act, changes to the HIPAA Enforcement Rule to incorporate the increased
and tiered civil money penalty structure, the adoption of breach notification
requirements for unsecured data, and adjustments to the HIPAA Privacy Rule as
required by the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act to increase privacy
protections for genetic information.
Association
members can access the document on the Health Information Technology webpage under
"APTA Summaries" and the HIPAA webpage.