Skip to main content

HiQualityCare-800x300.png

The gut reaction of many PTs and PTAs who read the title of this article is going to be, "Of course I give high-quality care." For others, it may elicit uncomfortable questions. To be clear, it’s far from the intent of this article to put readers on offense or make them feel defensive.

Physical therapy is a powerful means to help people live healthier and more fulfilled lives, and our profession is filled with people providing excellent care. With that said, I hope to get you thinking critically about how to identify when you’re providing high-quality care.

Measuring quality of care can be challenging. Practices and insurance companies have attempted to quantify quality through specific measures that include cancellation rates, online reviews, self-discharge rates, referrals, outcome measures, and satisfaction scores.

Unfortunately, these measures bring their share of issues. Some variables are outside of our control. For example, clinics in areas where many people are of lower socioeconomic status and depend on Medicaid, or where there are transportation issues, likely will have higher cancellation rates. And clinics in rural areas where health literacy is low likely will have greater variability in outcome measures.

Log in or create a free account to keep reading.


Join APTA to get unlimited access to content.


You Might Also Like...

Article

New ChoosePT Resources to Help You Educate Patients and Grow Demand

Apr 28, 2026

APTA's consumer-focused website, ChoosePT.com, continues to expand with new and regularly updated resources designed to help the public better understand

Article

New VA Scheduling System Eases Administrative Burden for Community Care PTs

Apr 28, 2026

Physical therapists providing care to veterans through the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Community Care Network are seeing long-awaited relief from

Article

CMS Requests Accelerated Medicaid Provider Revalidations: What PTs Need to Know

Apr 27, 2026

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has asked all state Medicaid agencies to conduct a "swift revalidation" of certain Medicaid providers identified