Being a physical therapist I may be biased but I think a profession that not only gives you the satisfaction of helping people plus the ability to tell them what to do every time you see them is unparallelled. I plan on giving insight into the field of physical therapy, into the outpatient setting and passing along a little wisdom on dealing with physicians, insurance companies, coaches, and all manner of related subjects.
First lesson: The difference between a Prescription and a Referral
Basically a prescription is written by your physician and is a tool used to request physical therapy services. It must have several elements A) a diagnosis, or what is wrong with you B) Frequency, how many times a week to come to therapy C) Duration, how many weeks to come to therapy D) Requested Services, I like evaluation and treat as indicated best, however, many surgeons have protocols that provide this information E) Date prescription was written F) Physician's Signature, yes, I know the nurse signed it but it's still a formality.
A Referral is issued by your primary care doctor depending on whether you have an insurance that requires one. Not all insurances require a referral. When you need a referral your primary care doctor is acting as a gatekeeper for health care and is deciding if you really need physical therapy, kidney dialysis, Neurosurgical Consultation, MRI, etcetera. Even if you have a prescription from a specialist such as an orthopaedic surgeon you may still need a referral to get care.
Now to make matters more confusing, your primary care doctor at least here in New Jersey can use the referral as a prescription for physical therapy. So what is the whole point of this explanatory blog? It is simply this; a prescription and a referral are two seperate things, usually. If you need a referral to go see a specialist, get blood work, etc., you will also need a referral for physical therapy services regardless of whether your specialist wrote you a prescription for physical therapy. So when the insurance specialist at your therapy provider asks whether you have a referral and prescription you'll know what they're talking about.
Oh, by the way, your primary care doctor is very busy and will usually take 3 days to process a referral so trying to call their office from the physical therapists office is futile. Just reschedule your physical therapy evaluation. It'll be less stress on everybody.
Showing posts with label physical therapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label physical therapy. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
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