Integrating Physical Therapists Into Primary Care Within A Large Health Care System

Author/s: 
Bodenheimer, T., Kucksdorf, J., Torn, A., Jerzak, J.
Date Added: 
August 6, 2021
Journal/Publication: 
Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine
Publisher: 
JABMF
Publication Date: 
July 26, 2021
Issue: 
4
Volume: 
34
Pages: 
866-870
Type: 
Best Local Practices, Practice Management Research Results
Format: 
Article
DOI (1): 
https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.2021.04.200432
PMID (1): 
34312283

RPR Commentary

A description of one health care system’s experience integrating physical therapists into primary care teams. James W. Mold, MD, MPH

Abstract

Background: Bellin Health in Wisconsin has pioneered the colocation and integration of physical therapists into primary care pods.

Methods: This is an observational study based on one in-person visit and several interviews.

Results: For patients with musculoskeletal complaints, providers make warm handoffs to the physical therapist, who is a few steps away. The physical therapist performs most of the visit, providing diagnosis, treatment, and patient education. Research studies show that-compared with physician management-appropriate patients managed by physical therapists have better outcomes, lower costs, and higher patient satisfaction. In a fee-for-service environment, the business case for this innovation requires an increased number of follow-up referrals to the physical therapy department. In the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) era, physical therapists can provide video visits with equal quality compared with in-person visits.

Conclusion: The Bellin Health program is a blueprint for other primary care practices to integrate physical therapists into primary care teams.

Text Availability

Free full text