by Keith Carson, Director of Partnerships, Therapy Specialists
INCREASED ACCESS TO THERAPY SERVICES
COVID-19 has undoubtedly accelerated the use of telehealth for rehabilitation services. Throughout the pandemic, CMS has taken the lead in ensuring more access for patients to healthcare services through virtual visits. For many therapy providers, telehealth was a life preserver that kept them and their patients afloat during the first few months of the pandemic. At Therapy Specialists, for example, we went from doing zero virtual visits per month in March to over 500 virtual visits in September. Telehealth has also enabled us and other therapy companies to provide more specialized services to our patients. We can now ask a therapist that lives in Stockton, Calif. with a certification in a specific treatment modality to treat a patient suffering from Parkinson’s disease in San Diego, Calif. Although telehealth is becoming more mainstream, it remains unclear as to whether Medicare and other insurance companies will continue to reimburse therapy providers for these services in the future. Right now CMS is seeking comments on their 2021 Proposed Rule on whether certain therapy codes should be added permanently to the list of acceptable telehealth services We remain hopeful that they will not restrict the access to these services in the future.
“TRICKLE-DOWN ECONOMICS”
Another significant issue for the future of therapy services is the economic pressure that is trickling down from Medicare to rehab providers. Most agree that Medicare needs to reduce costs, maintain outcomes and improve the overall health and well-being their patient population. But the economic backdrop to these efforts in therapy services are that therapists remain in high demand, and as a result are able to request more compensation for their services than they have in the past. Higher salaries for therapists mean increased cost for therapy providers, and therefore, can lead to increased costs for skilled nursing facilities. In the most recent proposed rule, CMS included a 7 to 9 percent cut for physical, occupational and speech therapy services across the board. Although many therapy associations are aggressively advocating against these cuts, a basic understanding of economics will tell you that something will have to give in the future. The silver lining for therapy providers is that patients will continue to need therapy services, and our therapists will continue to be an essential part of the healthcare system. But we will need to continue to innovate in order to deliver these services and maintain patient outcomes in the midst of these economic pressures.
AN INCREASED NEED
The need for physical, occupational, and speech therapy services is going to dramatically increase in the upcoming months — and probably years. One primary reason is because our healthcare system, understandably so, has been acutely focused on mitigating the impact of COVID-19 over the last nine months — and will continue to be focused on it over the next nine months. Amid the pandemic, lying in wait has been the muscle strains and sprains, chronic pain, and deconditioning that has gone unaddressed with most older adults. You might remember that at the beginning of the pandemic many “essential” healthcare workers were furloughed in large part because doctors stopped treating patients and surgeons stopped doing surgery. Think about the potential impact on a resident in your community who recently had surgery and been prescribed therapy services twice a week, but was unable to receive those services because of the pandemic. COVID-19 has decreased the amount of therapy being provided, and as a result new problems have arisen, new injuries have surfaced, and new conditions have revealed themselves. So, as we continue to try to suppress COVID-19 we will see an influx of patients coming back to therapy because their issues have been exacerbated. This will certainly continue in the upcoming months, and likely extend into the next few years.
Although the waves of the future will present some challenges for our profession, they will also bring about opportunities for patients and providers alike. The challenges we face have only served to remind me of the invaluable role the physical, occupational, and speech therapist plays during this season in helping people recover from their injuries and keep moving. They are essential workers to the fullest extent of the word and will play an increasingly important role in our healthcare system both now and into the future.