Home Health PT

Home healthcare nurse, physical therapy with senior adult woman. -  LifeSource Home Health

What is Home Health?

Home health is a sector of healthcare that services patients who are unable to leave their home safely unassisted, require a taxing effort to leave the home, or are reliant upon an assistive device. Home health often comes after a hospitalization event or discharge from a Skilled Nursing Facility, but may also come after a referral from a patient’s primary care physician. The goal is to safely discharge patients to their own care, the care of a caregiver, or to an outpatient therapy clinic to continue with treatment.

What Does a Home Health PT do?

A Home Health Physical Therapist (PT) will see patients who have physical deficits preventing them from living a safe and comfortable life. Patients referred for PT may have the onset of new disease preventing them from being as active as they once were, but post operative and secondary generalized weakness cases can also be common. The most common diagnoses are representative of a geriatric population and include DM II, CVA, CKD, CHF, osteoporosis, Alzheimer’s, and post-surgical healing. A Home Health PT will go to the patient’s home and provide a care plan that addresses home safety, transfers, gait quality, Durable Medical Equipment (DME) training, muscle strength, and balance.

Treatments

If weakness, balance deficits, or poor range of motion is identified, PTs may provide a Home Exercise Program (HEP) that is tailored to a patient’s disease, age, required level of assistance, and reasonable goals. In this case the goal will be to provide safe rehabilitation through instruction and training until a patient can move safely onto outpatient or self care. In other instances a patient or their caregivers may simply need instruction regarding safe transfers, compensatory strategies, pain management, equipment use, or home modifications. These concepts are often broken down into multiple treatment sessions.

Visits typically last between 45 minutes and an hour, depending upon the care provided that day. A patient may only need one visit to provide resources, or may need several more. It is most common to see Home Health PT cases 1-2 times per week and for a duration of 1-5 weeks. This low frequency, relatively short duration, and the minimal time commitment means that Home Health PT visits are perfect for clinicians looking to work around school or clinic schedules, have more time with family, or work on other projects.

What is Lifespan?

Now that you know more about the environment and patients, you may be wondering how Lifespan can help you begin your Home Health journey. As a Home Health Network, Lifespan establishes contracts with many Home Health Agencies, large and small. When an agency cannot reasonably hire a full-time PT, has needs their PTs cannot meet (language, gender, location, or skillset) then they come to us. At the same time, Lifespan works with clinicians such as yourself to enter your desired location, skillset, and language abilities into a database. When a case comes up that matches your profile, we offer this case to you.

How to Get Started

If this sounds like what you’ve been looking for, then we would like to invite you to complete the sign up form linked below. Upon submission, you will be sent a Docusign onboarding packet to begin working on at your leisure. You may also begin sending in the required credentials listed below, obtaining the necessary equipment, reviewing the training, and coordinating with the team on any questions. Some clinicians finish this process in days, some in months. Work at your own pace and whenever you’re ready to see patients, we’ll be here.

Credentials

In accordance with state healthcare operating guidelines, you will need to furnish some common credentials prior to seeing patients.

-Your active license

-An active CPR or BLS certification

-A current (within 1 year) TB test and questionnaire

-A current (within 1 year) physical

-A driver’s license (this is home health afterall)

-Auto insurance

-Professional Liability Insurance (HPSO.com is a common solution)

Supplies

As an independent contractor you will need to have the below supplies prior to seeing patients.

-A blood pressure cuff (manual or automatic)

-A pulse oximetry monitor

-A thermometer

-A therapy bag

-Infection control supplies such as hand sanitizer, gloves, masks, soap, papertowels, and protective barriers (wax paper, puppy pads)

Clinician Inquiry

Provide more information about availability, current setting, needs, and skillset.

Name
How many patients are you looking to see?
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