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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

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Rehabilitation and Therapy

George Fox University

2019

Physical Therapy

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

What Are Typical Outcomes Associated With Physical Therapy For Foot & Ankle Patients?, Judith F. Baumhauer, Christopher Neville, Kostantinos Vasalos, Chad Condidorio, Kathleen Fear, Jeff Houck Jan 2019

What Are Typical Outcomes Associated With Physical Therapy For Foot & Ankle Patients?, Judith F. Baumhauer, Christopher Neville, Kostantinos Vasalos, Chad Condidorio, Kathleen Fear, Jeff Houck

Faculty Publications - College of Physical Therapy

Introduction/Purpose: It is unclear whether patients attending physical therapy, post-op or for conservative care, achieve clinically important differences (CID) on the patient reported outcome information system (PROMIS) scales. Key PROMIS outcomes physical function (PF) and pain interference (PI) match well with treatments provided in physical therapy. Physical therapy may also influence depression (Dep). Documentation of PROMIS outcomes associated with physical therapy are useful to help set patient expectations. The purpose of this analysis was to document expected PROMIS PF, PI, and Dep outcomes after physical therapy for foot and ankle diagnoses by 1) reporting average improvement and 2) examining whether …


Does Physical Therapy Produce Value For Post-Operative And/Or Non-Operative Foot And Ankle Patients?, Jeff Houck, Christopher Neville, Kostantinos Vasalos, Chad Condidorio, Kathleen Fear, Judith F. Baumhauer Jan 2019

Does Physical Therapy Produce Value For Post-Operative And/Or Non-Operative Foot And Ankle Patients?, Jeff Houck, Christopher Neville, Kostantinos Vasalos, Chad Condidorio, Kathleen Fear, Judith F. Baumhauer

Faculty Publications - College of Physical Therapy

Introduction/Purpose: Healthcare is at a unique time in history where patient reported outcomes have become important in assessing value and subsequent reimbursement with pay-4-performance initiatives. It is unclear whether physical function, pain and depressive symptoms can assist providers determine if additional physical therapy may improve care for foot and ankle patients considering post-op and/or non-operative care. The purpose of this research was to examine symptom severity (PROMIS PF, PI, and Dep) after surgery or with non-operative care at the start of formal physical therapy to determine if this symptom severity presentation and/or change in symptoms over time are predictors of …