Therapy Workloads in Pediatric Health: Preliminary Findings and Relevance for Defining Practice.

Clicks: 226
ID: 71154
2020
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
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Abstract
To measure time spent by pediatric physical and occupational therapists in performing daily work activities.Physical and occupational therapists at an urban pediatric academic hospital were observed during a standard workday. Time studies recorded total time spent performing patient care and other workplace-specific tasks. Data were analyzed to identify trends.Broad similarities existed in average amounts of time spent in direct patient care, indirect patient care, and nonpatient care tasks. Indirect patient care tasks demonstrated the lowest variability in time spent.This is the first report of pediatric physical and occupational therapists' time in performing daily tasks. The metric and tools derived from these findings support managerial decision-making, provide a comparison of actual versus targeted workload, assist with determining appropriate and safe staffing caseloads, and contribute to measurements of a patient's therapy acuity level.Video Abstract: For more insights from the authors, access Supplemental Digital Content 1, available at: http://links.lww.com/PPT/A280.
Reference Key
long2020therapypediatric Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Long, Jason T;Neogi, Smriti;Vidonish, William;Badylak, Julie;Reder, Rebecca D;
Journal pediatric physical therapy : the official publication of the section on pediatrics of the american physical therapy association
Year 2020
DOI
10.1097/PEP.0000000000000665
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

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