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Can the OTA write the discharge? No. The occupational therapist must review any information from the occupational therapy assistant(s), determine if goals were met or not, complete and sign the discharge documentation and/or make recommendations for any further needs of the patient in another continuum of care.
Once you have found a provider that you want to shadow, reach out to them via phone, email, or written correspondence. Plan on contacting them a few weeks before you would like to begin shadowing. Make sure to let the provider know why you want to shadow them specifically, and how you came across their information.
(d) A physical therapist assistant shall not: (1) Perform measurement, data collection or care prior to the evaluation of the patient by the physical therapist (2) Document patient evaluation and reevaluation (3) Write a discharge summary (4) Establish or change a plan of care (5) Write progress reports to another
Can PTAs and OTAs complete progress notes? Not for Medicare beneficiaries. ing to Rick Gawenda in this blog post, CMS does not allow assistants to complete full progress notes. Instead, licensed clinicians (i.e., PTs or OTs) must write progress notes themselves.
PTAs are also highly trained providers who provide hands-on patient care, but they cannot perform initial evaluations, design treatment plans, or make changes to a patients treatment plan without a supervising PTs approval.

People also ask

Hi Noemi, This job can be physically demanding because you often have to walk, stoop, kneel, crouch, lift and stand for long periods of time. In addition, physical therapist assistants may be required to move heavy equipment and lift patients or help them to turn, stand or walk.

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