Saturday, July 11, 2009

Best Careers

Best Careers 2009: Physical Therapist

Posted December 11, 2008

OverviewNext to the clergy, physical therapy ranked highest in job satisfaction, according to a survey conducted by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago. More than three quarters of physical therapists reported being "very satisfied" with their occupation. In a similar survey by the Wall Street Journal's Career Journal, physical therapy rated one of the eight best careers.

And it's easy to understand why:

  • You're a one-on-one coach, a role that many people enjoy. It's a bit like a fitness coach but with more skills and you're helping people with more acute problems.
  • You usually see real progress. For example, it's touching to see a patient, who came in on a stretcher or in a wheelchair, walk out at the end of treatment.
  • Unlike physicians, who often are restricted to 12-minute appointments, you typically see a patient for an hour.
  • You have considerable autonomy in how to solve problems, yet, unlike in self-employment, you can get a steady and pretty good paycheck.
  • There's variety: Most physical therapists are generalists. You might treat, for example, a brain-injured child, a football player who broke his arm, an Iraq War veteran amputee, and an aged stroke patient.
  • You can choose from a wide range of work settings, notably hospitals, physical therapy clinics, schools, physicians' offices, and patients' homes.
  • Unlike many other health professionals who must work nights and weekends, you usually have normal work hours.
  • Despite increased use of lower-cost physical therapy assistants, the job market for physical therapists is projected to remain strong as the baby boomers are reaching the age where they get more weekend-warrior athlete injuries and more serious problems.

Like all careers, physical therapy has downsides:

  • This career is physically demanding. All day, you're moving patients around, demonstrating exercises, and so on. That's a plus for some people and a minus for others who might prefer a desk job. It's not uncommon to leave work with sore muscles.
  • Burnout risk. Many of your patients will be newly disabled, in pain, progressing slowly, and/or frustrated by the painful exercises you prescribe. That can take a toll on you.
  • Training requirements have been ratcheted up. Not long ago, a bachelor's degree would do. Now, a master's is the minimum, with a three-year doctor of physical therapy increasingly the norm.

Nevertheless, if you're a science- and helping-oriented person, fascinated with the human body, and have an optimistic personality, a physical therapy career may heal your career pains.

A Day in the Life. You arrive at the hospital and head to the physical therapy room, with its weights, mats, and treadmills. You discuss the day's cases with your physical therapy assistant, who will do much of the routine work.

Your first patient had arthroscopic knee surgery and is back for his third session. You review his chart, interview and examine him, and see that since his last visit, he has improved his range of motion to 90 percent. You teach him a new exercise that should get him back to 100 percent, and you give him the good news that he doesn't need to come back. He walks out with a smile.

Alas, that was your easiest patient of the day. Your next patient, who had a stroke, arrives in a wheelchair. He has been seeing you for months, and he still can't walk well. He's frustrated not only by his lack of progress but with the reality of his likely limitations for the rest of his life. And like some patients, he can't help but take his frustration out on you. "For all that money I'm paying, can't you help me more than to tell me to keep trying these torturous exercises?" You help him with his exercises; because of his poor mobility, you have to help lift him and move his legs. He is making enough progress that you're able to start weaning him from his wheelchair and teaching him how to best use a walker.

By the time he leaves, you're ready for a break, but first, you E-mail his occupational therapist and social worker, requesting a meeting to discuss his case.

Next, you have a new case, a cancer patient who is wheeled into your clinic on a gurney. She has had abdominal surgery and can't sit up. After reviewing the physician's reports and taking a medical history, you reassure her that she will get better. After examining her, you develop a treatment plan, which, yes, includes painful exercises but also pain-relieving ultrasound, massage, and other palliative measures. This is another one of those cases that make you glad you have an upbeat, cheerful personality. She really appreciates it, promises to do the exercises you've assigned, and you schedule her for another appointment tomorrow.

Reader Comments

look deeper into the the story...

A lot of positives yes BUT there are a lot of negatives that seem to get overlooked. Education is now pretty much a mandated doctorate level. The new doctorate requirement is not supported by all PTs and some think it may actually hurt the profession. Total student loan debt is ~100k when all is said and done. Take this and consider the fact that reimbursement is exponentially decreasing with no sign of increasing. You'll also hear from many PTs that the APTA's lobbying voice is extremely weak. Not an ideal scenario when the doctorate was mandated for primarily political reasons. How effective the PT lobbyists are at promoting the benefits of physical therapy services to congress at this crucial stage of "healthcare reform" is essential for the future of this profession. From what I've been hearing their voice is relatively quiet.

Chiropractors seem to have the political edge over PTs which is sad really considering PTs have more credibility in the healthcare system. There are reasons PTs have more credibility. One big one is the type of student that pursues PT. Just about anyone can go and be a chiropractor. The institutions will be more than happy to collect your tuition dollars. pre-PTs generally need a 3.5 cum GPA just to be considered for the PT program. The prerequisite courses are not necessarily easy. The PT program's intensity is comparable to a PA program (basically condensed medical school). This means little though if the decision makers in congress don't know really what a PT does and how their utilization can both decrease costs and increase patient outcomes. Which brings up the next point..

The public generally don't know what PTs do. They have a general idea but this knowledge is superficial. Most, for instance, have no idea that PTs are very capable of treating lower back pain. When a person thinks of back pain they think of Chiropractor. They are much better at marketing their profession.

Some well respected clinicians believe that a possible collapse of the system is inevitable. This not being too far away (5-10 years). The system would then go to a "pay out-of-pocket" system. Looking at medicare's status of being about 7 years away from extinction this actually seems plausible. How will PTs fair in an open market system? Just a thought. It's certainly not impossible.

What is the prospective view of this profession 10-20 years from now? This is the real question if you're looking at pursuing this profession.

thanks

i've wanted to be a physical therapist for a few months. this sounds like an awesome job, and i plan to progress in this field. i love sports so i will try to help injured athletes. this information was helpful, THANKS SO MUCH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

thanks

i've wanted to be a physical therapist for a few months. this sounds like an awesome job, and i plan to progress in this field. i love sports so i will try to help injured athletes. this information was helpful, THANKS SO MUCH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

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