Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Almost all PT offices have a 4 week wait for appts so best to just get scheduled somewhere. Everyone can do shoulders--that's probably 30% of our patient load at an outpatient office.
What? That has not been my experience at all. I have gotten into see PTs within the week when I've needed one. Sometimes I have to see one of the less experienced PTs but they are overseen by the more senior staff and can at least get me started and then I can see on of the more senior PTs after a couple weeks of body work and the initial exercise routine.
I'm just telling you what is going on in the majority of our business's 15 offices as well as another NoVa chain of PT offices. You might be able to get a one off appt in the next week but you might not get followup appts for several weeks. The volumes of patients lately have been insane.
I saw PTs through the Centers for Advance Orthopaedics in February-April of this year and had no problem getting my initial appointment with a PT nor in scheduling follow ups twice a week until I was done with my therapy.
They were definitely busy but I always got the attention I needed including some extra massage and dry needling that was not originally planned but we discovered was helping my progress a lot. Also it seems like every PT in the office took a vacation at some point during the time I was there, as well as many of the assistants, so it's not like they were crazy overbooked -- when my main PT was on vacation I was able to get an appointment with one of the others no problem.