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H.R. 1846, The Medicare Access to Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Services Improvement Act of 2007

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Enon Hopkins

This bill is irresponsible and neglects the needs and safety of Medicare patients. Athletic Trainers are not prepared for the demands of screening for contraindications of modalities through their current formal training. Additionally, only licensed therapists should be performing any form of therapy on patients.

ajc

First, of all Athletic Trainers are educated on the contraindication of modalities. Second, the bill is not to treat Medicare patients. Most Trainers ARE licensed, under wich they are not to treat Medicare. The reason for the new bill is most insurances follow Medicare regulations. If Trainer are allowed to bill under Medicare, the rest of the insurances will follow. Also you have not read the licenses for athletic Trainers. There are spacific regulations to whom they can treat. Please dont write about things you do not understand.

Tom Lane

I am a PTA/ATC and I can say that a majority of ATC's in the clinical setting know a lot more than the therapy staff. They are educated more than I am about indications and contraindications of modalities, evalutation techniques and rehabilitation, just to name a few, which they all have had in school. They are regulated by the same educational board as other professions, and ATC's have to have a lot more continuing education than therapists do. My hopes is that the physical therapy members and athletic trainers can learn to work together rather than against eachother. Remember, it's about the patients.

Jen

To ajc-
Please do not write about things that you cannot spell. You have proven the point that only therapy professionals, who are extensively trained and have abundant knowledge of the human body and its physiology, should be allowed to treat these individuals. Athletic trainers are simply unqualified.

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