Skip to main content

Gauging Your Practice's Financial Health

August 2018

I'd submit that the gross number of patients seen or evaluated per day or hour provides no indication of the value of care or of the revenue generated. The number of treatment units per hour that are billed for and paid—which has no relationship to the number of people seen—is a much more useful metric. If a therapist sees 8 people in an 8-hour day and provides 4 units of care, billable to the patient or a third-party payer, then the therapist has a 100% productivity rate. At the end of the day, 32 units of 15 minutes were billed for, and there is no more room for any sort of "improvement" in that. There is no more time in the day in which to bill.

Log in or create a free account to keep reading.


Join APTA to get unlimited access to content.


You Might Also Like...

News

APTA Releases 2024 Annual Report

Apr 15, 2025

Now available: the 2024 APTA Annual Report, a snapshot of some of the association's biggest accomplishments in 2024, from two major wins in Medicare payment

News

Telehealth, PT Compact Legislation Reintroduced in U.S. Congress

Apr 9, 2025

Two APTA-supported bills from Congress' last session are back for consideration: making Medicare telehealth provisions permanent for PT services and streamlining

Article

APTA Town Hall: Provide Your Input on Draft Code of Ethics for the Profession

Apr 1, 2025

Join one of two virtual town halls in April to add your thoughts to the Board motion being brought to the 2025 House of Delegates.