• Physical Therapy

     

    What’s Required

    Physical Therapy

     (9) Physical Therapy means services provided by a qualified Physical Therapist. (§300.34, Federal Regulations).

    "Physical Therapists are health care professionals who help individuals maintain, restore, and improve movement, activity, and functioning, thereby enabling optimal performance and enhancing health, well-being, and quality of life." The Physical Therapist Scope of Practice (2015).  American Physical Therapy Association.

    As providers of Physical Therapy in the school system, Physical Therapists provide services under Part B of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).  Under IDEA Physical Therapists, "work collaboratively with a student's IEP team and participate in screening, evaluation, program planning, and intervention. As a member of the IEP team, Physical Therapists design and implement physical therapy interventions - including teaching and training of family and education personnel and measurement and documentation of progress - to help the student achieve his/her IEP goal.

    Physical Therapists assist students in accessing school environments and benefiting from their educational program." Fact Sheet on Providing Physical Therapy in Schools under IDEA 2004 (2009). American Physical Therapy Association, Section on Pediatrics.

    What We Do

    Referral Process

    When a campus or parent concern arises for a student in Special Education that involves a student's positioning, mobility, or gross motor performance as it relates to the student's educational needs, the campus will consider whether a referral to physical therapy is warranted. There are several circumstances under which a referral to physical therapy may be generated.

    Students may be currently receiving special education services and demonstrate a lack of progress on a goal in an area that may require the addition of physical therapy to allow the student to make satisfactory progress on that goal.

    Students may move into the district with physical therapy as part of their Individual Education Plan (IEP).

    Students may be undergoing a Full and Individual Initial Evaluation to determine eligibility for special education and Physical Therapy (PT) is included as part of the process.

    It is determined at the Review of Existing Evaluation Data (REED) meeting that an updated assessment from physical therapy is needed.

    For students currently receiving special education services the campus team will:

    • Determine if there is an educational need for a PT Consult/Evaluation.

    If yes, a REED will be held and Parent Consent obtained to generate a Physical Therapy Consult/Evaluation which will be emailed to the campus Physical Therapist.

    Or,

    If no, move to the next step in the referral process as follows:

    Review the student's progress in the identified IEP Goals and Objectives.

    • Use measurable data to determine if barriers are limiting the student's progress in the identified goals and objectives or if there are additional areas of difficulty for the student not previously identified.
    • Consider campus-based supports, intervention strategies to benefit all students.
    • If the data shows that the strategies have not resulted in adequate improvement in performance, and the barriers limiting student progress involve performance skills in the areas of positioning, mobility, or gross motor functioning the ARD Committee should request a consult/evaluation for PT.

    For students who move into the district with physical therapy as part of their Individual Education Plan (IEP):

    • The Diagnostician will notify the Therapist(s) of the move-in utilizing the appropriate special education referral form and email the campus Physical Therapist.
    • The student will be evaluated for 30 school days according to the provisions in the IEP from the previous school district.
    • The Therapist will use this time to collect data needed to determine recommendations for physical therapy services in the new setting. 

    Note:  Due to the Texas PT licensure rules that govern physical therapy practice, the Therapist must have the following to provide physical therapy services:

    • A current (accurate and within last three years) evaluation in hand
    • Goals that indicate PT support
    • PT time, frequency, and duration specified on the services page
    • a Physician Referral

    Without these, the PT can only provide general intervention strategies.  If a current and adequate PT Evaluation does not come with the student's paperwork, the PT will update the student's present level of performance in the current educational setting and complete a PT Consult/Evaluation.

    For students who are currently undergoing a Full and Individual Evaluation to determine eligibility for Special Education:

    • The Evaluation Team may determine that information from Physical Therapy is needed to determine if the related service of PT would be necessary for the event the student qualifies for Special Education.
    • If it is determined that Physical Therapy is needed to participate in the Full and Individual Evaluation, the Diagnostician or Speech Therapist will send a referral to the Physical Therapist utilizing the appropriate special education form.

    For students who are undergoing a re-evaluation process and it is determined that an updated PT Evaluation is needed:

    The Diagnostician or Speech Therapist will procure parent permission for a Physical Therapy Re-Evaluation and send a referral to physical therapy utilizing the appropriate special education form and email it to the campus Physical Therapist.

    Evaluation Process

    "Physical therapists engage in an examination process that includes taking the individual's history, conducting a standardized system review, and performing selected tests and measures to identify potential and existing movement-related disorders."  (Guide to Physical Therapist Practice 3.0. Alexandria, VA: American Physical Therapy Association; 2014). School-based PTs may evaluate students with disabilities to determine the need for services in the educational setting. As a related service to Special Education, physical therapy services may be recommended to the individualized education program (IEP) team if the expertise of a PT is required for students to access the general education curriculum, to participate in their educational environment, and to benefit from their specially designed educational program.

    In responding to the request for consultation/evaluation, the PT may do any or all of the following:

    • Review information such as work samples, report cards, outside evaluations, district evaluations, teacher observations, and previously attempted strategies.
    • Collaborate with the student's teacher(s) regarding the student's history and progress about the identified educational concern.
    • Observe the student in the educational setting during the time and in the environment(s) where the problem(s) occurs.
    • If no additional support is indicated and it is determined that the area of concern can be addressed through general strategies (including classroom level interventions), the PT will complete the 91ÖÆƬ³§ PT Consultation Services form describing any observations/considerations and suggestions or follow-up that are recommended, review this information with the ARD Committee and provide this form to the campus Diagnostician or Speech Therapist to file in the audit folder.

     

    Service Delivery Models

    Student-specific services are provided in an integrated model to facilitate the implementation of the Individualized Educational Program (IEP) in the natural environment at school (including classrooms, hallways, cafeterias, gym, playground, etc.) Student-specific PT services are available for all students receiving special education services if an educational need is identified by the ARD Committee. PT services are provided as integrated support. Integrated PT service time may be used to work with the student in classroom or other school environments to determine appropriate strategies, interventions, and adapted equipment, and to train instructional staff on how and when to use strategies, interventions, and adapted equipment. The PT provider will participate with the collaborative team on the campus to assess the effectiveness of interventions and to revise/adapt interventions as needed.

    A Physical Therapist is assigned to each campus in 91ÖÆƬ³§ and is available as a campus resource.