Wash. Admin. Code § 246-915-381 - Spinal manipulation-Endorsement. (Effective July 1, 2020.)
(1) A physical
therapist may perform spinal manipulation only after being issued a spinal
manipulation endorsement by the secretary. The secretary, upon approval by the
board, shall issue an endorsement to a physical therapist who has at least one
year of full-time, orthopedic, postgraduate practice experience that consists
of direct patient care and averages at least thirty-six hours a week and who
provides evidence in a manner acceptable to the board of all of the following
additional requirements:
(a)Training in
differential diagnosis of no less than one hundred hours outlined within a
course curriculum;
(b)Didactic and
practical training related to the delivery of spinal manipulative procedures of
no less than two hundred fifty hours clearly delineated and outlined in a
course curriculum;
(c)Specific
training in spinal diagnostic imaging of no less than one hundred fifty hours
outlined in a course curriculum; and
(d) At least three hundred hours of
supervised clinical practical experience in spinal manipulative procedures. The
supervised clinical practical experience must:
(i) Be supervised by a clinical supervisor
who:
(A)Holds a spinal manipulation
endorsement under this section; or
(B) Is a licensed chiropractor or osteopathic
physician and surgeon;
(ii) Be under the close supervision of the
clinical supervisor for a minimum of the first one hundred fifty hours of the
supervised clinical practical experience, after which the supervised clinical
practical experience must be under the direct supervision of the clinical
supervisor.
(iii) Be completed
within eighteen months of completing the educational requirements in (a)
through (c) of this subsection, unless the physical therapist has completed the
educational requirements in (a) through (c) of this subsection prior to July 1,
2015, in which case the supervised clinical practical experience must be
completed by January 1, 2017.
(2) A physical therapist holding a spinal
manipulation endorsement under subsection (1) of this section shall consult
with a health care practitioner, other than a physical therapist, authorized to
perform spinal manipulation if spinal manipulative procedures are required
beyond six treatments.
(3) A
physical therapist holding a spinal manipulation endorsement under subsection
(1) of this section may not:
(a)Have a
practice in which spinal manipulation constitutes the majority of the services
provided;
(b)Practice or utilize
chiropractic manipulative therapy in any form;
(c)Delegate spinal manipulation; or
(d) Bill a health carrier for spinal
manipulation separately from, or in addition to, other physical therapy
procedures.
(4) A
physical therapist holding a spinal manipulation endorsement under this section
shall complete continuing education directly related to spinal manipulation as
specified in WAC
246-915-085.
(5)If a physical therapist is intending to
perform spinal manipulation on a patient who the physical therapist knows is
being treated by a chiropractor for the same diagnosis, the physical therapist
shall make reasonable efforts to coordinate patient care with the chiropractor
to prevent conflict or duplication of services.
Notes
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