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EditorialEditorials

Health Services Research: Physical Therapy Has Arrived!

Linda Resnik and Janet K. Freburger
Demo Journal of Physical Therapy December 2015, 95 (12) 1605-1607; DOI: https://doi.org/10.demo/ptj.2015.95.12.1605
Linda Resnik
L. Resnik, PT, PhD, is a guest co-editor of this special series. She is director, Center on Health Services Training and Research (CoHSTAR); professor (research), Department of Health Services, Policy and Practice, School of Public Health Brown University; and Research Career Scientist, Providence VA Medical Center, Providence, Rhode Island.
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Janet K. Freburger
J.K. Freburger, PT, PhD, is a guest co-editor of this special series. She is associate director and Senior Research Fellow, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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Health services research (HSR) and health policy topics are critically important to the future of the physical therapy profession, but they are included only rarely in physical therapy journals—until now. We are pleased to introduce the first of a 3-part special series on physical therapy–relevant HSR and health policy in rehabilitation.

According to the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality, HSR is a “multidisciplinary field of scientific investigation that studies how social factors, financing systems, organizational structures and processes, health technologies, and personal behaviors affect access to health care, the quality and cost of health care, and ultimately, our health and well-being.”1 HSR provides data, evidence, and tools to help make health care affordable, safe, effective, equitable, accessible, and patient centered. Products derived from HSR inform health policy—defined as “decisions, plans, and actions that are undertaken to achieve specific health care goals within a society”2—at all levels, from individual providers (eg, physical therapists), to health care organizations and systems, to payers and government. At one end of the spectrum, HSR can enable providers and patients to make better decisions about their individual health care; at the other end, HSR can inform decisions about payment policy and health care coverage for populations.

Health services research has never been more important than it is now, as health systems struggle to control costs and provide high-quality, high-value care. Desperately needed to demonstrate both the necessity and the value of physical therapy, this domain of research will provide data to inform the organization and delivery of physical therapy care, payment policies related to physical therapy, and future state and federal health care regulations.

In physical therapy, HSR was first promoted within APTA's Health Policy Administration (HPA) Section and presented through HPA platform and poster presentations. In 2005, the section initiated …

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Demo Journal of Physical Therapy: 95 (12)
Demo Journal of Physical Therapy
Vol. 95, Issue 12
1 Dec 2015
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Health Services Research: Physical Therapy Has Arrived!
Linda Resnik, Janet K. Freburger
Demo Journal of Physical Therapy Dec 2015, 95 (12) 1605-1607; DOI: 10.demo/ptj.2015.95.12.1605

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Health Services Research: Physical Therapy Has Arrived!
Linda Resnik, Janet K. Freburger
Demo Journal of Physical Therapy Dec 2015, 95 (12) 1605-1607; DOI: 10.demo/ptj.2015.95.12.1605
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