Walla Walla, Washington is a Hidden Gem!

Walla Walla Valley has much to offer its residents and visitors. Miles of road and mountain biking trails are available for cyclists of all abilities. For those who like to move fast or experience speed from the bleachers, head out to the local drag racing strip. In the winter, Bluewood Ski Area is a gathering place for many of the locals who enjoy skiing and snowboarding on a less crowded mountain. There are 120 wineries in Walla Walla Valley. You can go on tasting tours, drive through the vineyards for spectacular views, or head out to the many restaurants that serve wines from the local wineries. Many city parks including a dog park are available to residents and visitors. Lakes in the area provide places for hiking, camping, fishing, and paddle boarding. This truly is a wonderful place to live and work. 

Another great place In Walla Walla is Park Manor Rehabilitation Center. A skilled nursing facility that some residents of Walla Walla call home or come for a short time to recover before heading back home. Park Manor has a strong nursing and therapy team and are looking for a Speech Language Pathologist to join the them. Come see what Walla Walla and Park Manor have to offer!

Pacific Care - Grays Harbor Now Hiring!

What do Kurt Cobain (Alternative Rock Star), Bryan Danielson (WWF wrestler Daniel Bryan) and Peter Norton (Norton Anti-Virus) have in common? They are all from Aberdeen WA, Grays Harbor county. Grays Harbor is also known for its history in the lumber industry, top surfing spots on the Washington coast, amazing cranberry bogs, and some of the best offshore fishing and clamming in Washington State. Only an hour away from Olympia on the scenic Olympic highway. Quaint communities make up all of Grays Harbor and the residents love living in and being from the area.

Among these communities in Hoquiam, WA, Pacific Care and Rehabilitation is a skilled nursing facility that provides the best therapy and nursing services in the area. The staff at Pacific Care love their residents and live their mission to dignify long-term care and skilled rehab in the eyes of the world.

They have an opening on their in-house therapy team for an Occupational therapist. The facility is locally owned and operated with decisions made by local leaders. Let your voice be heard and be able to practice at the top of your license. Be a part of amazing clinical development, career growth, and leadership training opportunities. Come be part of something great! 

Pacific Care is currently offering an amazing career opportunity for an Occupational Therapist. Find out more about this amazing opportunity and browse our complete list of therapy job opportunities.

Revitalized Vital Signs! The Winners Are…..

By Tamala Sammons, M.A. CCC-SLP, Senior Therapy Resource
A huge thank-you to everyone who submitted information on how vital signs in therapy are being integrated at their facilities. We had amazing entries from across the organization. We were blown away by how vital signs have become such an integral piece of therapy services. We read the most clinically comprehensive documentation and saw how decisions around care were driven by vital signs during therapy sessions. We also were impressed on how vital signs data collected in therapy was used for IDT communication to ensure the very best collaborative care.

Overall we want to thank everyone – whether you submitted something in or not – for your focus on providing the best care using all resources, including integrating vital signs.

Here are this year’s Revitalized Vital Signs champions! Please join me in congratulating and celebrating the following facilities:

Vital Signs Grand Champions

● Shawnee PARC – Angie Taylor, Therapy Leader
● The Oaks at Lakewood – Glenn Aricaya, Therapy Leader
● Keystone Ridge – Tara Meyerpeter, Therapy Leader
● Cedar Pointe – Dustin Rex, Therapy Leader
● Legend Oaks Waxahachie – Evette Ramirez, Therapy Leader
● City Creek Post-Acute – Ray Yarman, Therapy Leader
● San Marcos Rehab – Ashley Keenan, Therapy Leader
● Rowlett Health and Rehab – Dana Pike, Therapy Leader
● Hays Nursing and Rehab – Reed Edwards, Therapy Leader
● Victoria Post-Acute – Dawn Thompson, Therapy Leader
● Kirkwood Manor – Heidi Gulley, Therapy Leader

Vital Signs Champions

● Legend – Gladewater – Jason Goza, Therapy Leader
● Northern Oaks – Sarah Adams, Therapy Leader
● Legend – Greenville – George Palin, Therapy Leader
● Windsor Rehab – Augustus Gray, Therapy Leader
● McCall – Ellie Toscan, Therapy Leader
● Rose Villa – Loren Penuliar / Lito Ortiz, Therapy Leaders

Vital Signs Honorable Mentions

● Hunter’s Pond – Sonia West, Therapy Leader
● Mesa Springs Health Care Center – Monica Sharpe, Therapy Leader
● Cambridge – Kapil Thakkar, Therapy Leader
● Legend – Paris – Quinn Hall, Therapy Leader

Therapy and Nursing Work Together to Prepare for COVID Outbreaks

By Dominic DeLaquil, PT, Therapy Resource Pennant – Idaho/Nevada
Just a couple of months ago, you could almost hear the collective sigh of relief as we were looking forward to a return to a more normal routine in our facilities. 2020 was a difficult year, as we were constantly pivoting to adapt to changing protocols in each building as outbreaks occurred, settled down, then surged again. The beginning of summer 2021 was bright with promise, most of our residents had been vaccinated, COVID case rates were dropping, and hope was in the air. Then the Delta variant showed up.

As one DOR in Idaho said, “As much as I’d like to bury my head in the sand about it, it does make sense to start preparing now.” So the Infinity and Lady Luck clusters in Idaho/Nevada asked the market Infection Prevention nurse, Clinical Resource Kristin Mumford, to join their next DOR call. The DORs and Kristin had a robust conversation, discussing topics such as how to manage therapist movements in a building, the importance of therapy to the psychosocial and physical well-being of residents when they have to stay in their rooms, the value of Therapy helping out our Nursing partners throughout the building in various “non-therapy” ways when extra help is needed on the floor, and other topics.

The conversation was an important early step to prepare for the worst, while we hope for the best. The conversation was productive for nursing and therapy, and the DORs left the call with agreements to their cluster partner DORs to each set up meetings with their DONs and EDs to discuss the plans in their buildings and how Therapy can help Nursing, serve the residents, and partner to ensure the best infection prevention protocols.

north mountain rehab hiring

Who Wouldn’t Want To Work For North Mountain? -WE’RE HIRING!

Calli Carlson is our dynamic rehab director at North Mountain Medical & Rehabilitation Center in Phoenix.  She started out as a staff Occupational Therapist here and feels privileged to now lead this team.  She says she has always been amazed by this group – they are compassionate, hard-working, ethical, intelligent and fully committed to helping patients reach their maximum independence.  The North Mountain team gets to work with a diverse and interesting group of patients since the facility accepts trach, vent or dialysis patients who are very medically complex and have spent a lot of time in a hospital setting. When the team first evaluates a patient, it is not uncommon for the patient to require full, two-person assist just to sit up at he edge of the bed for a few minutes.  It is incredible and rewarding to see those same patients eventually stand, walk, dress themselves, and return home to their families and lives that they love.  “Our therapists see the potential in our patients and help motivate and inspire them even when they cannot see the potential in themselves.  It is really a special thing,” says Calli.

North Mountain has become well known for their potluck celebrations and takes advantage of any opportunity to celebrate.  In addition to a dynamic and dedicated therapy team, the facility has a wonderful interdisciplinary team where there is mutual respect and accountability between departments and a high level of communication between all members of the team.  They hold themselves and their colleagues to a very high standard.

Calli and the therapy team have had uncountable meaningful experiences with their patients over the years.  A recent one involved a patient who had suffered a stroke six months prior to coming to North Mountain and had been residing at a different skilled nursing facility.  He had been in bed for the past six months, had very little strength, and was very depressed.  Within the first two weeks, the North Mountain team had him up in a wheelchair and standing with two therapists, a bilateral knee block and grab bars when he face timed his wife.  His wife was crying tears of joy and he was smiling – the first smile the therapy team had seen from him.  You could just feel that he finally had hope.  This patient continue to work with therapy and progress – and his wife is so pleased that our therapists were able to see his potential when others did not. 

Calli is excited for the future of the therapy department at North Mountain and expects the team to continue to grow.  Because of recent additions to the team, they are able to incorporate sensory stimulation, communication boards, fine motor/gross motor activities to improve engagement, edema management and bed/wheelchair positioning to maximize patient’s well being and healing. “I am eager to work with even more patients as we grow our therapy family!”

Intrigued? North Mountain Medical & Rehabilitation Center is currently offering an amazing career opportunity for a full time Physical Therapist. Find out more about these amazing opportunities and browse our complete list of therapy job opportunities.

Congratulations Kevin Moon, Our Newest SPARC Winner!

Kevin Moon, SLP, Graduated from Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA

Read his awesome winning essay below:
Dr. Atul Gawande, the author of Being Mortal, once said “We think our job is to ensure health and survival. But really it is larger than that. It is to enable well-being.” This quote is powerful and is a philosophy I want to implement to be a spark in the lives of the patients I will be working with.

One way is to provide patient-centered, evidence-based treatments that move towards accomplishing the patient’s goals and wishes. This type of care is what has been emphasized in my training during my externship with Ensign Services and at Loma Linda University. Trying to step into a patient’s world, understand where they are coming from, respecting the patient’s wishes/goals, and delivering inclusive and culturally appropriate treatments are all things that can help better treat patients holistically. In addition, applying the core values of my school which include compassion, excellence, humility, integrity, teamwork, and wholeness of care in conjunction with the training I received during my externship will enable me to provide speech therapy to patients at the highest levels.

The populations that reside in skilled nursing facilities (SNF) are one of the most vulnerable, susceptible, and most in need of our support and skilled help. With the combination of my education and training, I hope to bring speech therapy that not only treats disorders such as cognition, swallowing, speech, and language but also provides patients with exciting, evidence-based therapy using the principles that my university has taught me such as compassion and humility. Hopefully, if I can use my passion for speech therapy to deliver engaging sessions to treat patients and I hope to inspire patients to want to get better. When going into each session during my externship, my goal is to treat the patient as a person first and a patient second. Because these patients are in such a vulnerable stage in their lives, treating them as a person first with humility and respect allows them to keep their dignity and self-worth intact during their stay at the facility. Doing this can really help me get to know my patient and really optimize therapy sessions as well as provide motivation and increase participation. In a setting such as SNFs, there are opportunities to really get to know the patients, and I want to use everything I can (e.g., personality, knowledge, training, rapport, and understanding of the patient) to inspire them so that they want to be in therapy and be an active participant in their recovery process. For example, most recently, I worked with a patient that needed swallowing therapy, but because of her physical and mental state, she had a difficult time participating in sessions and displayed major decreased activity tolerance. Over our first few sessions, I learned that music was a huge part of her life. I discovered her love for R&B
and oldies. Once I learned this about the patient, we incorporated music into our session and got better results. Prior to using music, when her pain was high, we had to stop for a prolonged amount of time or even end sessions. Once we incorporated music into her sessions, we sang her favorite songs when she felt pain and this was able to get her back into focus and continue the session. Sometimes, she would even smile amidst all of her pain.

Another example from my externship was a speech and language patient that I worked with. He was a farmer from Mexico and only spoke Spanish. This language barrier posed to be a problem during our first session together. Although I knew some Spanish phrases for swallowing therapy, my abilities in Spanish, in general, were not up to par. When interacting with this patient, I was able to see that the language barrier was causing some frustration and decreased engagement with the patient. In order to deliver functional and personalized therapy, I started to study Spanish. To start, I learned Spanish related to farming, fruits, and vegetables to work on word finding and circumlocution strategies. After learning words and phrases that were related to things that were familiar to the patient, we started to work on speech and language. The patient’s level of engagement immediately increased while frustrations decreased. At times, the patient would tell stories or go on tangents, and I could see his face light up when reminiscing about his past. He even used language that was more complex than he usually used, thus improving his speech and language while brightening up his day with positive and happy thoughts.

With the benefit of being able to develop relationships with patients, my goal is to foster a culture where therapy provides functional and motivating activities for patients that they are motivated to do. I would love to get to a point where patients smile and want to get to sessions because of the spark I have tried to instill in them. More importantly, the passion that I bring will help improve the quality of life for residents. To ensure that this happens, the therapy delivered must be evidence-based and patient-specific. This is the way I envision delivering therapy.

Evidence-based practice is composed of three components: the best external evidence, clinical expertise, and patient preference. To ensure that true evidence-based therapy is delivered, each component must be fulfilled. By tapping into the desire to continually learn, I can find the best, most up-to-date research through avenues such as continuing education, self-research, and collaboration with others. This ensures that patients receive well-documented, well- researched methods of therapy. The patient’s preference is also paramount to finding the right treatments for therapy. This is done by really listening to what the patient and their families have to say. The patient should not be a passive participant in the rehabilitation process, rather, an active participant in their healing process. This is one of the biggest things that can keep me accountable. By keeping the patient in the driver’s seat of their journey, the patient and their progress are the factors that will ensure I stay accountable. My purpose is to help patients and I plan to keep myself accountable to them. Clinical expertise is the last component of having evidence-based practice. I have built a strong foundation with my experience as an extern at Ensign and building my clinical experience will be an ongoing journey because clinical learning should not stop.

Finding my meaning in evidence-based practice and how to deliver it is one of the biggest things I learned during my 10-week externship at Brookfield Healthcare Center and Downey Post-Acute facilities. I also learned many other things that will help me deliver evidence-based, patient-centered, and holistic therapy to the patients I will be working with. One lasting lesson I have learned about working in SNFs, which I will take with me throughout my career, is best stated by Mark Parkinson: “Instead of just keeping your residents alive, give them a reason to live.” This plays hand in hand with Dr. Gawande’s ideas about enabling well-being rather than just ensuring health and survival. Instead of pursuing the sole goal of extending someone’s life, giving patients dignity and purpose to residents during their stays at SNFs is something that was emphasized during school and my externship. This can not only have an impact on the patient’s treatment, but it can have an effect on other aspects of their lives such as mental health and overall well-being. Thus, providing therapy that is beyond just doing exercises is very important. It requires giving respect, dignity, and purpose combined with therapy exercises to deliver high-quality treatment to patients.

Many times in therapy, the patient’s therapy needs are siloed into their respective disciplines (OT, PT, SLP). Rather than focusing on only the specific treatments that need to be provided by each specific discipline, by looking at the person and their lives as a whole with an interdisciplinary lens, treatment can be designed to promote purpose, engagement, and collaboration. This opens up a world of avenues where the different disciplines of therapy can work together to not only help with the patient’s deficits but to promote well-being and give them more motivation to keep pushing forward. Furthermore, this idea can be used to promote efficiency by finding ways to provide different therapies the patient needs in one session using an interdisciplinary approach. Using a strategy that can increase therapy efficiency across the different disciplines along with increasing quality of life for patients provides benefits to both the patient and the business. And in this way, it gives me opportunities to make a difference and create a spark in any way possible. Even a smile, a simple gesture, a kind word, a listening ear, or an honest compliment has the potential to create a spark in patients and give them dignity. When this happens, everybody wins.

Clinical Instructors: One of the Most Influential Parts of Our Professional Growth

By Joseph Benzon (JB) Chua, PT, CEEAA, DOR, Summerfield Healthcare, Santa Rosa, CA
“Develop a passion for learning. If you do, you will never cease to grow.” — Anthony J. D’Angelo

Clinical Instructors (CIs) are individuals who will create, mold and influence our personalities as we tackle the ever-changing world of healthcare. I, myself, started as a student who was trained by some of the best therapists in our organization.

Janet Weinberger, PT, was a lead PT at Summerfield when she took me under her wings and taught me not only great clinical skills, but also strong clinical documentation skills. She’s now on our ADR and Appeals team. Janet’s DOR was Lori O’Hara, SLP. She led her team in Summerfield with her great knowledge and driven attitude and had inspired me to do the same. Lori is now the lead therapist helping us navigate the new payment system of PDPM. Lastly, my former DOR and resource, Gina Tucker-Roghi, OTR, helped me to identify the unique talent of every individual and foster these individuals to really shine (much like her Abilities Care Approach, right?).

When the pandemic hit us in March 2020, our student program at Summerfield halted and we had to send three students back to their school because of the strict restrictions given to skilled nursing facilities. Every single month, therapists as well as academic site coordinators were asking when we would be ready to get the students back in our building. In May 2021, we accepted our very first PT student post-pandemic from Samuel Merritt University, where one of our therapy resources, Ciara Cox, also teaches. The student’s name is Natalia Gonzalez-Smith. Her CI, a newly hired PT (in the same month that Natalia started) named Siddharth “Sid” Mourya, PT, is ready to tackle the challenge of teaching his first student.

Both student and CI inspired me with their willingness to learn from each other, to identify clinical approaches to provide the best care for our residents, and to develop programs for our long-term population to minimize their risk of decline in function and learning the Ensign way. Natalia finished her clinical rotation with flying colors, providing us with a great case study backed up with evidenced-based research that helped even the seasoned therapists in their clinical approach. In return, we sent her off with a piñata party, where she showed her happiness by hitting the piñata as hard as she could and shared the candies inside it. As for Sid, he was set to take his Credentialed Clinical Instructor Program course mid-July. He enjoyed the experience and encouraged his wife (who is also a PT) to do the same.

Our profession as well as our organization is shaped by each and every talented and driven therapist. Share your knowledge and keep the passion for learning alive.

One Step Backward, One Step Forward to Independence

By Carlos Pineda, CTO/DOR, Southland Care Center, Norwalk, CA
We are launching our “prototype” Tandem Backward Walking I-Southland Tool in a Lunch and Learn training. This maintenance series is dedicated to the person who inspired Southland to pursue greatness with maintaining the function of our beloved residents: Bertha Spaeder (pictured with Roger Pavon, PTA). Bertha has been my inspiration in pursuing greatness for our beloved patients. I named this tool after Bertha. ” B.S.MP01″ –Stands for Bertha Spaeder Maintenance Program series 01. Standardized testing and strategies are also part of the training. This evidence-based group therapy program aims to minimize fall risk.

Bertha Spaeder Maintenance Program Series 01
Walking backward is essential in our daily life: when opening a door, backing away from a kitchen sink, stepping from the curb as a swiftly-moving bus passes, during toileting, or opening the refrigerator. An effective compensatory stepping response is the first line of defense for preventing a fall during sudden large external perturbations. Falling backwards is common among our elderly population especially with comorbidities like Parkinson’s disease and CVA.

A validated standardized test, “Backward Walk Test,” assesses ability to walk backward. On the 3-meter backward walk test, if the individual completed the backward test in more than 4.5 seconds, the person is at risk for falling. Following is the procedure:

Procedure:

  1. Check Vital Signs
  2. Introduce the patients to each other
  3. Educate patients on the purpose
  4. Demonstrate the procedure
  5. Start with slow pace (60bpm on metronome) or let patient count on every step or state which leg will go first (Right…, Left…)
    a. For Progression – increase by 10 bpm every week or as needed, if safe.
    b. To add cognitive challenge, ( 1. ) Ask the patient to count backward simultaneously with the metronome beat. (2.) Instruct patient to turn head Right<>Left while walking backward.
  6. Assess for any gait deviation
  7. Repeat

Group activity should be graded and have enough stimulus/challenge to promote physiological changes. This can be effectively done using the Borg Scale. It is a skilled and billable service provided by qualified therapists that requires continuous analysis, assessment and monitoring during the intervention. Tandem Backward Walking group therapy promotes teamwork and a sense of purpose. As biopsychosocial therapists, we address not only the impairments but also the psychosocial wellbeing of the patient. We identify and take aim on what is important to the patient and on how they define quality of life.

SLPs and COVID-19

By Elyse Matson, MA CCC-SLP, Clinical Resource
Cognition and Swallowing are among the common challenges persisting for many Americans after COVID-19. Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs) can help patients regain health and quality of life.

With an estimated 10 to 30% of COVID-19 survivors experiencing a post-COVID-19 syndrome, including brain fog and swallowing difficulties, it is more important than ever to utilize the full range of services provided by SLPs.

The pandemic tested everyone as a society, but one of the persistent challenges is the daunting set of difficulties many of our residents and those in our communities are experiencing after contracting and recovering from COVID-19. Many continue to demonstrate diminished function, including with cognitive skills, communication of needs and swallowing abilities.

This is an excerpt from the new COVID-19 Clinical Pathway, available on the Portal. This tool guides SLPs through the specific treatment needs of residents at various phases of recovery from COVID-19.

Impairments SLPs can assess

● Cognition
Many residents who had COVID-19 report persistent brain fog as a debilitating symptom after recovering from the virus. This can prevent a return to home as well as impact independence with ADLs. SLPs engage with individuals to improve their memory, attention, organization and planning, problem solving, learning and social communication — such as re-learning conversational rules or understanding the intent behind a message or behind nonverbal cues. The focus is on the person’s specific challenges as well as regaining the skills that are most important to their daily life and priorities.

● Swallowing
Residents diagnosed with COVID-19 may experience swallowing problems that can put them at risk for choking, aspirating, decreased appetite and diminished sensory feedback while eating (loss of taste and smell). This may be the result of time spent on a ventilator, or it may be another side effect of the virus. SLPs are part of the team who decide on the best course of action with the patient and their family. SLPs may recommend modified textures of food and drink for patients; therapy exercises to strengthen the tongue, lips, and muscles in the mouth and throat; and strategies to make eating and drinking safer, such as modifying the pace of chewing/eating, size of food, and more.

● Communication
People diagnosed with COVID-19 are also experiencing speech and language difficulties. Some, such as those who spent a significant amount of time on a ventilator or experienced low oxygen to the brain, may have muscle weakness or reduced coordination in the muscles of the face, lips, tongue, and throat — making it difficult to talk. Others, particularly those who experienced a COVID-related stroke, may experience aphasia, which makes it hard for someone to understand, speak, read or write. SLPs intervene with patients through targeted therapy to improve their communication and understanding.

People who have severe speech and/or language difficulties may need to find other ways to answer questions or tell people what they want, such as through gesturing with their hands, pointing to letters or pictures on a paper or board, or using a computer. These are all forms of augmentative and alternative communication (AAC). SLPs help find the appropriate AAC method to meet an individual’s needs.

For questions about SLP scope of practice or program development, contact Elyse Matson, SLP Resource, at ematson@ensignservices.net.

Wound Care: A Case Study in Pueblo Springs, Tucson, AZ

Resident K is a 52-year-old man who was referred to Physical Therapy for chronic, non-healing pressure ulcers of the coccyx and ischial tuberosity and severe pain.

  • PMH: Spina Bifida, B AKA, HTN, colostomy; wounds have been present approximately 10 years. Patient underwent flap surgery five years ago; wound vac has been unsuccessful in promoting healing
  • PLOF: Modified Independent in transfers and wheelchair mobility; has resided in nursing homes for 10 years; history of being non-compliant with pressure relief and positioning

Evaluation status (4/2020):

  • Mobility: Modified I transfers and wheelchair mobility; tilt in space motorized chair with ROHO cushion
  • Strength or ROM deficits: No
  • Wound 1: Coccyx: Stage 4 pressure ulcer: 1.5L x.7W x.6D; necrotic <25%
  • Wound 2: Ischial Tuberosity: Stage 4 pressure ulcer: 3.5L x 3.0W x 3.0D
  • Pain: 7/10 with any movement, related to wounds

Wound care: Dakins solution

Patient reluctantly agrees to PT POC to initiate in-wound electrical stimulation (HVPC) five times a week to facilitate increased wound bed granulation, decrease necrotic tissue, decrease pain and facilitate wound healing. Patient states, “These wounds won’t heal; they’ve been there forever and I’ve tried it all.”
D/C plan: reside in skilled nursing facility

Discharge status (10/2020):

  • Wound 1: Coccyx: Resolved
  • Wound 2: Ischial Tuberosity: .3L x .3W x .2D
  • Pain: 0/10
  • Patient is discharging to an Assisted Living Facility

As the wounds began to improve, patient K began to be compliant with positioning and pressure relief. During the course of treatment, estim protocol changed from negative to positive polarity in wound, and then finally peri-wound as wounds became too small for in-wound electrode placement. Dressing changes occurred through IDT wound team consultation. Treatment included patient/caregiver education throughout.

Kudos to the Pueblo team for being willing to tackle the “impossible” wounds and having the perseverance to hang in there! They understood that chronic healing takes time. Meeting requirements of documenting progress every 30 days, changing protocols when healing began to plateau, and using skilled assessment allowed them to continue the POC to closure/near closure of the wounds.

Submitted by Shelby Donahoo, M.S., OTR/L, Therapy Resource, Bandera