Supporting the Physiatrist, Strengthening the Specialty

AAPM&R is working to ensure PM&R is positioned to thrive in the future of healthcare and that you’re prepared for wherever your career takes you. Our more than 10,000 Academy members support each other in advancing PM&R’s impact through healthcare. As we move forward, it is more important than ever that every member play an active role in helping one another realize the vision for our specialty.

Newsroom

Looking for AAPM&R members in the news? Press releases? Our Academy Action Center? Or looking to submit your members in the news content? You'll find it all in our Newsroom. You will also be able to explore PM&R and Academy news as well as learn how to contact us if you would like to submit your member content, or if you are a reporter who is interested in speaking with a PM&R physician.

Event Calendar and Webinars

Stay up to date on all Academy events and learning opportunities and view recordings of past webinars. 

PM&R Aspire

PM&R Aspire is our career-exploration platform purpose-built to help PM&R professionals make better-informed career decisions. We have mapped employer locations across the United States, enabling you to explore, message and apply to the roles that matter most to you.

PM&R Q&A Video Conversations

AAPM&R is leading the advancement of physiatry’s impact throughout healthcare as aligned with YOUR vision for the specialty. Explore our Q&A video series where members of our Physiatrist in Training (PHiT) Council Board chat with AAPM&R Board leaders.

Latest News

BREAKING: AAPM&R Leads Effort to Unite Team Physiatry to Score an Enormous Advocacy Win

Aug 4, 2020, 20:10 by User Not Found

AAPM&R is thrilled to announce that our leadership efforts have resulted in a BIG WIN for physiatry! By bringing together the unified voice of 2,377 physiatrists, 123 patient advocacy groups, state and medical specialties, and large IRF hospitals, as well as 97 of your patients, and gaining support from key Congressional offices, we have successfully defeated a dangerous CMS proposal that would have had a detrimental impact on patient care, the specialty, and the future of inpatient rehabilitation.

CMS heard us! In the rule released today, August 4, 2020, CMS did NOT finalize their proposal, as written, to amend the IRF coverage requirements to allow non-physician practitioners (NPPs) to perform certain duties that are currently required to be performed by a rehabilitation physician. CMS is finalizing that an NPP may perform one of the three required face-to-face visits in lieu of the rehabilitation physician in the second and later weeks of a patient’s IRF stay, when consistent with the NPP’s scope of practice under applicable state law. Rehabilitation physicians will continue to have the flexibility to see the patient on three or more occasions per week, as is currently permitted. CMS is continuing the requirements that a rehabilitation physician review and concur with the preadmission screening for the IRF admission, establish and implement the overall plan of care, and lead the weekly interdisciplinary team conferences, which include rehabilitation nurses, social workers or case managers, and treating therapists carrying out the patient’s care plan.

"Those of us leading this advocacy effort are so pleased that CMS heard our voice and heeded our concerns. There is still work ahead but we are so thankful to everyone who helped us in this effort. Our patients and our specialty are better for it."

Darryl Kaelin, MD, FAAPMR
AAPM&R Past President
Co-Chair, Future of Inpatient Rehabilitation Workgroup

By leading this effort, and with your help and support, AAPM&R successfully united all physiatrists and other stakeholders to keep inpatient rehabilitative care duties in the hands of the rehabilitation physician. This is a monumental win and would not have been possible without the engagement of our members and other key supporters. Thank you!

We are also thrilled to announce CMS’ decision to remove the post-admission physician evaluation (PAPE) documentation requirement, effective October 1, 2020. Your Academy has long advocated to reduce burden for physiatrists by streamlining administrative documentation. CMS’ decision to remove the PAPE is a direct result of our persistent advocacy. As proposed, CMS has also codified into regulation certain elements of the pre-admission screening (PAS); however, they have removed three elements from the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual including expected frequency and duration of treatment in the IRF, any anticipated post-discharge treatments, and other information relevant to the patient’s care needs.

AAPM&R’s advocacy work provides what individual PM&R physicians cannot easily do alone — influence the trajectory of PM&R in health care and help advance the future of the specialty. We track and influence legislation and policy issues; advocating on behalf of our members and positioning PM&R doctors as leaders across the health care continuum.

Our advocacy does not stop here. AAPM&R actively asserts our position that physiatry-led, patient-centered, team-based care is the best approach to providing optimized medical rehabilitation care for patients. Physiatrists are necessary and integral leaders of the rehabilitation care team within the IRF setting and we will continue to advocate for the long-term interests of physiatrists in IRFs and patients in need of intensive, coordinated, interdisciplinary inpatient hospital rehabilitation.

Collaboration, open dialogue, and a united voice among physiatrists will be essential to our success. In the weeks and months ahead, please watch for updates from our Future of Inpatient Rehabilitation Workgroup and requests from AAPM&R for you to stay involved and support future efforts.

Team Physiatry’s success is driven by you. Thank you for being a #PMRAdvocate and getting involved! We couldn’t do it without you.

AAPM&R will continue to review the final rule in its entirety and to share further updates with you. To read the finalized IRF Prospective Payment System Rule for 2021, click here.

BREAKING: AAPM&R Leads Effort to Unite Team Physiatry to Score an Enormous Advocacy Win

Aug 4, 2020, 20:10 by User Not Found

AAPM&R is thrilled to announce that our leadership efforts have resulted in a BIG WIN for physiatry! By bringing together the unified voice of 2,377 physiatrists, 123 patient advocacy groups, state and medical specialties, and large IRF hospitals, as well as 97 of your patients, and gaining support from key Congressional offices, we have successfully defeated a dangerous CMS proposal that would have had a detrimental impact on patient care, the specialty, and the future of inpatient rehabilitation.

CMS heard us! In the rule released today, August 4, 2020, CMS did NOT finalize their proposal, as written, to amend the IRF coverage requirements to allow non-physician practitioners (NPPs) to perform certain duties that are currently required to be performed by a rehabilitation physician. CMS is finalizing that an NPP may perform one of the three required face-to-face visits in lieu of the rehabilitation physician in the second and later weeks of a patient’s IRF stay, when consistent with the NPP’s scope of practice under applicable state law. Rehabilitation physicians will continue to have the flexibility to see the patient on three or more occasions per week, as is currently permitted. CMS is continuing the requirements that a rehabilitation physician review and concur with the preadmission screening for the IRF admission, establish and implement the overall plan of care, and lead the weekly interdisciplinary team conferences, which include rehabilitation nurses, social workers or case managers, and treating therapists carrying out the patient’s care plan.

"Those of us leading this advocacy effort are so pleased that CMS heard our voice and heeded our concerns. There is still work ahead but we are so thankful to everyone who helped us in this effort. Our patients and our specialty are better for it."

Darryl Kaelin, MD, FAAPMR
AAPM&R Past President
Co-Chair, Future of Inpatient Rehabilitation Workgroup

By leading this effort, and with your help and support, AAPM&R successfully united all physiatrists and other stakeholders to keep inpatient rehabilitative care duties in the hands of the rehabilitation physician. This is a monumental win and would not have been possible without the engagement of our members and other key supporters. Thank you!

We are also thrilled to announce CMS’ decision to remove the post-admission physician evaluation (PAPE) documentation requirement, effective October 1, 2020. Your Academy has long advocated to reduce burden for physiatrists by streamlining administrative documentation. CMS’ decision to remove the PAPE is a direct result of our persistent advocacy. As proposed, CMS has also codified into regulation certain elements of the pre-admission screening (PAS); however, they have removed three elements from the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual including expected frequency and duration of treatment in the IRF, any anticipated post-discharge treatments, and other information relevant to the patient’s care needs.

AAPM&R’s advocacy work provides what individual PM&R physicians cannot easily do alone — influence the trajectory of PM&R in health care and help advance the future of the specialty. We track and influence legislation and policy issues; advocating on behalf of our members and positioning PM&R doctors as leaders across the health care continuum.

Our advocacy does not stop here. AAPM&R actively asserts our position that physiatry-led, patient-centered, team-based care is the best approach to providing optimized medical rehabilitation care for patients. Physiatrists are necessary and integral leaders of the rehabilitation care team within the IRF setting and we will continue to advocate for the long-term interests of physiatrists in IRFs and patients in need of intensive, coordinated, interdisciplinary inpatient hospital rehabilitation.

Collaboration, open dialogue, and a united voice among physiatrists will be essential to our success. In the weeks and months ahead, please watch for updates from our Future of Inpatient Rehabilitation Workgroup and requests from AAPM&R for you to stay involved and support future efforts.

Team Physiatry’s success is driven by you. Thank you for being a #PMRAdvocate and getting involved! We couldn’t do it without you.

AAPM&R will continue to review the final rule in its entirety and to share further updates with you. To read the finalized IRF Prospective Payment System Rule for 2021, click here.

Explore AAPM&R

Online Learning Portal

Education is a fundamental offering that affects PM&R physicians across clinical focuses, practice areas, career stages and levels of expertise. As part of Academy membership, we provide top-notch education and other innovative learning resources across a variety of delivery mechanisms.

Access AAPM&R’s popular Online Learning Portal, which features educational resources, including case studies, instructional videos and more on a variety of clinical and practice topics.



Online Learning Portal

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Online Education Subscription

24/7 access to our online educational resources through the end of your annual membership cycle. Check out what's included below!

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STEP Certificate Programs

AAPM&R’s highly-regarded STEP Certificate Programs are designed by physiatrists for physiatrists and teach and assess important physiatric skills using a progressive, competency- based curriculum.

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PhyzForum

PhyzForum is an online physiatry community that allows you to engage with peers, ask advice, and share experiences. Participate in discussions to network, collaborate, and exchange best practices with your peers.

Annual Assembly
November 12-15

12310A-1936

The 2020 Annual Assembly is virtual! Join us from November 12-15 as we meet online to share best practices and support each other as we navigate a “new normal."

Critical Conversation Series

Thursday, October 1 at 6 pm (CT)

You're invited to participate in a series of discussions on racial equity, access and inclusion in today’s world. Join us for our next conversation on October 1 for AAPM&R's Diversity and Inclusion Journey. We will review efforts that led to the creation of the D&I strategic plan, unveil our new Principles of Inclusion and Engagement and share new initiatives on the horizon.

AAPM&R News

BREAKING: AAPM&R Leads Effort to Unite Team Physiatry to Score an Enormous Advocacy Win

Aug 04, 2020

AAPM&R is thrilled to announce that our leadership efforts have resulted in a BIG WIN for physiatry! By bringing together the unified voice of 2,377 physiatrists, 123 patient advocacy groups, state and medical specialties, and large IRF hospitals, as well as 97 of your patients, and gaining support from key Congressional offices, we have successfully defeated a dangerous CMS proposal that would have had a detrimental impact on patient care, the specialty, and the future of inpatient rehabilitation.

CMS heard us! In the rule released today, August 4, 2020, CMS did NOT finalize their proposal, as written, to amend the IRF coverage requirements to allow non-physician practitioners (NPPs) to perform certain duties that are currently required to be performed by a rehabilitation physician. CMS is finalizing that an NPP may perform one of the three required face-to-face visits in lieu of the rehabilitation physician in the second and later weeks of a patient’s IRF stay, when consistent with the NPP’s scope of practice under applicable state law. Rehabilitation physicians will continue to have the flexibility to see the patient on three or more occasions per week, as is currently permitted. CMS is continuing the requirements that a rehabilitation physician review and concur with the preadmission screening for the IRF admission, establish and implement the overall plan of care, and lead the weekly interdisciplinary team conferences, which include rehabilitation nurses, social workers or case managers, and treating therapists carrying out the patient’s care plan.

"Those of us leading this advocacy effort are so pleased that CMS heard our voice and heeded our concerns. There is still work ahead but we are so thankful to everyone who helped us in this effort. Our patients and our specialty are better for it."

Darryl Kaelin, MD, FAAPMR
AAPM&R Past President
Co-Chair, Future of Inpatient Rehabilitation Workgroup

By leading this effort, and with your help and support, AAPM&R successfully united all physiatrists and other stakeholders to keep inpatient rehabilitative care duties in the hands of the rehabilitation physician. This is a monumental win and would not have been possible without the engagement of our members and other key supporters. Thank you!

We are also thrilled to announce CMS’ decision to remove the post-admission physician evaluation (PAPE) documentation requirement, effective October 1, 2020. Your Academy has long advocated to reduce burden for physiatrists by streamlining administrative documentation. CMS’ decision to remove the PAPE is a direct result of our persistent advocacy. As proposed, CMS has also codified into regulation certain elements of the pre-admission screening (PAS); however, they have removed three elements from the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual including expected frequency and duration of treatment in the IRF, any anticipated post-discharge treatments, and other information relevant to the patient’s care needs.

AAPM&R’s advocacy work provides what individual PM&R physicians cannot easily do alone — influence the trajectory of PM&R in health care and help advance the future of the specialty. We track and influence legislation and policy issues; advocating on behalf of our members and positioning PM&R doctors as leaders across the health care continuum.

Our advocacy does not stop here. AAPM&R actively asserts our position that physiatry-led, patient-centered, team-based care is the best approach to providing optimized medical rehabilitation care for patients. Physiatrists are necessary and integral leaders of the rehabilitation care team within the IRF setting and we will continue to advocate for the long-term interests of physiatrists in IRFs and patients in need of intensive, coordinated, interdisciplinary inpatient hospital rehabilitation.

Collaboration, open dialogue, and a united voice among physiatrists will be essential to our success. In the weeks and months ahead, please watch for updates from our Future of Inpatient Rehabilitation Workgroup and requests from AAPM&R for you to stay involved and support future efforts.

Team Physiatry’s success is driven by you. Thank you for being a #PMRAdvocate and getting involved! We couldn’t do it without you.

AAPM&R will continue to review the final rule in its entirety and to share further updates with you. To read the finalized IRF Prospective Payment System Rule for 2021, click here.

Physiatry News

BREAKING: AAPM&R Leads Effort to Unite Team Physiatry to Score an Enormous Advocacy Win

Aug 04, 2020

AAPM&R is thrilled to announce that our leadership efforts have resulted in a BIG WIN for physiatry! By bringing together the unified voice of 2,377 physiatrists, 123 patient advocacy groups, state and medical specialties, and large IRF hospitals, as well as 97 of your patients, and gaining support from key Congressional offices, we have successfully defeated a dangerous CMS proposal that would have had a detrimental impact on patient care, the specialty, and the future of inpatient rehabilitation.

CMS heard us! In the rule released today, August 4, 2020, CMS did NOT finalize their proposal, as written, to amend the IRF coverage requirements to allow non-physician practitioners (NPPs) to perform certain duties that are currently required to be performed by a rehabilitation physician. CMS is finalizing that an NPP may perform one of the three required face-to-face visits in lieu of the rehabilitation physician in the second and later weeks of a patient’s IRF stay, when consistent with the NPP’s scope of practice under applicable state law. Rehabilitation physicians will continue to have the flexibility to see the patient on three or more occasions per week, as is currently permitted. CMS is continuing the requirements that a rehabilitation physician review and concur with the preadmission screening for the IRF admission, establish and implement the overall plan of care, and lead the weekly interdisciplinary team conferences, which include rehabilitation nurses, social workers or case managers, and treating therapists carrying out the patient’s care plan.

"Those of us leading this advocacy effort are so pleased that CMS heard our voice and heeded our concerns. There is still work ahead but we are so thankful to everyone who helped us in this effort. Our patients and our specialty are better for it."

Darryl Kaelin, MD, FAAPMR
AAPM&R Past President
Co-Chair, Future of Inpatient Rehabilitation Workgroup

By leading this effort, and with your help and support, AAPM&R successfully united all physiatrists and other stakeholders to keep inpatient rehabilitative care duties in the hands of the rehabilitation physician. This is a monumental win and would not have been possible without the engagement of our members and other key supporters. Thank you!

We are also thrilled to announce CMS’ decision to remove the post-admission physician evaluation (PAPE) documentation requirement, effective October 1, 2020. Your Academy has long advocated to reduce burden for physiatrists by streamlining administrative documentation. CMS’ decision to remove the PAPE is a direct result of our persistent advocacy. As proposed, CMS has also codified into regulation certain elements of the pre-admission screening (PAS); however, they have removed three elements from the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual including expected frequency and duration of treatment in the IRF, any anticipated post-discharge treatments, and other information relevant to the patient’s care needs.

AAPM&R’s advocacy work provides what individual PM&R physicians cannot easily do alone — influence the trajectory of PM&R in health care and help advance the future of the specialty. We track and influence legislation and policy issues; advocating on behalf of our members and positioning PM&R doctors as leaders across the health care continuum.

Our advocacy does not stop here. AAPM&R actively asserts our position that physiatry-led, patient-centered, team-based care is the best approach to providing optimized medical rehabilitation care for patients. Physiatrists are necessary and integral leaders of the rehabilitation care team within the IRF setting and we will continue to advocate for the long-term interests of physiatrists in IRFs and patients in need of intensive, coordinated, interdisciplinary inpatient hospital rehabilitation.

Collaboration, open dialogue, and a united voice among physiatrists will be essential to our success. In the weeks and months ahead, please watch for updates from our Future of Inpatient Rehabilitation Workgroup and requests from AAPM&R for you to stay involved and support future efforts.

Team Physiatry’s success is driven by you. Thank you for being a #PMRAdvocate and getting involved! We couldn’t do it without you.

AAPM&R will continue to review the final rule in its entirety and to share further updates with you. To read the finalized IRF Prospective Payment System Rule for 2021, click here.

Take the Next STEP in Your Ultrasound Education

step

AAPM&R's STEP Ultrasound Certificate Program is the premiere ultrasound training program—designed by physiatrists, for physiatrists. 

As the only formal, standardized training pathway available for honing and validating your ultrasound skill set, successful completion of the STEP Ultrasound Program will clearly demonstrate to your patients, fellow health care professionals, employers, and the medical facilities you work with that you are a competent professional, expertly trained in ultrasound. 

PhyzForum AAPM&R's Online Member Community