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Research Reports |
M Keehn, PT, Department of Rehabilitation, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1740 W Taylor St, MC 889, Chicago, IL 60612 (mkeehn@uic.edu)
This excerpt was created in the absence of an abstract.
Finding many physical therapists who practice in hospitals who have not been involved in discussions of restructuring is becoming increasingly difficult. A good number of therapists who have been involved in restructuring are in institutions that have already been "unrestructured." Apparently, the subject evokes a variety of responses.
Before sharing my views on the report by Lopopolo, I would like to be clear about the perspective I bring to the subject. I am the director of physical therapy services in an academic medical center in a large urban area. We are currently involved in our own discussions of restructuring. Our department provides a broad range of inpatient and outpatient services. In addition to patient care and clinical education, the clinical staff is also actively involved in classroom teaching. In our organization, the clinical and academic programs are part of one combined department....
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Physical Therapy 1997 77: 888-889.
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