This video is great!! I recently graduated my program and the inpatient setting really clicked with me personally more than the outpatient setting - I started my new job at the hospital I had my second clinical at today!
Is it possible to ask this question here... Which job is more stable and more secure for let's say... 15 years. Will working in-patient PT be more stable? or is out-patient PT better? When your video description stated that being out-patient is more "laid back" of a job, I felt concerned the possibility that this environment is less secure because being laid back means... you're not getting enough customers. Less customers, less income... but surely, this can be an issue for in-patient rehabs as well. With today's economic climate, which PT setting is more likely to shut down?
Neither will shut down. Job security is the good part about working in healthcare. I would say actually outpatient is less laid back and more stressful because of productivity demands and patient mills (seeing 3-4 patients an hour). Hospitals will not shut down, even in recessions, so I would say inpatient is more "stable"
Thank you for the clarifications with inpatient and outpatient facilities, really helpful, I think I'm still more attracted to choose inpatient. Awesome video
Hi! Thanks for the video, I know this applies to PTs, but how might this change for a PTA? I'm an SPTA currently and about to start clinicals. I have not been a tech previously, so this is pretty new to me.
this is perfect, i was so confused before but this video helps
This video is great!! I recently graduated my program and the inpatient setting really clicked with me personally more than the outpatient setting - I started my new job at the hospital I had my second clinical at today!
Very nice video, I can relate on both I do work as an inpatient and an outpatient PT in a day.
Appreciate this video man. Thx for a good video description and great informative video.
of course!
Great video!! Thank you for sharing!! ❤🧡💛💚💙💜
Is it possible to ask this question here... Which job is more stable and more secure for let's say... 15 years. Will working in-patient PT be more stable? or is out-patient PT better?
When your video description stated that being out-patient is more "laid back" of a job, I felt concerned the possibility that this environment is less secure because being laid back means... you're not getting enough customers. Less customers, less income... but surely, this can be an issue for in-patient rehabs as well.
With today's economic climate, which PT setting is more likely to shut down?
Neither will shut down. Job security is the good part about working in healthcare. I would say actually outpatient is less laid back and more stressful because of productivity demands and patient mills (seeing 3-4 patients an hour). Hospitals will not shut down, even in recessions, so I would say inpatient is more "stable"
@@PhilipHsu Thank you, Philip!
It is interesting to hear how different this is from the UK.
Hows it in uk ?
Thank you for the clarifications with inpatient and outpatient facilities, really helpful, I think I'm still more attracted to choose inpatient. Awesome video
Hi! Thanks for the video, I know this applies to PTs, but how might this change for a PTA? I'm an SPTA currently and about to start clinicals. I have not been a tech previously, so this is pretty new to me.
I really enjoyed your video! It was very informative
thanks for the kind words! glad you found it helpful.
Thank you so much for this very informative video!!
No problem!!
Can you do a pros and cons video about skilled nursing facility vs home care setting 😅
Thnx