Physical Therapy Assistants in Missouri

Physical Therapy Assistants
male pta
William David Hosp

    Physical Therapy Assistant
301 S Main St, Granby, MO 64844
417-472-6271    
male pta
William Blake Stuart, PTA

    Physical Therapy Assistant
3001 E Elm St, Harrisonville, MO 64701
816-380-6525    
male pta
William M Weber, PTA

    Physical Therapy Assistant
8516 N Oak Trfy, Kansas City, MO 64155
816-436-4500     816-436-4510
male pta
Wyatt Lee Johnson, PTA

    Physical Therapy Assistant
490 Highway 61, Bloomsdale, MO 63627
573-483-5040    
male pta
Zachary Sturm, PTA

    Physical Therapy Assistant
6240 N Chatham Ave, Kansas City, MO 64151
816-587-6234     816-587-6294
male pta
Zachary M Endicott, PTA

    Physical Therapy Assistant
400 W Lyon Dr, Neosho, MO 64850
615-896-6400    
female pta
Zuleika Danielle Matlock, PTA

    Physical Therapy Assistant
2725 N Westwood Blvd, Poplar Bluff, MO 63901
573-778-9348     573-778-3463
Physical Therapy Assistants are individual who works under the supervision of a physical therapist to assist him or her in providing physical therapy services. A physical therapy assistant may, for instance, help patients follow an appropriate exercise program that will increase their strength, endurance, coordination, and range of motion and train patients to perform activities of daily life.
PTA's are skilled health care providers who are graduates of a physical therapist assistant associate degree program accredited by an agency recognized by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Education or Council on Postsecondary Accreditation. They assists the physical therapist in providing physical therapy. The supervising physical therapist is directly responsible for the actions of the physical therapist assistant. The PTA performs physical therapy procedures and related tasks that have been selected and delegated by the supervising physical therapist.
Duties of the PTA include assisting the physical therapist in implementing treatment programs, training patients in exercised and activities of daily living, conducting treatments, and reporting to the physical therapist on the patient's responses. In addition to direct patient care, the PTA may also perform such functions as patient transport, and clinic or equipment preparation and maintenance. Currently more than half of all states require PTAs to be licensed, registered or certified.