"In-depth shoes" responses
Description
Collection
Title:
"In-depth shoes" responses
Text:
Thanks to those who responded!!
Randy McFarland, CPO
Sunny Hills Orthopedic Services, Inc.
www.sunnyhills.com
Original post:
Where do you procure your depth shoes locally or through a national source?
What are you having to pay?
Do you provide depth shoes to Medicaid clients?
Is your markup compatable with surviving as a practice?
Answer any, all or no questions.
Responses received:
Apex Ambulator from Cascade $68.00
We try to get custom shoes and pay 225-240 bucks. TRUFIT is hit and miss. We
make no money but do not lose too much if you consider your time.
National source/ PW Minor
About $56 a pair
No
No
I get mine from APEX of course I don't sell'em I give'em away....New Balance
tennis shoes come in wide if that will help.
Medicaid is coveing for our kids to get TM2000 shoes routinely. They are
ridiculously expensive actually, so I guess the markup is adequate. I
encourage people to use regular shoes if the child's foot is slim and not
high-arched, but a lot of kids can find nothing else to go on over
orthotic devices.
We buy our depth shoes almost exclusively from P.W. Minor & Sons, Batavia,
NY. Prices range anywhere from $65.00-$95.00. We have found that they have
the largest selection, excellent quality, and superior service over other
companies manufacturing depth shoes. We do provide Medicaid recipients with
depth shoes but normally only as a sideline service. We seem to be
obligated to provide shoes for our referral sources of prosthetic/orthotic
clients. If we had to rely only on New York State Medicaid fees for our
markup, the practice would not be viable. We also provide plastazote lined
depth shoes for our diabetic clients under the Medicare Therapeutic Shoe
program. For those we use M.J. Markell, and Otto Bock has a limited line of
quality depth shoes.
Is this a joke!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Hell no we make no money from shoes and they
are the bane of our existence!!!!!!!
Randy, I have a practice within a county hospital and:
1.) we procure our depth shoes locally through a pedorthist. We refer our
patients to this individual only for shoe fittings. We have our patients
return to us for a follow up appointment after receiving the shoes to
evaluate the overall fit of the shoe, to evaluate the orthosis fit in the
shoe, and to evaluate for the installation of customized shoe modifications
(i.e., wedges, rocker soles, etc.) when indicated
2.) The county hospital has a contract with the pedorthist and I am not sure
what the contracted amount per shoe is although, I do understand that extra
depth name brand shoes such as SAS can go for over $100 in this region.
3.) The county hospital does provide depth shoes for medicaid clients and
this is funded through a special shoe fund for at-risk patients with
diabetes. This fund is financed through a hospital tax for Dallas county
residents.
4.) Since our O and P practice is primarily to provide customized devices
and is currently separate of providing shoes, only the customization of depth
shoes that our patient receive, we are able to survive as a practice.
Hope this information was of some benefit. I am very interested to learn the
responses to these questions that you receive from other members of the
listserv.
Randy McFarland, CPO
Sunny Hills Orthopedic Services, Inc.
www.sunnyhills.com
Original post:
Where do you procure your depth shoes locally or through a national source?
What are you having to pay?
Do you provide depth shoes to Medicaid clients?
Is your markup compatable with surviving as a practice?
Answer any, all or no questions.
Responses received:
Apex Ambulator from Cascade $68.00
We try to get custom shoes and pay 225-240 bucks. TRUFIT is hit and miss. We
make no money but do not lose too much if you consider your time.
National source/ PW Minor
About $56 a pair
No
No
I get mine from APEX of course I don't sell'em I give'em away....New Balance
tennis shoes come in wide if that will help.
Medicaid is coveing for our kids to get TM2000 shoes routinely. They are
ridiculously expensive actually, so I guess the markup is adequate. I
encourage people to use regular shoes if the child's foot is slim and not
high-arched, but a lot of kids can find nothing else to go on over
orthotic devices.
We buy our depth shoes almost exclusively from P.W. Minor & Sons, Batavia,
NY. Prices range anywhere from $65.00-$95.00. We have found that they have
the largest selection, excellent quality, and superior service over other
companies manufacturing depth shoes. We do provide Medicaid recipients with
depth shoes but normally only as a sideline service. We seem to be
obligated to provide shoes for our referral sources of prosthetic/orthotic
clients. If we had to rely only on New York State Medicaid fees for our
markup, the practice would not be viable. We also provide plastazote lined
depth shoes for our diabetic clients under the Medicare Therapeutic Shoe
program. For those we use M.J. Markell, and Otto Bock has a limited line of
quality depth shoes.
Is this a joke!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Hell no we make no money from shoes and they
are the bane of our existence!!!!!!!
Randy, I have a practice within a county hospital and:
1.) we procure our depth shoes locally through a pedorthist. We refer our
patients to this individual only for shoe fittings. We have our patients
return to us for a follow up appointment after receiving the shoes to
evaluate the overall fit of the shoe, to evaluate the orthosis fit in the
shoe, and to evaluate for the installation of customized shoe modifications
(i.e., wedges, rocker soles, etc.) when indicated
2.) The county hospital has a contract with the pedorthist and I am not sure
what the contracted amount per shoe is although, I do understand that extra
depth name brand shoes such as SAS can go for over $100 in this region.
3.) The county hospital does provide depth shoes for medicaid clients and
this is funded through a special shoe fund for at-risk patients with
diabetes. This fund is financed through a hospital tax for Dallas county
residents.
4.) Since our O and P practice is primarily to provide customized devices
and is currently separate of providing shoes, only the customization of depth
shoes that our patient receive, we are able to survive as a practice.
Hope this information was of some benefit. I am very interested to learn the
responses to these questions that you receive from other members of the
listserv.
Citation
“"In-depth shoes" responses,” Digital Resource Foundation for Orthotics and Prosthetics, accessed November 21, 2024, https://library.drfop.org/items/show/212715.