Mar 9
2026
The Fully In-Person Physical Therapy Model Is Starting to Crack

By Elisabeth Brown, Principal Product Marketing Manager, WebPT.
Most outpatient physical therapy clinics weren’t designed for today’s reality. They were built for a time when staffing was steadier, patient access was easier, and reimbursement was more predictable. That operating model hasn’t shifted much, even as expectations around access, continuity, and sustainability have.
Hands-on care matters. It always will. But lately, clinic leaders and clinicians in different parts of the country are saying the same thing, even when they are not trying to make a point. The fully in-person model is getting harder to sustain.
That does not mean physical therapy is failing. It means the pressures around care delivery have outpaced the structure designed to support it. Reimbursement keeps tightening. Staffing shortages are still very real. Patients want high-quality care, but they also want care that fits into lives that are already stretched thin.
Something has to bend.
Why hybrid care still makes people uncomfortable
Hybrid care tends to get lumped together with what happened during COVID. That is understandable. Many clinicians were pushed into video visits with little guidance and a lot of uncertainty. It felt reactive. For some patients, it felt impersonal. For therapists, it often felt disconnected from outcomes.
That experience stuck. Hybrid became shorthand for watered-down care.
What’s happening now does not look like that at all. Clinics are not trying to replace hands-on work. They are trying to be more intentional about when physical presence is essential and when it is not.
What flexibility actually looks like in practice
There is a common assumption that flexibility means lowering standards. In real clinics, it often means the opposite.
Short virtual check-ins can help patients stay engaged between visits. Questions get answered sooner. Confusion around exercises does not have time to spiral. Patients who might otherwise disappear after the first few visits are more likely to stay connected.
This is not about doing less. It is about reinforcing the plan of care in ways that fit real schedules.
Why flexibility is not something clinics are giving up
The cost conversation misses a larger reality: the fully in-person model is already under strain.
Hybrid care is not a concession. It is a way to protect patient outcomes, clinic economics, and provider sustainability. When patients complete more of their plan of care, clinics see fewer drop-offs, fewer gaps in the schedule, and less pressure to constantly replace lost visits with new evaluations.
Flexibility also changes the rhythm of clinical work. Not every meaningful interaction requires hands-on time in the clinic. Creating intentional variation in the schedule can reduce fatigue and make the workload more sustainable over the long term. In a profession where burnout and attrition continue to shape hiring and retention, that is not optional. It is strategic.
Why video-only telehealth was never the answer
Video-only care tried to do too much at once. It asked technology to stand in for physical assessment, manual skill, and relationship building.
Hybrid care works when it does not make that mistake. Some moments in care absolutely require being in the room. Others require clarity, accountability, or reassurance. Those are not the same thing, and treating them as if they are has been part of the problem.
What this shift actually requires
Hybrid care does not work if it is bolted on without a plan.
Clinics that are making it work decide upfront which visits must happen in person and which ones can happen virtually without compromising outcomes. They help clinicians get comfortable using short virtual interactions with purpose instead of trying to replicate an in-clinic visit on a screen. They pay attention to whether flexibility actually improves adherence and completion, rather than assuming it will.
Most importantly, they stay grounded in why physical therapy exists in the first place. Patients still want human care. Clinicians still rely on hands-on skills and clinical judgment. Hybrid care is not about moving away from that. It is about protecting it in a system that is changing, whether we like it or not.
The fully in-person model is cracking because the world around it has changed. Hybrid care is one way physical therapy can adapt without losing what makes it effective.