Physical therapist assistants and aides
Physical, social, or oversight-heavy work that AI augments rather than replaces.
SOC 31-2020 · Healthcare
Signal composition
how the 0-100 score is assembled
By seniority
multiplicative adjustment from category curve
Entry-level roles carry the brunt because they concentrate the most automatable subset of tasks. Senior work is insulated by judgment, relationships, and accountability.
Task-level analysis
scored 0-100 for current-generation AI feasibility, weighted by BLS-stated importance
Perform clerical tasks such as answering phones and scheduling patients
Phone answering, appointment scheduling, and basic clerical work are highly automatable via AI voice assistants, scheduling software, and administrative automation; these tasks involve structured information handling that current AI handles well, requiring minimal human intervention except for complex edge cases.
BLS evidence: Aides 'do clerical tasks, such as answering phones and scheduling patients' and complete 'a variety of clerical tasks, such as ordering supplies, scheduling treatment sessions, and completing insurance forms.'
Record patients' progress and treatment results
AI excels at structured documentation from dictation or form inputs, can auto-populate progress notes from standardized assessments, and track quantitative outcomes; human review needed mainly for clinical judgment calls and unusual cases, but most routine documentation can be AI-automated with light oversight.
BLS evidence: Assistants 'record patients' progress and report the results of each treatment to the physical therapist.'
Educate patients and family members about post-treatment care
AI can generate educational content, answer common questions via chatbot, and provide standardized instructions, but effective patient education requires reading comprehension levels, cultural context, addressing specific concerns, and building rapport—AI can draft materials and handle routine queries but humans must personalize delivery.
BLS evidence: Physical therapist assistants 'educate patients and family members about what to do after treatment.'
Observe patients before, during, and after therapy and report status to physical therapist
AI vision systems could track some movement patterns and vital signs, and flag anomalies, but nuanced clinical observation of pain behaviors, compensation patterns, effort level, and subtle status changes requires human judgment; AI could assist with structured monitoring but cannot replace the observational expertise.
BLS evidence: Physical therapist assistants 'observe patients before, during, and after therapy, noting the patient's status and reporting it to a physical therapist.'
Clean treatment areas and set up therapy equipment
Involves physical tasks in varied clinic layouts—wiping surfaces, moving equipment between rooms, adjusting treatment tables—requiring navigation of dynamic environments and manual dexterity that current robotics cannot reliably perform in typical clinical settings without major infrastructure investment.
BLS evidence: Physical therapist aides 'clean treatment areas and set up therapy equipment' and are 'responsible for keeping the treatment area clean and organized.'
Use devices and equipment such as walkers to assist patients
Requires physical assistance with gait training and assistive devices in dynamic, unpredictable environments where patients may lose balance or need immediate support; current robotics lack the dexterity, responsiveness, and safety reliability needed for hands-on patient mobility assistance.
BLS evidence: Assistants 'use devices and equipment, such as walkers, to help patients' as part of their treatment duties.
Help patients perform specific exercises as part of the plan of care
Requires real-time physical presence to guide patients through exercises, provide hands-on corrections to form, ensure safety during movement, and adapt based on immediate physical feedback like pain or fatigue responses that AI+robotics cannot reliably detect or respond to in unpredictable rehabilitation contexts.
BLS evidence: Physical therapist assistants 'help patients do specific exercises as part of the plan of care' and 'treat patients through exercise, massage, gait and balance training, and other therapeutic interventions.'
Help patients move to or from therapy areas
Requires physically supporting patients with varying mobility limitations, balance issues, and unpredictable movements during transfers; demands real-time strength, balance assistance, and safety judgment that AI-enabled robotics cannot provide safely in clinical rehabilitation contexts.
BLS evidence: Aides 'help patients move to or from a therapy area' and assist 'patients as needed in moving to or from a treatment area.'
Treat patients using therapeutic techniques such as massage and stretching
Demands skilled manual therapy requiring fine motor control, tactile feedback to assess tissue quality and patient response, and real-time adjustment of pressure and technique based on patient comfort and therapeutic goals—capabilities far beyond current AI-enabled robotics in clinical settings.
BLS evidence: Assistants 'treat patients using a variety of techniques, such as massage and stretching' under the direction and supervision of physical therapists.
Task heatmap
automation score by task, sorted by weighted contribution
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External signals and sources
category-level priors and BLS fields that feed the four non-task signals
- Karpathy/BLS Digital AI Exposure (0-10 scale rescaled to 0-100)
- BLS projected outlook: Much faster than average (16%)
- Indeed demand signal (monthly refresh pending)
- BLS typical entry-level education: See How to Become One
- Credential trend signal (annual refresh)
Related in Healthcare
closest AOI neighbors in the same category