White Paper

How Care-First Strategies Help Lower Workers’ Comp Costs

Employers, providers, TPAs and other workers’ comp stakeholders need to work together to succeed.
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White Paper Summary

In today’s world — where medical cost inflation is outpacing overall inflation — ensuring injured workers receive the treatment they need and return to work in a timely fashion is critical to keep costs in-line.

A number of factors, including provider consolidation and changes in billing practices are contributing to these increased costs.

“The same set of practices or treatments that would have cost $100 five years ago now cost between $130 and $140, representing a 30-40% inflation in overall charges,” said Sandip Chatterjee, chief product officer, MedRisk.

There are a number of ways workers’ comp stakeholders can manage costs, including some strategies targeted specifically toward musculoskeletal injuries, which make up the majority of workers’ comp claims. These injuries can often be treated effectively with early physical therapy interventions, but differing state regulations and physicians treating patients with a formulaic, rather than individualized approach can make it challenging to ensure workers are getting the care they need, when they need it.

Fortunately, workers’ comp stakeholders can collaborate effectively to get workers the care they need while managing costs. TPAs, like Davies, are leveraging partnerships with managed physical therapy networks like MedRisk and SPNet to access discounted networks, use data and analytics to identify industry trends and at-risk claims and and support recovery while managing costs through utilization review.

To learn more about MedRisk, please visit their website.

MedRisk is the leader in physical rehabilitation for the workers’ compensation industry. Our clinically based program ensures evidence-based care, reduces costs, and promotes return to work.

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