
When hospital care is needed for a workers’ compensation claim, network participation often becomes the dividing line between managed medical costs and inflated facility spend. Hospital services introduce a level of pricing complexity, utilization variability, and administrative exposure that few other components of workers’ compensation medical care carry. Without a structured framework to guide access, oversight, and reimbursement, facility charges can escalate quickly, affecting not only medical spending, but also claim duration and recovery outcomes. As workers’ compensation stakeholders continue to focus on managing medical costs, increasing attention has shifted to how hospitals and facilities are incorporated into provider networks, and whether those networks are positioned to manage care consistently and predictably.
Provider networks have long served as a foundational element of workers’ compensation medical management, but their role has expanded beyond price negotiation alone. Research consistently shows that networked care is associated with lower medical payments, reduced total claim costs, faster access to treatment, and shorter claim durations. These outcomes reflect not only differences in reimbursement, but also differences in utilization patterns, care coordination, and administrative oversight.
Claims treated within a network tend to initiate care earlier, follow more conservative and evidence‑based pathways, and experience fewer disruptions related to authorization or billing. While professional services have historically driven network strategy, facility‑based care increasingly represents one of the most consequential opportunities to influence both cost and recovery.
Hospital and facility services differ fundamentally from professional services in scope, scale, and financial impact. Inpatient admissions, emergency department visits, outpatient hospital procedures, ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs), and ancillary services such as anesthesia and implantable devices can represent a significant portion of claim spend within a short timeframe.
These services are also subject to substantial pricing variability. When delivered outside a network framework, facility care may be reimbursed based on billed charges, with limited ability to apply utilization controls or align care with treatment guidelines. This variability can lead to higher payments, longer claim timelines, and increased administrative friction, all of which contribute to cost instability.
Including hospitals, outpatient departments, emergency facilities, and ASCs within a WC PPO network allows facility care to operate within the same managed environment as professional services. Network participation establishes clearer expectations around reimbursement methodologies, access standards, and care coordination, while supporting integration with utilization review and bill review processes.
In 2025, analysis of claims utilizing the HCS Network Solutions PPO Network demonstrated meaningful reductions across several facilities and facility‑adjacent service categories in New Jersey. Observed savings included:
Additional savings were observed in key ancillary components of facility care, including a:
Together, these results illustrate how network participation can influence the most significant drivers of workers’ compensation medical spend.
Effective facility management extends beyond unit cost containment. Network facilities are better positioned to align with evidence‑based treatment guidelines, support appropriate site‑of‑care decisions, and coordinate transitions from acute care to rehabilitation.
This coordination is particularly relevant in musculoskeletal and orthopedic claims, where hospital‑based services often represent a gateway to longer‑term recovery. When facility care is managed within a network structure, downstream services, such as physical therapy, follow‑up imaging, and return‑to‑work planning, can be initiated more efficiently and with greater continuity.
As workers’ compensation programs continue to address medical spend, facility care has emerged as the most consequential, and actionable, area of focus. Network strategies that extend beyond professional services to meaningfully include hospitals and other facilities offer greater predictability in pricing, stronger care coordination, and improved claim stability. In an environment defined by healthcare consolidation and increasing complexity, aligning facility care within a structured network framework is not simply a cost strategy, it is a necessary foundation for delivering appropriate care and supporting timely recovery.
To learn more, please visit https://www.medrisknet.com/.
This article was produced by the R&I Brand Studio, a unit of the advertising department of Risk & Insurance, in collaboration with HCS Network Solutions. The editorial staff of Risk & Insurance had no role in its preparation.