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MEDICAL PAYMENTS PER CLAIM IN CALIFORNIA GROWING RAPIDLY
AFTER STEEP POST-REFORM DECREASES, NEW STUDY REPORTS
CAMBRIDGE, MA,
May 24, 2012—
The costs per claim of medical treatments for injured
workers in California were growing rapidly after large
decreases that resulted from system reforms in prior years,
according to a new study, CompScope™ Medical Benchmarks
for California 12th Edition, from the Workers
Compensation Research Institute (WCRI).
According to WCRI’s study, medical payments per workers’
compensation claim in California rose about eight percent
per year from 2005 to 2009. These increases followed an
overall decrease of
about
30 percent from 2002 to 2005 due to the comprehensive
reforms in the California workers’ compensation system.
The Cambridge, Mass.-based WCRI said the growth in medical
payments per claim after 2005 was driven by both increases
in the utilization of medical care and prices for some
services.
“This report provides information for policymakers and
system stakeholders to monitor the areas that have become
drivers of the growth in medical costs after the impact of
the prior reforms in 2002-2004, which have largely ended,”
said Ramona Tanabe, WCRI’s Deputy Director and Counsel.
The study reported that use of medical services in
California increased moderately starting in 2006, reflecting
a potential combined impact of changes in regulations,
practice patterns, and
participant behavior after the
effect of reforms largely ended.
For
example, the percentage of claims that received more than 24
visits for physical medicine services increased gradually
from 2006 to 2009. Since the reform limited physical
medicine treatments to 24 visits for a claim unless
additional treatments were authorized, the recent increase
may indicate that more treatments were authorized. Another
underlying factor might be the update of the Medical
Treatment Utilization Schedule (MTUS) that allowed
additional post-surgery physical medicine services outside
of the 24-visit limit in the reform.
Other
medical cost drivers included more frequent billing for
complex office visits with higher prices, increases in the
percentage of claims that received major radiology services,
a rise in prices paid for office visits due to a large fee
schedule increase, and increases in costs for hospital
outpatient and/or ambulatory surgical center (ASC) services
due to regulation updates. Medical cost containment expenses
and medical-legal expenses per claim also grew rapidly.
ABOUT WCRI:
The Workers Compensation Research Institute
(WCRI) is an independent, not-for-profit research
organization based in Cambridge, MA. WCRI is recognized as a
leader in providing objective, credible, and high-quality
information about public policy issues involving workers'
compensation systems. WCRI's members include employers;
insurers; governmental entities; managed care companies;
health care providers; insurance regulators; state labor
organizations; and state administrative agencies in the
U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
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