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MEDICAL
PAYMENTS PER CLAIM FOR MARYLAND WORKERS’
COMP CLAIMS AMONG LOWEST OF STUDY STATES,
REPORTS NEW WCRI STUDY
CAMBRIDGE, MA, July 14, 2009
–
Medical payments per workers’ compensation claim
in Maryland were among the lowest of 14 states. A main
driver was lower prices paid for all major nonhospital
services related to the lower fee schedule rates, according
to a new study from the Workers Compensation Research
Institute (WCRI).
The study, Monitoring the Impact of Fee Schedule Changes
in Maryland: CompScope™ Medical Benchmarks, 9th Edition,
observed that Maryland implemented three changes to its
nonhospital provider fee schedule between 2004 and 2008. The
study analyzes claims with experience as of March 2007 and
captures the impact of the first two changes, including the
2006 change that substantially increased the rates for
orthopedic and neurological surgeries.
WCRI observed that prices paid for major surgery services
increased 21 percent from 2005 to 2006, corresponding to the
2006 fee schedule change. Previously, the prices paid for
major surgery services decreased nearly 40 percent from 2003
to 2005, related to the significant reduction in fee
schedule rates in September 2004.
The average price paid for major surgery services in
Maryland was still among the lowest of the 14 study states
in 2006 despite the significant price increase in that year.
This is not a surprising result given that, according to
WCRI’s Benchmarks for Designing Workers’ Compensation
Medical Fee Schedules: 2006 study, the surgery fee
schedule rate in Maryland was still among the lowest in the
nation, even after the 2006 increase. In addition, the
percentage of claims with major surgery in Maryland had been
among the lowest of the 14 states throughout the study
period.
Furthermore, a main driver of the rapid growth in total
medical costs per claim in 2005 and 2006 was double-digit
rate increases in hospital payments per inpatient episode in
that period. One possible factor underlying this trend might
be the transition to the All Patient Refined-Diagnosis
Related Groups (APR-DRG) system in hospital rate setting
beginning in July 2005. This new grouping system provides a
more detailed classification of a case’s severity and risk
of mortality, and may lead to differing case-mix weights and
hence differing rates than used in the pre-2005 methods.
Despite the increases, the average hospital payment per
inpatient episode in Maryland was still lower than many
study states in 2005 for claims with 24 months of
experience.
Utilization for most nonhospital services was typical in
Maryland, except for physical medicine services, which were
higher than typical. In addition, hospital outpatient care
was used less frequently in Maryland than in many other
study states. Among the cases with such care, the average
hospital outpatient payment per claim in Maryland was among
the lowest of the 14 states. These results all contributed
to the lower medical costs per claim in Maryland.
While employers in Maryland paid less for medical costs per
claim, injured workers in the state reported generally
typical outcomes, according to WCRI’s Comparing Outcomes
for Injured Workers in Michigan 2009 study, which
contains worker outcomes results for Maryland for
comparison. Despite the lower fee schedule rates, workers in
Maryland reported typical access to care and satisfaction
with care when compared with other states in that study.
Maryland injured workers also reported typical physical
recoveries and fairly typical return-to-work rate and speed.
In general, the Maryland workers’ compensation system
provided both workers and employers with a better value
proposition compared to other states studied.
In addition, the study found that utilization for physical
medicine services in Maryland was higher than typical,
driven by more visits per claim compared to other study
states. Over the study period, the number of visits per
claim for physical medicine in Maryland had steady, small
increases each year.
This result masks offsetting trends: the number of visits
per claim for physical medicine services provided by
chiropractors decreased 15 percent from 2001 to 2006, while
the number of visits per claim for physical medicine
services billed by other nonhospital providers, such as
physical/occupational therapists and physicians, increased
20 percent over the same time period.
The Workers Compensation Research Institute is a
nonpartisan, not-for-profit membership organization
conducting public policy research on workers’ compensation,
health care and disability issues. Its members include
employers, insurers, and governmental entities, insurance
regulators and state administrative agencies, as well as
several state labor organizations. |