Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A.
The principles summarized in this section are key to the intended
implementation of all Office of Workers' Compensation medical treatment
guidelines and critical to the reader's application of the guidelines in this
document.
1. Application of Guidelines. The
OWCA provides procedures to implement medical treatment guidelines and to
foster communication to resolve disputes among the provider, payer, and patient
through the Workers' Compensation Act.
2. Education. Education of the patient and
family, as well as the employer, insurer, policy makers and the community
should be the primary emphasis in the treatment of workers' compensation
injuries. Currently, practitioners often think of education last, after
medications, manual therapy, and surgery. Practitioners must develop and
implement strategies to educate patients, employers, insurance systems, policy
makers, and the community as a whole. An education-based paradigm should always
start with inexpensive communication providing reassuring and evidence-based
information to the patient. More in-depth education is currently a component of
treatment regimens which employ functional, restorative, preventive and
rehabilitative programs. No treatment plan is complete without addressing
issues of individual and/or group patient education as a means of facilitating
self-management of symptoms and prevention. . Facilitation through language
interpretation, when necessary, is a priority and part of the medical care
treatment protocol.
3. Informed
Decision Making. Providers should implement informed decision making as a
crucial element of a successful treatment plan. Patients, with the assistance
of their health care practitioner, should identify their personal and
professional functional goals of treatment at the first visit. Progress towards
the individual's identified functional goals should be addressed by all members
of the health care team at subsequent visits and throughout the established
treatment plan. Nurse case managers, physical therapists, and other members of
the health care team play an integral role in informed decision-making and
achievement of functional goals. Patient education and informed decisionmaking
should facilitate self-management of symptoms and prevention of further
injury.
4. Treatment Parameter
Duration. Time frames for specific interventions commence once treatments have
been initiated, not on the date of injury. Obviously, duration will be impacted
by patient adherence, as well as availability of services. Clinical judgment
may substantiate the need to accelerate or decelerate the time frames discussed
in this document. Such deviation shall be in accordance with La.
R.S.
23:1203.1
5. Active Interventions. Emphasizing patient
responsibility, such as therapeutic exercise and/or functional treatment, are
generally emphasized over passive modalities, especially as treatment
progresses. Generally, passive interventions are viewed as a means to
facilitate progress in an active rehabilitation program with concomitant
attainment of objective functional gains.
6. Active Therapeutic Exercise Program.
Exercise program goals should incorporate patient strength, endurance,
flexibility, coordination, and education. This includes functional application
in vocational or community settings.
7. Positive Patient Response. Positive
results are defined primarily as functional gains that can be objectively
measured.
a. Objective functional gains
include, but are not limited to, positional tolerances, range-of-motion (ROM),
strength, and endurance, activities of daily living, ability to function at
work, cognition, psychological behavior, and efficiency/velocity measures that
can be quantified. Subjective reports of pain and function should be considered
and given relative weight when the pain has anatomic and physiologic
correlation. Anatomic correlation must be based on objective
findings.
8.
Re-Evaluation of Treatment within Four Weeks. If a given treatment or modality
is not producing positive results within four weeks, treatment should be either
modified or discontinued. Reconsideration of diagnosis should also occur in the
event of poor response to a seemingly rational intervention.
9. Surgical Interventions. Surgery should be
contemplated within the context of expected improvement of functional outcome
and not purely for the purpose of pain relief. The concept of "cure" with
respect to surgical treatment by itself is generally a misnomer. All operative
interventions must be based upon positive correlation of clinical findings,
clinical course, and diagnostic tests. A comprehensive assimilation of these
factors must lead to a specific diagnosis with positive identification of
pathologic conditions. The decision and recommendation for operative treatment,
and the appropriate informed consent should be made by the operating surgeon.
Prior to surgical intervention, the patient and treating physician should
identify functional operative goals and the likelihood of achieving improved
ability to perform activities of daily living or work activities and the
patient should agree to comply with the pre- and post-operative treatment plan
and home exercise requirements. The patient should understand the length of
partial and full disability expected post-operatively.
10. Pharmacy-Louisiana Law and Regulation:
All prescribing will be done in accordance with the laws of the state of
Louisiana as they pertain respectively to each individual licensee, including,
but not limited to: Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners regulations
governing medications used in the treatment of non-cancer-related chronic or
intractable pain; Louisiana Board of Pharmacy Prescription Monitoring Program;
Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals licensing and certification
standards for pain management clinics; other laws and regulations affecting the
prescribing and dispensing of medications in the state of Louisiana.
11. Six Month-Time Frame. Injuries resulting
in temporary total disability may require maintenance treatment and may not
attain return to work in six months.
12. Return To Work. Return to work is
therapeutic, assuming the work is not likely to aggravate the basic problem or
increase long-term pain. An injured worker's return-to-work status shall not be
the sole cause to deny reasonable and medically necessary treatment under these
guidelines. Two good practices are: early contact with injured workers and
provide modified work positions for short-term injuries. The practitioner must
provide specific physical limitations and the patient should never be released
to non-specific and vague descriptions such as "sedentary" or "light duty." The
following physical limitations should be considered and modified as
recommended: lifting, pushing, pulling, crouching, walking, using stairs,
bending at the waist, awkward and/or sustained postures, tolerance for sitting
or standing, hot and cold environments, data entry and other repetitive motion
tasks, sustained grip, tool usage and vibration factors. Even if there is
residual chronic pain, return-to-work is not necessarily contraindicated. The
practitioner should understand all of the physical demands of the patient's job
position before returning the patient to full duty and should request
clarification of the patient's job duties. Clarification should be obtained
from the employer or, if necessary, from including, but not limited to,
occupational health nurse, physical therapist, occupational therapist,
vocational rehabilitation specialist, chiropractor or another professional.
American Medical Association clarifies "disability" as "activity limitations
and/or participation restrictions in an individual with a health condition,
disorder or disease" versus "impairment" as "a significant deviation, loss, or
loss of use of any body structure or body function in an individual with a
health condition, disorder or disease".
13. Delayed Recovery. Within the discretion
of the treating physician, strongly consider a psychological evaluation, if not
previously provided, as well as initiating interdisciplinary rehabilitation
treatment and vocational goal setting, for those patients who are failing to
make expected progress 6 to 12 weeks after initiation of treatment of an
injury. The OWCA recognizes that 3 to 10 percent of all industrially injured
patients will not recover within the timelines outlined in this document
despite optimal care. Such individuals may require treatments beyond the limits
discussed within this document, but such treatment requires clear documentation
by the authorized treating practitioner focusing on objective functional gains
afforded by further treatment and impact upon prognosis.
14. Guideline Recommendations and Inclusion
of Medical Evidence. All recommendations are based on available evidence and/or
consensus judgment. It is generally recognized that early reports of a positive
treatment effect are frequently weakened or overturned by subsequent research.
Per R.S.
1203.1, when interpreting medical evidence
statements in the guideline, the following apply to the strength of
recommendation.
Strong
|
Level 1 Evidence
|
We Recommend
|
Moderate
|
Level 2 and Level 3 Evidence
|
We Suggest
|
Weak
|
Level 4 Evidence
|
Treatment is an Option
|
Inconclusive
|
Evidence is Either Insufficient of
Conflicting
|
a.
Consensus guidelines are generated by a professional organization that the
guidelines are intended to serve. A committee of specialists and experts are
selected by the organization to create an unbiased, vetted recommendation for
the treatment of specific issues within the realm of their expertise. All
recommendations in the guideline are considered to represent reasonable care in
appropriately selected cases, regardless of the level of evidence or consensus
statement attached to it. Those procedures considered inappropriate,
unreasonable, or unnecessary are designated in the guideline as "not
recommended."
15.
Treatment of Pre-Existing Conditions The conditions that preexisted the work
injury/disease will need to be managed under two circumstances:
(a) A pre-existing condition exacerbated by a
work injury/disease should be treated until the patient has returned to their
objectively verified prior level of functioning or Maximum Medical Improvement
(MMI); and
(b) A pre-existing
condition not directly caused by a work injury/disease but which may prevent
recovery from that injury should be treated until its objectively verified
negative impact has been controlled. The focus of treatment should remain on
the work injury/disease.
AUTHORITY
NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with
R.S.
23:1203.1.