Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. Workers'
Compensation is designed to provide indemnity and medical care benefits for
workers who sustain injuries or illnesses arising out of and in the course and
scope of employment. The following instructions give some general guidelines
for medical review of workers' compensation claims.
B. Technical Considerations for Review of
Claims
1. Prior to a detailed medical review,
a cursory review of the claim should be accomplished and should include at
least the following.
a. Job related
illness/injury must be identified.
b. Each service/item billed must be
identifiable.
c. Billing period
must be identified.
d. Appropriate
forms must be used and filled out completely.
2. If the cursory review indicates that
sufficient information is present, processing of the claim can proceed. If the
review indicates information is lacking, the carrier/self-insured employer must
take immediate and appropriate action to obtain the information required. The
"timely payment" provision contained in the statement of policy in this manual
will not apply until the required information is obtained. However, absence of
nonessential information is not justification for delay in claim
processing.
C. Functions
of Medical Review. The carrier/self-insured employer should use a program of
prevention and detection to guarantee the most appropriate and economical use
of health care resources for claimants.
1.
Prevention through Education. Informing physicians and other health care
providers about workers' compensation programs, policies and statutory
provisions that deal with claim submission is the key to ensuring the
appropriate billing of covered services. As part of that educational focus, the
following are some of the administrative policies encountered in the review
process:
a. quality of care;
b. medical necessity;
c. screening tests;
d. confidentiality;
e. general documentation
requirements.
2. Quality
of Care. Quality care should:
a. be provided
in a timely manner, without inappropriate delay, interruption, premature
termination or prolongation of treatment, and emphasize an early, safe return
to work;
b. seek the patient's
cooperation and participation in the decisions and process of his or her
treatment;
c. be based on accepted
principles of evidence based practice as established in
R.S.
23:1203.1 and the skillful and appropriate
use of other health professionals and technology;
d. be provided with sensitivity to the stress
and anxiety that illness can cause, and with concern for the patient's and
family's overall welfare and should focus on improvement in function related to
the physical demands of the injured workers job;
e. use technology and other resources
efficiently to achieve the treatment goal;
f. be sufficiently documented in the
patient's medical record to allow continuity of care and peer
evaluation.
3. Medical
Necessity
a. The workers' compensation law
provides benefits only for services that are medically necessary for the
diagnosis or treatment of a claimant's work related illness, injury, symptom or
complaint.
Medically necessary or
medical
necessity shall mean health care services that are:
i. clinically appropriate, in terms of type,
frequency, extent, site, and duration, and effective for the patients illness,
injury, or disease; and
ii. in
accordance with the medical treatment schedule and the provisions of
R.S.
23:1203.1.
b. To be medically necessary, a service must
be:
i. consistent with the diagnosis and
treatment of a condition or complaint; and
ii. in accordance with the Louisiana medical
treatment schedule; and
iii. not
solely for the convenience of the patient, family, hospital or physician;
and
iv. furnished in the most
appropriate and least intensive type of medical care setting required by the
patient's condition.
c.
Services not related to the diagnosis or treatment of a work related illness or
injury are not payable under the workers' compensation laws and shall be the
financial responsibility of the claimant, and in appropriate cases, his health
insurance carrier.
4.
Screening Tests
a. A screening test not
related to the on-the-job illness or injury is not covered under the workers'
compensation law.
b. A screening
test may be defined as a diagnostic procedure or test which is performed for a
claimant in the absence of, or regardless of, his/her presenting sign(s),
complaint(s), or symptom(s).
c.
Although screening tests may reflect good medical practice, such tests are not
covered under the Workers' Compensation Program if not specifically related to
the on-the-job illness or injury. For example, a standard battery of laboratory
tests ordered without regard to a specific symptom or diagnosis consistent with
the reported on-the-job illness or injury, is considered nonpayable
screening.
d. Payment for such
test(s) shall be an enforceable obligation against the claimant and, in
appropriate cases, his health insurance carrier, but shall not be an
enforceable obligation against the employer or insurer.
5. Confidentiality. When it is necessary to
request additional information to clarify the need for services or substantiate
coverage for a claim being reviewed, the carrier/self-insured employer must
take particular care to ensure that all of its employees adhere to strict
policy guidelines regarding claimant privacy. The carrier/self-insured employer
shall require only sufficient information to allow a reviewer to make an
independent judgement regarding diagnosis and treatment. Intimate details in a
claimant's records are neither necessary nor desired, and are specifically
protected by law.
6. General
Documentation Requirements. The determination of appropriate reimbursement
requires adequate documentation of services. The following items establish the
minimum documentation requirements prior to payment.
a. Documentation for all services must be
legible and signed by the health care provider, i.e., date(s) of service, type
of surgery where applicable, diagnosis (not a list of symptoms).
b. Submitted documentation must contain
sufficient data to substantiate the diagnosis and need for treatment on each
date of service.
c. To substantiate
medical necessity:
i. it is essential to
report the most complete and precise diagnosis(es) on the claim form;
ii. service(s) billed should be appropriate
for the diagnosis;
iii.
documentation in the clinical record (i.e., physical findings and historical
data) should confirm the diagnosis and support the medical necessity and
appropriateness of the service billed; and
iv. documentation should be available for
each service billed.
d.
The maintenance of adequate and accurate clinical records is a requirement for
all physicians and hospitals. Documentation should be complete, including
positive as well as negative findings, and should be recorded in a timely
manner.
7. Detection.
The carrier/self-insured employer detects the misuse of benefits through
routine claims review, computer analysis, claims audit and the investigation of
complaints. The carrier shall conduct such reviews and analysis on an ongoing
basis and shall investigate all complaints in a timely manner. Referrals of
appropriate cases may be made to the Office of Workers' Compensation Medical
Review staff.
8. Prepayment and
Postpayment Claim Review. A practitioner's or provider's claims may be selected
for review by the Office of Workers' Compensation if utilization review
procedures detect a pattern of over-utilization of services. If a review
indicates a possible overuse or misuse of services, the practitioner or
provider will be notified in writing that he or she will receive a request for
additional information on a sampling of submitted claims.
9. Referrals. The Office of Workers'
Compensation medical review staff will investigate complaints from claimants,
carriers, employers, physicians, other practitioners, and health care
facilities, inquiries from the press or government agencies, referrals from
other internal areas of the Office of Workers' Compensation, and even leads
from various media sources (e.g., newspapers) if in the judgement of the
medical manager such investigation is warranted. In appropriate cases, the
Office of Workers' Compensation will refer evidence of over-utilization to the
various licensing authorities.
D. Professional Justification
1. Medical Necessity. All claims submitted
for payment to the carrier/self-insured employer must be reviewed for medical
necessity and for compliance with the medical treatment schedule and the
provisions of
R.S.
23:1201.1. Medical necessity implies the use
of technologies* services, or supplies provided by a hospital, physician, or
other provider that is determined to be:
a.
medically appropriate for the symptoms and diagnosis or treatment of the
work-related illness or injury;
b.
provided for the diagnosis or the direct care and treatment of the patient's
illness or injury;
c. in accordance
with the medical treatment schedule and the provisions of
R.S.
23:1203.1; and
d. not primarily for the convenience of the
patient, patient's family, practitioner or provider; and
e. the most appropriate level of service that
can be provided to the patient.
2. Additional Medical Record Information. It
is the responsibility of the claimant and provider to furnish all medical
documentation needed by the carrier/self-insured employer to determine if the
injury or illness is job related and if the services are medically necessary
for the condition of the claimant (e.g., physician office record, hospital
medical record, doctor's orders, treatment plan, vital signs, lab data, test
results, nurses' notes, progress notes).
*The term technology refers to any medical
or surgical treatment, medical or surgical device, therapeutic or diagnostic
procedure, drug, biological, or therapeutic or diagnostic
agent.
AUTHORITY NOTE:
Promulgated in accordance with RS 23:1291.