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Three Simple Tips for Getting Better Spinal Injury Recoveries

Three Simple Tips for Getting Better Spinal Injury Recoveries

Three Simple Tips for Getting Better Spinal Injury Recoveries

Injury recovery, especially in the spinal ligament injury market is significant because 50% of the patients that received this type of injury will not fully recover, and 30% of them will have a significant amount of problems associated with that type of an injury.

These injuries are not the sexiest injuries in the market, but they are the most common injuries in the market. They cost the most amount of money. They cause the largest amount of personal trauma and trials and tribulations simply because so many people with these types of injuries result in a chronic outcome.  As a matter of fact, if we have 4 million auto accidents or auto injuries in this country, 2 million people every year are going to become chronic as a result of those injuries.

When you are dealing with patients, you want to get the best results.  I’m not going to get into specifics of adjusting for chiropractors or type of modality you’re going to use or anything similar. I’m going to start with some very, very general tips for you. In a Smart Injury Doctor’s Program, we call these Smart Injury Recommendations and they’re just some very, very general recommendations.

We know that when a person has a spinal ligament injury, they need to take this injury quite seriously. Your approach to that patient, your level of professionalism, your level of certainty, your level of handling the patient, will guide their response to their injury and compliance in their care.

Spinal ligament injury conditions can cause them problems. It is a fairly permanent condition. It can cause an unstable segment or segments for a long time to come. The patient needs to take their initial treatment very seriously because that’s where you’re going to try to reduce down their risks for long term residual complaints and get them a great, great result.

One of the first things that you should be discuss is dehydration. When your body is not receiving the amount of fluids and the amount of water that it needs, it takes a toll on injury recovery. It slows it down, making recovery not as swift. Remember, water is the primary way that oxygen and nutrients get delivered directly to a spinal injury. Dehydration is one of the most common reasons why cell function becomes disrupted, no matter what. Essentially if you lack fluids, you’re going to create a delay in recovery and less optimal result of recovery.

Typically the body fluctuates from anywhere to 60% of its total weight is actually water. So how much water do you want the person to consume? About half their body weight in ounces of water every single day. They will improve their injury results if they are hydrated.  If they drink coffee, they need  to offset that cup of coffee with an extra cup of water. You want them drinking water. It’s a very general recommendation that basically hits home. Hydration.

The next Smart Injury Recommendations is proper sleep. Sleep is so misunderstood. But if we look at the course of injuries and how injuries heal successfully, they have to have healthy tissue growth. They have to repair the damaged tissue and now have healthy tissue growth. According to the National Sleep Foundation, growth and repair of tissue occurs in the third and fourth stages of sleep, which after you’ve completed about 70% of your rest, that’s when those stages happen. This means that your patient needs  to get an uninterrupted night of sleep. It’s crucial.

So what’s enough sleep? According to Mayo Clinic, the optimum sleep for adults is 7 to 9 to hours. A teenager, needs 8 to 10 hours. That’s what required in order for optimal healing to occur. Optimal healing and the repair of tissue occurs in the later stages of sleep.

The third recommendation that our doctors recommend, is they need to eat a healthy diet. You want them to consume a good non-inflammatory diet. One that is reduces inflammation. Consuming more anti-inflammatory fats. These fats are fish, salmon, sardines, olive oil mix and nuts and seeds, avocados, flaxseed oil, fish oil. Staying away from processed foods that are high in saturated fats. Vegetable oils, like corn, safflower, sunflower, soybean oils, or foods with trans fats. Those are high inflammatory foods.  Also include anything that is a leafy green vegetables, highly anti-inflammatory. Anything that’s a vegetable that’s grown above the ground is highly anti-inflammatory.

There are also some spices that are anti-inflammatory, like bromelain from pineapple, garlic, curcumin, turmeric, curry powder, cocoa, tea and berries. They provide anti-inflammatory substance and they also provide a lot of nutrients. They’re nutrient dense, and that’s what the body needs when it’s going to repair.

You don’t just recommend these three, you follow up by asking about it in your re-examinations. Especially if you have a patient that’s not progressing in a manner that you deem to be appropriate for what you normally see under your care.

It is easy to just talk to the patient about better sleep, better hydration, and better diet at least while they are going through your treatment program. If they adopt these habits, you’ve created a healthier patient. You’ve created a much healthier patient. That’s one of the things that as you as an injury provider can significantly help and influence a person to become healthier and now they can also look at long term things that keep their health such as ongoing care, supportive care in your clinic.

All of us have a spine. A spine is like the teeth, if you don’t maintain it, you’re not going to get as much mileage out of it. People should take their spinal health very seriously and you as an injury provider can seriously influence that.

Three simple recommendations.

Hydration

Enough Sleep

Anti-Inflammatory Diet

 

In the Smart Injury Doctors Program, we call these Smart Injury Recommendations. There’s other recommendations that you can give the patient to get better outcomes, but these are three simple things that you want to go over with the patient that will improve your injury results.

 

https://www.smartinjurydoctors.com/
https://www.thespinalkinetics.com

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Depositions Don’t Have to be Hard

Depositions Don’t Have to be Hard

Depositions Don’t Have to be Hard

If you are going to be in the injury market and you are a great doctor, you need to be in the injury market. Injury patients need great doctors. If you’re looking at the injury market saying, “I just don’t want to do depositions”, “I don’t want to do court trials.” Don’t look at it that way. It’s very, very easy.

Depositions are part of being an injury doctor.  If you are a Smart Injury Doctor and document as you go, depositions cease to be a stressful or hard activity. As a matter of fact, they can be incredibly fun. Now, why do I say that? I say that from years of experience. I say that from doing lots of depositions. I say that from being successful in court. I say that from training doctors, Smart Injury Doctors, for many years on how to simplify and document as they go. Enabling them to be confident and competent in depositions.

A good example of using standardized methods and depositions is a dentist. He has a patient that was in an accident and the dentist lost their two front teeth on the steering wheel. The dentist did his evaluation, X ray, history, etc.  He determined the course of action and did that action.  He documented what was done.  Would that dentist worry about going into deposition? No. Would he worry about going to trial and testifying? No. Okay, so what are you worried about? What gives you worry when you worry?

From all of my years in the injury market, as a doctor, as an educator, I know it comes from not using  standardized  procedures. It’s not actually having procedures where you immediately week one, determine the severity and location of all of the patient’s spinal injuries and any other injuries for that matter.

You need to objectified it. Make it objective, not subjective. You are high level professional and use only high level professionals to assist you with objectifying it.

If you’re sending out for an MRI, you’re using the best MRI center you can find. If you’re sending out for excessive motion testing, you’re looking for the best radiology service you can find. When using a high level of objectivity, you understand the consensus, the best practices behind this, you’re putting your patient on a treatment plan that’s consistent with all of the best practices that you utilize, that you’re communicating to the market in your patient’s notes that you utilize them. You’re now getting a great result with a patient. Maybe it takes four months, six months, eight months, whatever it takes. However long it takes, right?

You’re documenting your outcome assessment procedures, you’re documenting any duties and address loss of enjoyment of life factors. You’re documenting disability. You’ve referred out to any other kind of professionals. If you need any kind of co-evaluation for a disability case, in the case of an impairment that actually affects a person’s ability to do their work or their job.

When you do all this and do it standardly, as a professional, you do it over and over and over and over and over again, and you do it in the same way. You will see, just like the dentist, the patients, those are all different. But the treatment varies very little. The only variable is the way people respond to treatment, but what you’re doing and how you’re applying it is all the same.

The wildcard is the patient and their response. But how you document and what you do that’s systemized, that’s standard, that’s very easy to make standard. If your clinic right now is not standard,  you are going to have a hard time with depositions and court trials. That is what a Smart Injury Doctor knows and understands.  Being part of our team of dedicated doctors, using the proper and standardized methods, eliminates this difficulty.

It is not hard to go into a court trial to say, okay, here’s what the patient had. Yes, they had an injury. I know what the mechanism of injury is. Mechanism is forced delivery system, the injuries is the derangement pattern that’s left behind and there’s three basic derangement patterns that the spine can undergo or a combination of these three. You can either break it or there’s two significant ligament findings.

One is a disc herniation, which is not as significant as excessive motion. The other is excessive motion, which is found on stress radiology. Disc herniation is found on MRI. Remember, there’s on 23 discs. There’s 220 specialized ligaments, so you’d better be covering all of the ligaments and the ligament injuries. You’ve done that, you’ve got all the injuries, you’ve got it highly documented, you know the consensus, you know your guidelines. Now it’s just sitting down in a deposition and explaining it and actually realizing that your documentation is so good.  My documentation was so good when I finished in private practice that I was sitting there and wondering why would anybody depose me or why would I be in court. All you have to do is read my notes and read my end report. Read my two page summary that summarizes everything that I’ve done and what the patient had, what we did and where we’re at now. Because that’s what I’m going to be testifying about. That’s what I’m going to be talking about. That’s what I’m going to be talking about, whether I’m in deposition or whether I’m in court.

And if they want to argue with me, they are arguing with objectivity. Arguing with consensus. If you have a problem with the impairment level I gave, then you have a problem with the AMA, not me, because I’m doing it exactly the way the AMA said to do it. If you have a problem with the severity and location of the injury, I did the imaging. I’m showing you the consensus of what the results mean. I’m showing the consensus of what fellow doctors say. What is the consensus of the research? This is what it says. If you want to argue, argue with that consensus.

And when you’re doing it at this level and you’re doing it very simply so that somebody who’s 14 years old can understand what you’re saying, then these depositions and court trials are very easy. They’re not hard. And they’re a great source of referrals.

Remember, a lot of doctors out there looking for attorney referrals. Well, attorneys that actually have doctors that do well in deposition or do well in trial, that’s a great source of relief for the attorney. That’s a doctor that the attorney looks to and says, “Okay, that’s somebody I can refer to,” because number one, they don’t miss injuries. Number two, they get great results with my clients. Number three, they document and their documentation is impeccable and number four, you can understand everything that they’re saying and they present the material extremely well if we need to go into deposition or trial.

It’s not complicated. I’ve trained a lot of doctors how to do very, very well in depositions and in trials, and it always comes back to simple basics. Simple basics.

I have a group of doctors called Smart Injury Doctors and I get calls from our group members and they say things like this “Oh my God, I can’t believe it’s that simple.” It is that simple. It’s only complicated when you complicate it.

So in your depositions, keep it simple. Improve yourself clinically to understand how to systemize workups, get that education. You’re putting out a lot of stress that’s unnecessary and you’re missing out on a lot of expansion that can occur within your own practice

The Smart Injury Doctors Education Program is totally geared toward ligament injuries. The number one cause of pain and disability in the world today.  This program is designed to simplifying your understanding of that. And it’s also geared toward helping you be much better in depositions and in court trials.

 

https://www.smartinjurydoctors.com/
https://www.thespinalkinetics.com

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The Importance of the Consultation for any injury’s First Visit

The Importance of the Consultation for any injury’s First Visit

The Importance of the Consultation for any injury’s First Visit

An injury patient has entered your clinic, filled out paperwork, has given your staff insurance information, they are now ready to meet you, their doctor. They want to find out a few things. For example, How are you as the doctor? How concerned are you? How much time do you take? Am I important or is this doctor organizing a thousand different things in his head?  Your new patient can perceive these things, so you need to be switched ON!

So many doctors make the error of not understanding or stressing the importance of the very first consultation they have with an injury patient.  This is the first time that the patient’s going to interact with their doctor for any amount of time.  When a patient has a spinal ligament injury, 50% of these patients never fully recover, and of that 50% that don’t fully recover, 30% have a significant condition associated with it.

This person is literally turning over their life to you. It is up to you to make this a very, very important visit. This visit is also the visit that sets the tone for compliance, that sets the tone for how much they trust you, that sets the tone for how much they’re going to refer you to others.

                                Therefore, at that point in time, this patient must be the only thing in your mind. Your complete focus, razor sharp, should be on the patient.  As a priority, you must document every single symptom that they feel is associated with this condition. If they have head pain, stiffness, neck pain, back pain, arm pain, numbness, tingling, they don’t sleep very well, if they have cognitive dysfunction,  don’t feel like they’re thinking clearly, they feel like they’re foggy, they feel like they’re afraid of driving, they feel depressed, anything what so ever it may be, whether it be a list of 10 or 15 or 20 things, it’s very, very important that you get each and every one of them down.

 

To help you do so, we have in the Smart Injury Doctor’s Program, a form called a Smart Injury Symptom Tracker, and that Symptom Tracker allows you to put every single thing that the patient is saying that they have as a result of this injury in one simple, easy to use form

                                Take your time during this consult. Explore in detail all of the symptoms, how it effects them, their families, their co-workers. It literally takes minutes, but it’s very, very important. What your end result should be is a patient that feels completely duplicated and understood.

Another reason you do this so thoroughly is if you may miss a symptom and its details. For example, they may shoulder pain and you listed it.  On exam three days later, when you’re asking them how they’re doing or on a patient review form a month later and they don’t put the shoulder pain, you know they have improved. 

You only know this if exam was done in a systematic, thorough way. If a patient says, “I don’t know, I’m not doing that good.” You look at your list of 15 things that they listed initially. Now they’ve only listed seven things. That means eight of the things that they originally listed have dropped off the list. That’s the improvement that’s occurring, but because the patient still has these seven things, they don’t think they’re doing that well.

You need to have a way to track the symptoms so that each time you’re basically saying, “Hey, how’s the shoulder?” “The shoulder pain’s completely gone.” “Okay, initially you said headaches, but you’re not listing that you have headaches here now.” “Yeah, it’s pretty cool. I mean, I had headaches for two weeks, but the headaches are completely gone now.” They can see you care, you are interested in their improvement and can show that improvement has occurred. All of this by following a Smart Injury format.

                                A patient in that re- eval is going to feel more confident in his doctor if the duplication and documentation of his original difficulties are correct and the patient will be more compliant as well.  This patient will be telling all of his friends about you, talk you up to his attorney and this will all lead to more and more referrals.

Another important area is if the patient has any active preexisting conditions, things that they’re actively being treated for, under care for, that are in the same area or are very similar to what they have now.

                                So an example of that, the patient had neck pain a month ago and was seeing a doctor for this problem. At this doctor, they had taken x-rays, showing they had severe degenerative disc disease, began taking naproxen for this significant neck pain which the doctor had listed and diagnosed, and is now under active care and treatment. This is listed as an active preexisting condition.

An active pre-existing condition is uncommon. The majority of preexisting conditions are called dormant preexisting conditions. They too must be listed. You must list for example, if they are diabetic, have a high blood pressure, or have a problem with their weight.  Any number or pre-existing conditions can be a complicating factor in the patients treatment.

There will be a difference in results and the time of recovery between a 26 year old who has no body fat, works out at a gym three times a week and is a vegan and the person that say is 45 years old, has high blood pressures, is obese, doesn’t work out at all and has a horrible diet.

Another documentation factor is was there any delay or gap in care?  Find out and document what was happening. Were they actively treating themselves? They might say, “Well doctor, I didn’t think it was… I thought it would go away. I thought I could help it myself. I thought if I stretched, if I did ice, if I did over the counter medication.”All of these are active care procedures need to be listed because the patient was trying to do self care, which is active care. It’s a form of active care and it failed.

Another important consultation item is that you cover is ligament damage. In a  consultation it’s very easy to say, to transition, “In a moment we’re going to be doing an examination procedure and in that examination procedure I’m going to be looking for things to help me determine the severity and location of any injuries that you have.”

“Ligaments are the tissue that holds these vertebrae together and in alignment and when they’re damaged they can cause all kinds of problems. They cause instabilities to occur.” During  examination procedures you will to be testing for the effect of ligament damage. Specialized x-rays called stress x-rays will then determine the severity and location of any ligament injuries

Their confidence in you and your team will be so high if you properly assess their symptoms, duplicating documenting them.  Note any pre existing conditions, properly diagnosis and follow up with documentation of any changes and gaps in care. They will  feel cared for and tell their friends, their family, their attorney, their co- workers, and you and your staff.

It is so simple:

Become a Smart Injury Doctor

Use the Smart Injury Symptom Tracker Form

Note any Pre Existing Conditions

Do a comprehensive Examination

Use the Gap in Care Form as needed

If these things are done in a timely manner with total duplication of the patient and properly documented at the time of the event, is a time saver.  Never again say, “Oh, I’m in deposition now. I have to get all of my notes together.”

Join us, become a Smart Injury Doctor We would love to have you on our team.

For more information on Spinal Ligament Injuries please check us out at http://www.smartinjurydoctor.comor check out our SmartInjuryDoctors® Podcasts on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play or Stitcher.

For information on spinal ligament testing by board certified medical radiologists go to www.thespinalkinetics.com

Want to learn more about Smartinjurydoctor's Program?

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246 Tierney Drive, Suite 1,
New Richmond, WI 54017

1-800-940-6513, ext 700

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Smart Injury Doctors
701 Richards Ave
Clearwater Florida 33755

[email protected]
Call Lee Ann at 1-800-940-6513, ext 700

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© 2019 Biocybernetics Inc.

What Practice Guidelines Should You Be Using?

What Practice Guidelines Should You Be Using?

Why are guidelines so important and what guidelines in the injury market are excessively important, especially for you, the treating provider?

A treatment guideline is developed after many of your peers have come together and have committed a significant amount of time and energy to analyze several different research models to put forth recommended treatment guidelines for any profession.

                There are several types of treatment guidelines. There can be chiropractic treatment guidelines; there can be physical therapy treatment guidelines; there can be orthopedic surgery treatment guidelines.

Guidelines are best practices established by your profession that you will be judged by. That is probably the most important thing that I’m going to tell you today. Here is the important part. You should be listing what guidelines you use in your private practice. What if someone says, “Hey, I think you over-treated in the injury market.”? It does happen and these are things that you must be cautious of and take into consideration and protect yourself from.

                If you list what guidelines you use, those are the guidelines by which you’re judged by. If you say, “Look, I use the ICA best practice guidelines for my treatment guidelines”, those are phenomenal guidelines for Doctors of Chiropractic to be using. I train doctors to list those guidelines as the primary guidelines that they use. There are also practicing chiropractic clinical practice protocols, PCRP, and you will want to use those guidelines as well. Those are the only subluxation-based guidelines in chiropractic.

Many chiropractors get confused with chiropractic guidelines and the term subluxation. The term subluxation is the same as a spinal instability. A spinal instability and a subluxation are the same thing. You must have misalignment of the bone, mis-motion of the bone causing nerve interference, motor sensory, or pain problem at that level. You must identify that.

If you are a subluxation-based provider, you need to use subluxation-based guidelines because those the guidelines that you must be judged by. In clinical practice, chiropractic clinical practice guidelines, CCP guidelines, and ICA best practice guidelines.

The ICA best practice guidelines will cover your Croft guidelines. They’re included in that. If you looked at the treatment for general conditions under the ICA best practice guidelines you’re very much still going to like those guidelines because it gives you, as a chiropractor, a lot of latitude for treatment and it is your guideline.

                If you do an impairment rating, you can use the impairment guidelines. If you’re going to do disability rating you have to use disability guidelines. Be sure you state what guidelines you are using. This is very simple. Here is an example:

 Patient: Mary Smith

 Treatment: I’m am utilizing the CCP guidelines, the ICA best practice guidelines, and The AMA Guides to Evaluation of Permanent Impairment for any impairment that I discover.

                You need to list your guidelines. Now, why is this important? Well, in the injury space you’re going to notice things called ‘utilization reviews’ and independent medical examinations. If someone says that the care was medically unnecessary, they must refer to a guideline. If you’ve listed what guideline you use, you must be judged by that guideline because that’s the guideline you’ve listed.

Most doctors are not proactive enough about what guidelines they use, and they don’t take the time to read the guidelines. You need to not only list your guidelines, but you need to read the guidelines. Read your ICA best practice guidelines. Some of the top chiropractors in the US spent a lot of time producing those guidelines, and they’re phenomenal guidelines. You want to look at those guidelines and utilize them.

                When you read them I think you’ll be shocked at how much latitude you have as a doctor, and now, if you’re citing that you use those guidelines and somebody has said something contrary to the guidelines, you now have a great rebuttal material for your utilization reviews or any IMEs that you get. Or in the worst-case scenario, let’s say that you have a post-payment review and somebody is saying, “Hey, we think you over-treated and we want the money back.” Well, now you’re actually set up so that you don’t really have a problem with that when you’re trading within your guidelines and you know your guidelines. Guidelines are really, really important today.

                And remember, a lot of times in an IME, or in a utilization review, a doctor will say, “Well, here’s a research paper that states a position that I’m taking.” Remember, a guideline usurps that. Guidelines go through all the research and they form a guideline. And that guideline kind of becomes a law. And until you change the guideline, it’s not changed. No matter how much new research comes out or everything else, until the guideline has changed, the guideline is present. It’s like a law. It could be a bad law, but until the law is changed, it’s present and it stays intact.

                So doctors, one of the easiest things, if you want to have a much easier time in the injury market, a much easier time navigating payment and billing, and all the various stresses that you run into, listing out your guidelines on each and every case is a really great way to start. You will like the results long-term. You’ll be able to sleep better at night when you understand exactly what you’re doing and why you’re doing it, and the fact that you have a lot of consensus. Your profession has consensus that what you’re doing is correct.

Remember, everything I teach is about objectivity. Objectivity means things are written down. You can show exactly if you have a ligament condition.  Good, here’s the consensus on it. Here’s what the impairment guides say on it. Here’s what a lot of research says about it. Here’s what Medscape says about it. You want consensus, and consensus reduces the adversarial nature of the personal injury market, and guidelines are a huge part of that.

                So again, doctors, list your guidelines that you’re using with each and every patient and in the long run, you’ll have a lot easier time navigating the personal injury market.

For more information on Spinal Ligament Injuries please check us out at http://www.smartinjurydoctor.comor check out our SmartInjuryDoctors® Podcasts on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play or Stitcher.

For information on spinal ligament testing by board certified medical radiologists go to www.thespinalkinetics.com

Want to learn more about Smartinjurydoctor's Program?

Reach Us

Want to know more? We are happy to receive a message from you.

246 Tierney Drive, Suite 1,
New Richmond, WI 54017

1-800-940-6513, ext 700

Leave A Message

CONTACT US

Smart Injury Doctors
701 Richards Ave
Clearwater Florida 33755

[email protected]
Call Lee Ann at 1-800-940-6513, ext 700

SEARCH THIS SITE

© 2019 Biocybernetics Inc.

The Five Steps to Great Spinal Injury Documentation

The Five Steps to Great Spinal Injury Documentation

The Five Steps to Great Spinal Injury Documentation

There is a lot of confusion about injury documentation. There are five general steps to injury documentation, and it is currently being made much more complicated than it needs to be. All injury documentation has these five basic steps in common and they are really very simple.

Step One:  You Have to Diagnose All of the Injuries

Whenever somebody is trying to adjudicate benefits for a patient, the first thing that they look for is the diagnosis. In other words, how injured is the patient? In a spinal soft tissue injury, there are two imaging biomarkers substantiate injury to the ligaments themselves.

The first is disc herniation. There are 220 specialized ligaments that hold the spine together. 23 of those ligaments are discs. The discs are evaluated generally on an MRI.

If any of the other 197 ligaments, including the disc are damaged, they can cause excessive motion to the spine. Excessive motion is one of the most significant problems that a patient can have. We must diagnose the ligament injuries thoroughly. We must diagnose what is wrong.

  • Did they fracture?
  • Do they have a disc herniation?
  • Do they have excessive motion?
  • Is it causing a spinal instability?
  • What is the grade and severity of the sprain?

That is all part of the complete diagnosis. And you need an accurate diagnosis.

Step Two: You Need to Document If the Condition is Permanent or Not

Any injury that is permanent has a section on t in the permanent impairment guides. Remember, impairment is a derangement of a body part. All injuries are derangement of body parts. The evaluation of permanent impairment that was done by the AMA could be called the guides to the evaluation of permanent injury because it is injuries that caused the derangements in the first place. You need to note whether there is permanency and that’s very easy to do. You  just use the AMA guides to determine if there is a permanency.

Step Three:  Duties Under Duress Factors?

If a patient can do something but it causes them discomfort, it is called a Duty Under Duress factor. They can ride their bicycle with a low back injury, but not like they could prior to the injury. For example, they previously were able to ride their bike for ten to twelve miles and now they are only able to ride it two miles before getting severe back pain. They can still do it, but it is causing problems when they do. These are called duties and under duress factors.

Step Four: Loss of Enjoyment of Life Factors

Let us look at that same back injury but the patient can no longer ride their bike because it is too physically painful. They must stop doing that particular activity because they are physically unable to.  These are called Loss of Enjoyment of Life Factors. These factors must be documented as well.

Step Five: Future Care Needs and General Progress Documentation

At the end of care, all doctors document reevaluation. If you’re doing any kind of a physical rehabilitation on a patient, you’re going to document outcome assessment procedures to show that you are basically gaining ground on the condition. It will show that what you are doing is actually working.

And then you also must document these five factors. All the injuries. Is their permanency, which means permanent impairment guides? Are there any duties under duress or loss of enjoyment of life factors? Now lastly, if let’s say that you’ve gone through your rehabilitation procedures and the patient’s gone through your program, whatever your program is, or you’ve sent patients out for various programs and at this point you’re at maximum medical improvement. Remember, maximum medical improvement is, I’m looking out at that patient. I’m looking out into the future the next year and no matter what I think this patient would do, their outcome is going to be the same. We’re at maximum medical improvement. Now, if a person has a permanent condition and they have a loss of enjoyment of life factor or duties of duress factor, then they also may be entitled to future care. They may need future care, supportive care, to maintain the results with their care. And in that case, it can be substantiated, but you must have all the other factors there as well.

You Help the Patient to Get Any and All Benefits That They May be Entitled to.

It is very, very easy today to document injuries, but you must be sure you have all five factors. Many doctors really struggle with one, the diagnosis, especially with ligament injuries. They don’t get a diagnosis of a severity and location of a ligament injury, and without that, the patient is going to have benefit problems. You are also missing out on permanency factors if it is not documented. Without that, there is no rationale for why they have lost the enjoyment of life of something or they have duties under duress factors. These five things must be documented clearly in doctor’s notes, on all injuries.

It doesn’t matter if it’s a work comp injury. Now some work comp providers will say, “Hey, in our work comp jurisdiction, we don’t use the AMA guides to determine disability.” Remember, impairment is how a physical injury influences a person’s activities of daily living. Disability is how it affects their ability to earn a living. In the ‘earn a living’ work comp area, they may say, “Hey, we don’t use the impairment guides for our disability.” A lot of times that confuses practitioners, but it is actually very simple. It just means that they use a modified approach. Everyone uses the impairment guides. No one is going to create new impairment guides to determine impairment. They just may have a modified system in their state that says, “Oh, we don’t use the impairment guides direct. We use a disability guide, which we’ve modified from the impairment guidelines.”

Systematize and Simplify

Injury practice and injury documentation is very easy if you’re systemizing and getting those five steps in place. If you are struggling with reimbursement issues or you’re struggling with doctor’s contesting your care, such as IMEs and utilization reviews, you must look at your documentation. In my experience, if those five elements are left out, and usually it starts with a diagnosis right from the foundation, there is no impairment, no duties under duress, or no loss of enjoyment of life factors. If they are there, they’re not documented properly.

And doctors, you know if you don’t document properly, then you don’t get paid properly and that’s not so much on you. That’s more on your patient. Your patient does not get the insurance benefits that they may be entitled to and it makes everyone’s job harder. It makes the insurance company’s job harder. It makes the plaintiff attorney’s job harder. It makes everyone’s job harder when you don’t document well.

In my experience with teaching, which I have done for doctors all over the country, these things are not being documented well. If you pick up those five things, you have seriously improved your documentation skills in the injury market, and everyone will benefit. You’ll benefit. Plaintiff attorneys will benefit. Defense attorneys will benefit. Insurers will benefit. And most importantly of all, your patients will benefit greatly.

For more information and tips on how to reduce the problems and stress associated today with growing a large and successful personal injury practice please check us out at http://www.smartinjurydoctor.comor check out our SmartInjuryDoctors® Podcasts on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play or Stitcher.

For information on spinal ligament testing by board certified medical radiologists go to www.thespinalkinetics.com

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