• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • WCW HOME
  • Submit a Wire!
  • Advertising
  • Media Partners
  • About
  • Contact Us

WorkCompWire

Your Trusted Source for Workers Compensation News

Enlyte
  • Workers Compensation News
    • Workers Compensation Industry News
    • Association, Rating & Research News
    • Claims, Legal, & Compliance News
    • Legislative & Regulatory News
    • Risk Management News
    • Work Force & Human Resource News
  • Featured Articles
  • Leaders Speak
  • Editor’s Forum
  • People On The Move

WCRI: Medical Payments Per Workers’ Comp Claim in Louisiana Stable

December 17, 2015 - WorkCompWire

Cambridge, MA – Growth in medical payments per workers’ compensation claim in Louisiana slowed from 2011 to 2013, in part due to decreases in utilization of hospital and nonhospital care, according to a recent study by the Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI).

The report, CompScope™ Medical Benchmarks for Louisiana, 16th Edition, found medical payments per claim with more than seven days of lost time continued to be higher than most states WCRI studied. The following are among some of the study’s other findings:

  • In Louisiana, hospital outpatient payments per service grew 1.0 percent per year from 2011 to 2013, after increasing 12 percent per year from 2008 to 2011. In earlier years, growth in Louisiana was faster than that of the median state. From 2011 to 2013, hospital payments per service were fairly stable in Louisiana and in the median state.
  • Utilization of medical care decreased from 2011 to 2013 for both hospital outpatient and nonhospital providers, largely due to fewer visits per claim. Medical treatment guidelines that recommended frequency, optimum, and maximum duration of treatment and diagnostic procedures for medical conditions were effective July 13, 2011. This WCRI study did not examine the impact of the guidelines on utilization.

“Hospital outpatient payments are an important driver of Louisiana’s medical payments,” said Ramona Tanabe, executive vice president and counsel for WCRI. The state’s fee schedule sets reimbursement at 90 percent of billed charges, but the workers’ compensation statute says reimbursement should be based on the mean of usual and customary charges. The conflicting provisions have produced considerable litigation. Louisiana policymakers and system stakeholders have focused on revising the reimbursement approach.

The report examined medical payments, prices, and utilization in Louisiana and compared them with 16 other states. It also examined how metrics of medical costs and care compared from state to state and across time. The study analyzed claims with experience through 2014 on injuries that occurred in 2013 and prior.

To order a copy of this study, click here: WCRI: CompScope™ Medical Benchmarks for Louisiana, 16th Edition.

Source: WCRI

Filed Under: Association, Rating & Research News, Industry News, Top Stories, Workers' Compensation

Primary Sidebar

Get Our Free Newsletter:

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: WorkCompWire.com, PO Box 1114, Culver City, CA, 90232, http://www.workcompwire.com. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

myMatrixx

Paradigm

MSQ

Follow Us on Twitter

Tweets by WorkCompWire

Workers Compensation News Topics

  • Top Stories
  • Featured Articles
  • Leaders Speak
  • Editor’s Forum
  • The RxProfessor
  • Industry News
  • Association, Rating & Research News
  • People On The Move
  • Claims, Legal, & Compliance News
  • Legislative & Regulatory News
  • Risk Management News
  • Work Force & Human Resource News
  • Workers’ Compensation

Wire Archives

Copyright WorkCompWire © 2023