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If your patient has a personal injury claim, there is a good chance that your medical records will be sifted for certain data to be fed into a computer. A program called "Colossus" will then use this data to determine the value of your patient’s claim for purposes of settlement. Colossus assimilates and examines facts provided by your medical records and subjects them to more than 10,000 pre-programmed "rules" (and biases) to evaluate over 600 trauma-induced injuries. This program is being used by more than half of the insurance industry. For many insurance companies, gone are the days when the claims adjuster would actually review the individual merits of each injury claim and negotiate a settlement accordingly. The purpose of this article is not to cause worry about the dawning of a brave new post-human world where computers dispense "justice" in the area of claims settlements. Our purpose is to inform you how Colossus thinks and works, so you may understand what information it needs. As a result, we hope your patients will be better positioned to secure fair and just settlements commensurate with their injuries. This, in turn, should make for a better chance of your bills being paid. BILLING Having determined what may be considered, the adjuster will then enter data into a computer for Colossus processing. They will then take their marching orders for settlement from what the computer dictates. Inadequate recordkeeping will result in denial of services and the presumption that the patient is uninjured. "Garbage in, garbage out." BUILT-IN BIAS AGAINST SOFT TISSUE
INJURIES "Nondemonstrable" refers to musculoligamentous (soft tissue) injuries which represent the most common type of motor vehicle accident injury. The most significant inherent bias in the Colossus program is its skeptical treatment of "nondemonstrable injuries." We will outline the type of information Colossus accepts following the "SOAP" pattern of record keeping utilized by most practitioners. SUBJECTIVE SYMPTOMS For example, your patient may come to you primarily for neck and back pain, but immediately after the accident he or she may have reported shoulder pain in the emergency room. Injury to the shoulder will not be recognized unless it appears in your treatment records. Neck pain which "radiates into the shoulder" will be considered as only one injury. If the musculoligamentous structure of the shoulder itself has also been affected, its symptoms should be identified and verified separately, so they get their due. OBJECTIVE FINDINGS
ASSESSMENT
OR DIAGNOSIS
Again, it is imperative that each body part complained of and found to be injured be addressed with a separate diagnosis. Colossus will recognize only diagnosed injuries. It also helps to note if your patient had a preexisting condition. PLAN
FOR TREATMENT: PHYSICAL THERAPY AND OTHERS Physical therapy, massage therapy, and manipulative therapy treatments are recognized. Duration/length of treatment (more or less than 90 days) and frequency/intensity of treatment are factored in. Therapy includes both visits to a therapist and home exercises. Colossus has a built-in bias against chiropractic treatment. However, chiropractic treatment is given more weight if it is sandwiched between visits to an M.D. or D.O. who approves such treatment. Other treatments
Colossus will recognize are:
Documenting the duration of each treatment is essential since Colossus requires a stabilization period. Colossus classifies injury stabilization periods as: 1) up to 1 month; 2) 1 to 3 months; 3) 3 to 6 months; 4) 6 to 12 months; 5) 12 to 18 months; 6) 18 to 24 months; 7) 24 to 36 months; and 8) more than 36 months. Colossus is calibrated to question a stabilization period it deems longer than expected. To satisfy Colossus, the records must clearly reflect ongoing complaints and treatment that reflects progressive improvement. Gaps in treatment and delays in treatment must be explained in the records, to avoid a negative effect. If the record indicates that the patient decided to try home exercises in lieu of formal treatment, but found he/she had to return for formal treatment, the negative effect of the gap may be diminished. Likewise, if the record shows that the patient attempted to work through or wait out the initial complaints, hoping the pain would subside without treatment, this would explain a delay. PROGNOSES OTHER
FACTORS
Duties under duress are day-to-day living duties which have become painful or difficult as a result of the injuries. These include the necessary domestic responsibilities of a homemaker and/or parent of young children, as well as the necessity to go out to work, as long as these responsibilities are made difficult or painful due to the injuries. Your chart should reflect the difficulty and the reason for the difficulty in performing the duties. The duration should also be acknowledged in the chart. It is not necessary that a prescription be made for the patient to refrain from these duties. Loss of enjoyment of life encompasses areas of life the patient normally would have enjoyed had he/she not been injured. These include athletics, vacationing, entertainment and socializing. Again, the chart should clearly document the activities and the duration. Colossus will allow an impairment rating indicated by a medical doctor if it is based on test results and follows the AMA guidelines. SUPPLEMENTAL
REPORTS We hope this
information will help you as you work with your patients to insure
that all medical aspects of their injuries are addressed and charted
clearly. This will help us to present the injury claim completely.
It will also help the insurance claims representative to "in-put" the
full injury story in terms the Colossus computer program requires.
More importantly, it will help ensure that your patient is compensated
fully for all injuries and their consequences, and that you are
paid fully.
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