Analysis Reveals High Costs and Low Savings in Workers’ Comp Physician Expenses

July 17, 2013

Acrometis’ analysis of 80,000 medical bills occurring during the first week of a work injury showed that the highest costs were in the M.D. and orthopedic surgeon categories. Yet while these two categories represented the largest expense, they yielded the lowest percentage of savings.

Payers gained only 27 percent in savings from M.D. and 36 percent from orthopedic surgeon categories, compared to 71 percent savings from outpatient services and 65 percent from pharmacy.

“The analysis clearly identified two large areas of potential savings,” said Acrometis Chairman and CEO Kevin Kilroy. “Our analysis shows payers where to focus their claims management energies to significantly reduce expenses.”

Acrometis’ analysis, captured in the third edition of its Strength in Numbers series, identified the top seven medical spend categories in 80,000 bills from 3,955 lost-time and medical-only claims processed through its CLAIMExpert processing platform. Acrometis examined provider type, type of treatment, date of treatment and the percentage of savings payers received on those bills. In descending order, the top spends were M.D., orthopedic surgeons, pharmacy, diagnostic testing, durable medical goods and physical therapy.

Following the spend and savings in the seven categories for the first 52 weeks of the claim, Acrometis found that percentage of savings in the M.D. category continued to be the lowest of all seven categories.

“If payers had the week-one savings data, they could have negotiated better network contracts or contracted with providers offering more attractive fee pricing,” Kilroy added. “Identifying areas of costs and savings early in the claim enables payers to reduce the overall cost of the claim.”

The Acrometis Strength in Numbers report is available at http://www.acrometis.com/tails.

Source: Acrometis

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