WCRI: Texas Sees 7% Increase in Medical Payments per Workers’ Comp Claim

Medical payments per workers’ compensation claim with more than seven days of lost time in Texas rose 7 percent from 2012 to 2013, a faster rate than in the median of 17 states, according to a recent study by the Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI).

The report, CompScope Medical Benchmarks for Texas, 16th Edition, pointed to the following factors:

“Texas’ 7 percent increase was a change from most prior years,” said Ramona Tanabe, executive vice president and counsel for WCRI. “From 2008 to 2012, growth averaged a more moderate 3 percent annually, with some year-to-year fluctuation.”

Payments per claim in Texas, though, remained lower than the typical state WCRI studied. Prices paid for some medical services remained below the norm, despite large increases. In addition, there were large decreases in utilization of medical care―though even after the decreases, Texas injured workers received more medical services than did those in other states for some key services, such as chiropractic care, office visits, and neurological/neuromuscular testing.

WCRI studied medical payments, prices and utilization in 17 states, including Texas, looking at claim experience through 2014 on injuries that occurred in 2013 and prior. WCRI’s CompScope Medical Benchmark studies compare metrics of medical costs and care from state to state and across time. Data in the Texas report likely reflect nearly all effects of House Bill 7, a 2005 reform focused on workers’ compensation medical costs.

To purchase a copy of this study, visit http://www.wcrinet.org/studies/public/books/csmed16_TX_book.html.

Source: WCRI