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Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE)

Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE). Renton COHE APP 2013-2014 Annual Training. What is a COHE?. Each Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE) is a contractual partnership between the Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) and healthcare organizations.

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Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE)

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  1. Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE) Renton COHE APP 2013-2014 Annual Training

  2. What is a COHE? • Each Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE) is a contractual partnership between the Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) and healthcare organizations. • Facilitate the implementation of occupational health best practices during the early phase of a claim. • Promote collaboration between stakeholders (Labor, Business, Unions, Providers, Insurers) involved in a worker’s injury or illness.

  3. COHE – What Claims Qualify? • COHE Claim • WA State Workers’ Compensation State Fund claims • NOT: Federal, Self-Insured, Tribal or Out of State Workers’ Compensation claims. • Claim filed with a COHE provider and/or COHE provider is the attending provider on the claim. • Resources focused on claims within the first 90 days of claim being filed.

  4. COHE Goals & Mission • Reduce Worker Disability • Improve Employment Outcomes • Promote Patient Satisfaction • Enhance Clinical Efficiency

  5. Current COHE’s • Community • Renton COHE – Valley Medical Center • Western WA COHE – Franciscan Medical Center • Eastern WA COHE – St. Luke’s Medical Center • Institutional • The Everett Clinic • Group Health Cooperative • Harborview

  6. COHE – More Details

  7. COHE Expectations • Establish Mechanism to Identify High Risk Cases for Long Term Disability • Develop Procedures for Coordinating Care • Implement Quality Procedures & Best Practices • Foster Communication between Providers, Workers & Employers • Offer Training & Mentoring in Occupational Health Best Practices to Participating Providers • Provide Feedback to Providers on their Performance

  8. 100 80 60 40 20 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Avoiding Disability % IW Receiving Disability Payments Early Intervention PeriodFocus of COHE Activities Time-Loss Duration (months)

  9. Keypoints from COHE Effectiveness Research • Substantially prevented long-term disability, reducing costs by an average of $480 per claim & lost work time by an average of four days. • Savings continue to accrue three to four years after the claim is filed, even though the current COHE intervention occurs during the first 90 days of the claim. • In the first year alone, the COHEs (Renton & Eastern Washington) saved approximately $8 million compared to control groups.

  10. May 2013 L&I COHE Program Report • Claims treated by COHE providers resolve faster • Faster resolution may be due to COHE Best Practices preventing some medical-only claims from becoming time-loss. (Wickizer, et al, 2007) • Majority of COHE providers are medium or high adopters of COHE Best Practices • Currently 62% of COHE providers are high & medium adopters. COHE’s are striving to improve the adoption rate to 80%. • 50% of inured workers have access to a COHE provider

  11. Overview of Renton COHE • Community based • Reduced disability • Encourage clinical best practices • Provider must be in catchment area • Deliverables • Physician Recruitment, Enrollment & Training • Clinical & Occupational Health Advisors • Health Services Coordinators • Best Practices & Quality Improvement Methods • Communication & Community Outreach • Performance Monitoring & Annual Review

  12. Attending Providers in the Program (APPs) • Over 200 Providers • Chiropractors • Emergency Physicians • Family Physicians • Nurse Practitioners • Physician Assistants • Specialty Providers • Neurology, Occupational, Orthopedics, Podiatry, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation • Around 5,500 Claims Annually

  13. Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE) Occupational Health Best Practices

  14. Occupational Health Best Practice #1 • Report of Accident (ROA) • Timeliness • To L&I within 2 business days of initial office visit • Speeds up processing & adjudication of claim • Strong association between time from injury to receipt of claim at L&I and substantially longer duration of time loss • 80% benchmark

  15. Provider Portion of ROA • Must complete each box to avoid delay in claim adjudication

  16. Report of Accident • Claim is initiated at L&I by the completion of the ROA. • Missing information may unnecessarily delay the adjudication of the claim, delaying treatment and payment for services. • When the ROA is received at L&I within 2 business days of the initial office visit, you receive higher payment for completing this form. • L&I processes COHE claims twice as fast as non-COHE claims.

  17. Report of Accident • When determining whether to file a claim for a patient: • If patient asks you to file a claim, you must regardless of your opinion as to it’s work-relatedness. • Indicate on the ROA that the claim is work-related or not. • Inform the patient that inappropriate filing of a claim can cause delays in payment by other insurers. • Claims should be filed even for minor injuries. • Fear of retaliation by employer. • Inform patient that the law protects them from discrimination for filing a claim.

  18. Report of Accident • If patient refuses to file and you feel condition is work-related: • Tell patient of his/her rights under the law (Title 51) and provide assistance with filing claim. • If patient still refuses, should not file claim. • L&I will not pay for visit if ROA is not completed and filed. • Patient cannot seek payment from other insurers by withholding that condition is work-related. • Title 51 prevents an employer from paying directly for an injured worker’s care to avoid filing a claim.

  19. Report of Accident • Determining Work-Relatedness • Depends on a variety of factors (medical, legal and administrative) • May be difficult to determine • In box 7 on the ROA, you are required to answer yes/probably or no/possibly • By law, a claim can be accepted only if the provider states the condition is work-related “on a more probable than not basis” or greater than 50% certainty, e.g., yes/probably. • For condition to be work-related, the industrial injury or exposure must be a “proximate cause” of the diagnosed condition.

  20. Occupational Health Best Practices #2 • Activity Prescription Form (APF) • Complete at first office visit • Complete with any work status change • Gives claims manager & employer information on the tasks worker can do. • Better chance of worker returning to work in a timely manner. • Claims manager uses form for time loss certification & treatment authorizations. • HSC uses the APF to facilitate return to work efforts with employer. • 80% benchmark

  21. APF Key Points • General Section • Patient stickers may be used, as long as all the requested information is provided. • Either ICD-9 codes or written diagnoses may be listed in the diagnosis box. • Providing this information will ensure the form gets into the correct claim file. • Including the provider’s name and the visit date is important for billing purposes.

  22. APF Key Points • Released for Work Section • If released to job of injury without restrictions, skip to “Plans” section. • Objective medical findings are needed to certify time loss or loss of earning power benefits. • Be realistic on “to” dates. May not necessarily be the next office visit, but the point at which patient’s status is expected to change.

  23. APF Key Points • Released for Work Section Cont’d • Must include at least one “key objective finding”. • Examples of objective findings are: • Limited ROM • Decreased strength • Swelling • Muscle atrophy • Do not include subjective complaints such as pain, tenderness or fatigue. • Be specific with date ranges.

  24. APF Key Points • Estimate What Worker Can Do Section

  25. APF Key Points • Estimate What Worker Can Do Section • Enables employers to identify potential light/modified duty positions. • Complete with assumption that light/modified duty is available. • Check as to how long the current capacity will last or if are permanent. • Estimate based on provider’s clinical opinion. • Conservative estimates are acceptable. • MUST be completed even when worker is not released to work. • For worker to understand what should physically do and not do to enhance recovery.

  26. APF Key Points • Estimate What Worker Can Do Section • Only address restrictions applicable to claim covered condition. • Boxes left blank will be considered as not restricted. • “Other instructions” could include need to elevate limb periodically, no use of left arm, etc. Be specific. • Note to claims manager is intended to help you draw the their attention to an issue, i.e. “need authorization for…” Also has space for new diagnosis and opioid prescriptions.

  27. APF Key Points • Plan/Sign Section • Quickly/briefly establishes plan for rehabilitation. • Succinctly indicates whether patient is progressing. • Comments are strongly encouraged. • Identifies what should happen next. • Alerts claims manager to actions needed, e.g., impairment rating exam schedule, Independent Medical Exam needed, claim closure.

  28. Occupational Health Best Practices #3 • Provider-Employer Contact • Provides timely communication between provider and employer regarding return to work • Call employer at or after the initial office visit. • Ascertain if light/modified duty available. • Provide information on worker’s restrictions, treatment planned, etc. • Note outcome of contact with employer on section in APF. • Contact employer at or after subsequent office visits as needed. • Be sure to bill for phone call and use appropriate modifier. • 25% benchmark

  29. Occupational Health Best Practices #4 • Barriers to Return To Work Addressed • Worker has been off work 4 weeks or greater • Receiving time loss • Ascertain reasons worker is off work • Develop action plan • Identify clinical evaluation/rehab services needed • 80% benchmark

  30. Occupational Health Best Practices #4 • Barriers to Return To Work Addressed • Barriers Exam • Can be completed by the APP or a COHE Advisor. • In addition to the regular exam. • Must include an extensive SOAPER note addressing barriers. • Medical Case Conference • HSC Services Billed

  31. SOAPERChart Notes • S: The worker’s subjective complaints • O: The provider’s objective findings • A: The provider’s assessment • P: The provider’s treatment plan • E: Employment issues • R: Restrictions to work

  32. Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE) In Summary

  33. How to “Do Good” in L&I System? • Set expectations for injured workers regarding return to work. • Help avoid administrative claim delays. • Eliminate barriers to care. • Facilitate communication with all parties. • Establish & maintain communication with employer. • Enhanced payment for services if provider meets the Occupational Health Best Practices benchmarks. • Scorecards are published by L&I on a quarterly basis.

  34. APP’s Role • Care of the injured worker. • Make the diagnosis. • Comment on work-relatedness. • Complete ROA. • Always consider work abilities. • Complete APF. • Include claim number, date of injury and employer on each patient encounter. • If help is needed with the patient’s return to work process, please contact an HSC.

  35. Resources Available for APPs • COHE Project Directors • Jaime Nephew, PT, DPT, MBA, FACHE • Grace Casey • COHE Medical Directors • Karen Nilson, MD • Scott Morris, MD • COHE Advisors • Wide variety of disciplines represented • COHE Health Services Coordinators (HSC) • Diena Wasson, RN-BC, CCM, BSN • Ellen Hull, M.Ed., CRC • Heather Latvala, M.Ed., CDMS • Kathryn M. Visser, M.Ed., CDMS

  36. HSC & APP • One-on-one training • Promote occupational health best practices • Provide training for nurses and other office staff • Assist with return to work coordination • Even missing 3 to 7 days of work can increase disability and a long-term earning capacity. • Research has shown that a worker remaining on payroll during recovery has a greater chance of full recovery and a higher family income while recuperating. • Evaluate potential barriers to return to work early to prevent ongoing disability

  37. Early Return to Work

  38. HSC Responsibilities • Identify claims that are at risk for long-term disability. • Intervene on claims that need HSC assistance. • Track claims to ensure early return to work services, care coordination and improved clinical outcomes of injured workers. • Act as a liaison, on behalf of the provider, between injured worker, employer and L&I. • Help employers, providers and injured workers navigate the Workers’ Compensation system.

  39. Satisfactions SurveySummary of Findings • Renton Worker Survey • As satisfied as on key satisfaction measures of: • Quality of Care • Coordination of Care • Overall Treatment Experience • Better employment outcomes • 55% more likely to return to same employer • 65% more likely to be working at time of survey

  40. Satisfaction SurveySummary of Findings • Renton Provider Survey • 75% indicated they have improved ability to treat Injured Workers • 74% are satisfied with their experience • 70% reported improved ability to communicate with employers • 50% stated they are more willing to treat Injured Workers

  41. Center of Occupational Health & Education (COHE) Quiz

  42. Quiz • Please see attached COHE APP Quiz 2013 Microsoft Word document for instructions and to complete the quiz.

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