-

CWCI Finds Sharp Increase in California Workers’ Comp Med-Legal Costs Under New Fee Schedule

OAKLAND, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Payments for medical-legal services used to resolve medical disputes over compensability issues in California work injury claims have risen sharply under the new Medical-Legal Fee Schedule (MLFS) that took effect last year according to a new CWCI study, with the increase in aggregate med-legal fees in the first seven months after the schedule took effect far exceeding the 25% increase anticipated by the Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC).

In April 2021, the DWC implemented a new fee schedule that for the first time since 2006, changed the payment formulas for med-legal evaluations and reports. The old MLFS had provided varying flat fee payments for “basic” and “complex” comprehensive (ML102 and ML103) evaluations, and time-based payments for evaluations involving “extraordinary circumstances” (ML104). The new schedule replaced those three levels of service with a single code (ML201), for which forensic physicians are paid a single, flat fee, plus $3 per page for record reviews exceeding 200 pages (MLPRR), and time-based payments for sub rosa video reviews (ML205). The new MLFS also continued to allow additional fees for evaluations by an Agreed Medical Evaluator (AME) or those involving an interpreter, and expanded fee multipliers to certain medical specialists.

CWCI’s study compared the utilization and reimbursement of med-legal services rendered before and after the new schedule’s April 1, 2021 effective date, using data from accident year 2015 through 2021 claims, with service dates limited to January through October of each year to account for the timing of billing and payment. The results indicate that replacing the three levels of evaluations with a single comprehensive evaluation reimbursed at a flat fee of $2,015 likely had the biggest impact on average payments. Basic evaluations (previously billed under ML102) accounted for about 40% of the evaluations paid under the new ML201 comprehensive service code, and the new flat fee increased the payment for these services by 222%. More complex evaluations (previously billed under ML103) represented 18% of the new ML201 evaluations, and payments for these services increased by 115%. Other key findings from the study:

  • It was hoped that the new MLFS would lead to a redistribution of med-legal services, with fewer supplemental reports, but these reports increased from 34.2% of med-legal services in 2019 to 37.8% under the new schedule.
  • Compared to the same time period in 2019, the average payment for a comprehensive evaluation that includes a face-to-face exam of the injured worker rose 52.9%, and the average payment for a supplemental evaluation rose 39.1%.
  • The new per-page record review fee also contributed to the increase in med-legal payments, adding an average of $1,917 to the base fee for comprehensive evaluations, $1,410 to the base fee for follow-up evaluations and $1,437 to the base fee for supplemental evaluations.
  • Physicians specializing in orthopedic surgery provided 53% of the med-legal services during 2021, while internal medicine physicians were a distant second, providing 9% of the services.
  • One goal of the new fee structure was to attract and retain more Qualified Medical Evaluators (QMEs). A review of DWC data show that 211 new physicians joined the pool of certified QMEs in 2021, while only 18 became inactive, resulting in 2,554 active evaluators, a 3% increase from 2020 yet a 1% decrease from 2019.

CWCI has published its study in a Research Update Report, “An Early Look at the Impact of the New Med-Legal Fee Schedule,” which is available to CWCI members and subscribers who log on to the Research section at www.cwci.org. Others may purchase the report from CWCI’s online store, here. CWCI will also conduct a half hour webinar followed by a Q&A session (free to CWCI members, $75 for non-members) on Wednesday, July 27 at 10 a.m. (Pacific) to review the MLFS changes and the results of the study. For details or to register for the webinar, click here.

Contacts

Bob Young
(510) 251-9470

California Workers’ Compensation Institute


Release Summary
CWCI looks at the impact of the new California worker's comp Medical-Legal Fee Schedule's revised rules and fees on med-legal utilization and payments
Release Versions

Contacts

Bob Young
(510) 251-9470

More News From California Workers’ Compensation Institute

CWCI Report Examines Functional Restoration Programs in California Workers’ Comp

OAKLAND, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A new California Workers’ Compensation Institute (CWCI) study offers some of the first comprehensive data on the use of Functional Restoration Programs (FRPs) to treat California injured workers. FRPs are multi-disciplinary programs used to treat injuries that involve chronic pain and improve patient function when the injuries do not respond adequately to traditional therapies. For its study, CWCI analyzed 635 indemnity claims that involved FRPs compiled from t...

CWCI Examines California’s Proposed Presumption for Hospital Worker Injuries & Illnesses

OAKLAND, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--SB 632 would drive up hospitals' costs, allow claims normally denied after investigation, fuel disputes, and extend presumptions to the private sector...

CWCI Finds California Workers’ Comp Independent Medical Reviews Are Trending Up

OAKLAND, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--After declining steadily from 2018 through 2022, the number of Independent Medical Review (IMR) decision letters issued in response to California workers’ comp medical disputes is now trending up, increasing in 2023, 2024, and the first quarter of 2025 according to the California Workers’ Compensation Institute (CWCI), but the uphold rate for medical service modifications and denials that are reviewed remains close to 90%. CWCI’s latest review of IMR activity a...
Back to Newsroom