-

CWCI Analyzes the Impact of Inflation on the California Workers’ Comp Medical Fee Schedule

OAKLAND, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A new California Workers’ Compensation Institute (CWCI) analysis that examines how medical inflation impacts allowable fees under the California workers’ compensation Official Medical Fee Schedule (OMFS) finds that physician and non-physician practitioner service fees represent more than half of treatment payments in the system and that differences in inflationary factors used between OMFS and Medicare explain the growing differential between California workers’ compensation and Medicare rates for professional services.

The new analysis focuses on the price indices used to adjust various OMFS payment rates. Maximum fees for different types of medical services provided to injured workers in California are regulated by the OMFS, but each OMFS section uses distinct rules for payment calculation and different inflation factors to update payment rates. For example, the Inpatient, Outpatient Facility, Ambulatory Surgical Center, Ambulance Service, and the Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics and Supplies (DMEPOS) sections of the fee schedule use Medicare’s inflationary factors, and the cumulative percentage increase in the OMFS inflationary factors for these fee schedules has been lower than economy-wide inflation. But over the past decade, inflationary adjustments for the OMFS conversion factor used to calculate fees in the Professional Services section of the schedule, which account for 53 percent of California workers’ compensation medical care payments, have not aligned with Medicare, as in 2015 Medicare suspended use of the Medicare Economic Index (MEI), a measure of inflation faced by physicians with respect to their practice costs and wage levels, and shifted to statutory changes set by the U.S. Congress.

In contrast, in California workers’ compensation, use of the MEI remains mandated by statute. From 2015 to 2019, statutory annual adjustments to the Medicare conversion factor were minimal (0.5 percent), and the state Division of Workers’ Compensation did not adopt them, but from 2021 to 2024, Congress mandated increases ranging between 1.25 percent and 3.75 percent per year for Medicare, which the state incorporated into the OMFS along with the MEI adjustments. As a result, the OMFS conversion factor as a percentage of Medicare for professional services rose from 124.4 percent in 2017 to 145.7 percent in 2024.

In addition to the inflation adjustments, each year fee schedule rates (e.g., price levels) are affected by changes in other factors including:

  • the Relative Value Units used in the Resource-Based Relative Value Scale system to quantify the complexity and resources required for medical services;
  • the weights assigned to Diagnosis-Related Groups which are used to classify patients based on their principal diagnosis, surgical procedure, age, presence of comorbidities, complications and other factors;
  • the weights assigned to the Ambulatory Payment Classification for hospital outpatient services; and
  • geographic adjustment variables (like Geographic Practice Cost Indices and wage indexes).

CWCI notes that while fee schedule rates set the maximum reimbursable fee for each service, average payments for physician services are also influenced by changes in utilization, service mix, and discounting practices.

CWCI has published its analysis of the impact of inflation on OMFS fees in a Report to the Industry which is available for free under the Research tab on the Institute’s website at www.cwci.org.

Contacts

Bob Young
(510) 251-9470

California Workers’ Compensation Institute


Release Summary
CWCI explains the growing differential between California workers' comp and Medicare rates for physician and non-physician service fees.
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