Workers’ Compensation – Components for Success
Be diligent in your quest to become more familiar with the precise details of workers’ compensation protocols. Executed properly, workers’ compensation cases can be a great boost to your practice.
This Documentation Gap Analysis allows us to evaluate the significant components of your current Documentation program. It should take less than 5 minutes to complete.
Sometimes you need more than a self-service, on-demand program and need an expert to analyze your issues, train the corrections, and help you implement the changes, so they stick
This course explains the significant role chiropractic care can play in the sports industry and how a DC can succeed as a Sports Chiropractor. Start your steps to success here!
The most effective chiropractic OIG compliance programs are scaled according to the size of the practice!
Be diligent in your quest to become more familiar with the precise details of workers’ compensation protocols. Executed properly, workers’ compensation cases can be a great boost to your practice.
Historically, chiropractic practices have depended on manipulation, ultrasound, stim, and heat - in other words, passive care. Insurance carriers did not demand the rigid standards they do today to prove medical necessity.
A new patient stands before you, intake paperwork in hand. The phone is ringing. Your DC has a question. Another patient’s child is crying in the reception area. Your stomach rumbles—you didn’t have time for breakfast. You wonder when you’re going to get to those reach-outs to patients with outstanding balances. The UPS guy walks in.
You've heard them, the buzz words since the Covid crisis has changed how most of us go about our daily routines. This "new normal" has affected everything we do from how we work, how we shop, how our children learn, and even how we visit the grandparents.
A doctor called us using the kind of pressured speech and fevered pitch we recognize as the sound of someone in trouble. He’d received records requests from his local BlueCross BlueShield and the records he sent in didn’t pass muster.
A client made a very insightful observation recently. He told us, “We’ve been in practice long enough that we’re probably way cockier than we need to be.” Anybody out there feel an “ouch” on that one? It’s dismayingly easy to get cocky and fall for the illusion that because procedures and policies are in place, the practice is safe and compliant, and its systems can basically run on autopilot.