New Jersey Doctors Should Be Aware of Workers’ Compensation Issues

By Stark & Stark on August 24th, 2016

Posted in Personal Injury

For any doctors who treat workers’ compensation patients, there are several issues they should be aware of in order to effectively provide treatment to these injured workers in New Jersey. If you are injured at work and getting medical treatment, the issues below are crucial for you to understand and discuss with your doctor if necessary:

Who is an authorized workers’ compensation doctor?

In New Jersey, the workers’ compensation carrier or the employer has the right to dictate medical care. This is an absolute, and is a strict rule in workers’ compensation cases. The employer can pick any doctor they want, and they usually pick the doctors that are in their networks. There are no workers’ compensation panel doctors in New Jersey, and any doctor can treat an injured employee as long as the workers’ compensation carrier authorizes that doctor to do so.

What if an insurance adjuster won’t authorize certain tests of treatment?

In exchange for the right to pick the doctor, the workers’ compensation adjuster must authorize everything that the doctor they chose orders. So if the doctor in question prescribes certain tests, medications, or procedures, the carrier must authorize it. If the carrier does not authorize the things prescribed, an attorney can file a Motion with the court to force the carrier to give authorization. Essentially, whatever a doctor puts in writing must be authorized.

What is Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI)?

A doctor treating an injured worker is authorized to give treatment until a person reaches MMI. Once a person is deemed to have all of the curative treatment necessary to relieve them of the effects of their injury, the carriers will not pay for ongoing medical care. Generally, the carriers will not pay for long periods of physical therapy or pain management, unless the doctor says that the treatment is helping the patient get better—or helping them to continue working if they are already back to work. Generally, a worker will receive weekly workers’ compensation checks as long as the doctor is giving them active treatment and they have not yet reached MMI. Additional issues will be addressed in my next blog post.

For these or any workers’ compensation issues, it is suggested that you contact legal counsel experienced with Workers’ Compensation issues.

Multiple locations to better serve your needs—

Hamilton, NJ

100 American Metro Boulevard
Hamilton, NJ 08619
Phone: 609.896.9060
Secondary phone: 800.535.3425
Fax: 609.896.0629
county best pa pennsylvania reviews south jersey berks northhampton montgomery bucks lehigh valley gloucester burlington mercer

Philadelphia, PA

One Liberty Place, 1650 Market St., Suite 3600
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Phone: 267.907.9600
Secondary phone: 800.535.3425
Fax: 215.564.6245
county best pa pennsylvania reviews south jersey berks northhampton montgomery bucks lehigh valley gloucester burlington mercer

Marlton, NJ

40 Lake Center, 401 NJ-73, Suite 130
Marlton, NJ 08053
Phone: 856.874.4443
Secondary phone: 888.241.7424
Fax: 856.874.0133
county best pa pennsylvania reviews south jersey berks northhampton montgomery bucks lehigh valley gloucester burlington mercer

Yardley, PA

777 Township Line Road, Suite 120
Yardley, PA 19067
Phone: 267.907.9600
Fax: 267.907.9659
county best pa pennsylvania reviews south jersey berks northhampton montgomery bucks lehigh valley gloucester burlington mercer

New York, NY

5 Pennsylvania Plaza 23rd Floor
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 800.535.3425
county best pa pennsylvania reviews south jersey berks northhampton montgomery bucks lehigh valley gloucester burlington mercer

Bridgeton, NJ

78 W Broad St
Bridgeton, NJ 08302
Phone: 856.874.4443
county best pa pennsylvania reviews south jersey berks northhampton montgomery bucks lehigh valley gloucester burlington mercer