Most real jobs have this type of set up. Most private practices you are buried in it if you are doing lots of surgery.My orthopedic department has a nurse who is trained to do the FMLA paperwork. She reads your notes and makes pretty accurate estimations on proper return to work times based on the range of dates I document that patients will be non weight bearing, weight bearing in CAM boot and then back to shoe. It is incredible.
still a podiatristMy orthopedic department has a nurse who is trained to do the FMLA paperwork. She reads your notes and makes pretty accurate estimations on proper return to work times based on the range of dates I document that patients will be non weight bearing, weight bearing in CAM boot and then back to shoe. It is incredible.
They will probably have AI that does this seamlessly... I'm sure it'll be released and working well the day after we retire. 😜My orthopedic department has a nurse who is trained to do the FMLA paperwork. She reads your notes and makes pretty accurate estimations on proper return to work times based on the range of dates I document that patients will be non weight bearing, weight bearing in CAM boot and then back to shoe. It is incredible.
In podiatry, yeah...Most real jobs have this type of set up. Most private practices you are buried in it if you are doing lots of surgery.
Most real jobs have this type of set up. Most private practices you are buried in it if you are doing lots of surgery.
Yes I somewhat mispoke when I said "disability" I meant FMLA/short term stuffFor me, it's more Fmla and short term disability stuff, work comp injuries, RTW and off work notes... mostly paperwork for working ppl. They just need to be off work or limted for a bit... but looking to go back.
Charge money. You won't get the money, but maybe you can reduce the number of requests, "modifications", etc.
The TCCs just didn't make sense financially for me.One of the reasons I've practically stopped doing total contact casts is because it effectively disables the patient, and next thing you know you have to play guessing games about how quick will the wound heal and write a new set of forms everytime something changes.
Of course, another reason I stopped doing tcc is because @air bud taught me these patients need surgical offloading
Also not included: the call from a patient saying their leg feels weird and you need to wonder if everything is turning into a gas swamp underneath the ulcer cast that can’t be checked without a sawIf you bulk-buy webril, 4" elastic plaster, 4" regular plaster, 4" fiberglass, 4cmx4cm foam squares*, felt straps for padding, paper tape, gauze squares, and foam padding to protect the toes**, then the unit cost came out to $22/kit***
*these are $4/square, probably the most expensive component lol
**I had to order this from a heating/insulation company, got a huge square that has lasted me going on 6+ years, don't remember who to reorder from
***not included, the most expensive component: the cost of your time preparing the kits, applying the cast, and taking it off next visit, which--let's be honest--in PP you have no help with.
100%... the paperwork fees, late fees, no show fees, sending ppl to collections are all losing propositions.I billed one time for a large FMLA packet after surgery few years ago.
Surgery went perfect. Charged 15$ bucks or so to the patient and rushed to complete for him.
Got immediate bad Google review. Thanks, man.
Attorneys (and other professionals) can set their rates. We can't set our rates.I mean, attorneys won’t even read a document without charging. And their rates aren’t dictated by a third party middleman. Time is money.
"Sir, did you not read the benefits package you signed up for?" That's literally a contract between them and their insurance company. We shouldn't be the ones having to collect it, but that's a whole different convo. It is asinine when people get upset over being asked for the rate they signed up for.Ppl are already mad that their $40 copay is too high
I dont charge. I have my MA fill it out with 1 of my 5 templates. I just sign it by end of the day after reviewing it.I have a lady scheduled next month for a bunionectomy. She works 3 jobs so she dropped off 3 stacks of disability forms. I called her and told her it would be $50 per stack so $150 total.
Would you please share the template for when the family member needs medical leave to provide round the clock care for a pt recovering from their hammertoe?I dont charge. I have my MA fill it out with 1 of my 5 templates. I just sign it by end of the day after reviewing it.
What is the protocol for when patients don't fit into a protocol?
I had one lady who wanted a gradual RTW. After being out 3 months, she wanted to return 20 hours/week for no more than 6 hours/shift. I hate when patients have these excruciatingly specific requests. I could farm it out to my MA but any mistakes and the pt is taking it up with me.
Also I had a different patient recently who had a hammertoe arthroplasty. Youngish guy, say late 20s. After 2 months out of work, he came to me with his parents and his mother indignantly pointed remarked that "whoever filled this form out marked that this was not a work related injury." I told her, no it wasn't, it was an elective hammertoe. She said according to whatever she pulled up on google, a hammertoe could be considered a work related injury if his work aggravated the pain he was having, and that he should be collecting workman's comp in addition to short term disability. Annoyed, I responded that workman's comp is for when you lacerate your hand on a saw or fall off a ladder and injure your neck, not for hammertoes. I then told her I wasn't going to commit perjury just so they could get more free money.
I swear, those hammertoe arthroplasties have some serious surgical morbidity!
New patient with plantar fasciitisI did a hammertoe arthroplasty on a lady recently. No implants or pins. Not only does she want short term disability, she needed forms filled out for her husband to be out on medical leave also to be her full time caregiver. Again this is an argument I'd rather have before surgery.
My local pod does this.This isn't a disability story but a paperwork story and also a "VA doctors are fat and lazy and overpaid and possibly have erectile dysfunction" story.
Veteran comes to my office, Sent from the VA because he couldn't see a VA podiatrist anytime soon. Nothing urgent, just needs a new pair of custom foot orthotics, his old ones were wearing out. Great, finally the VA refers me something that reimburses good. Not so fast. He just needed me to sign off on forms to be faxed back to the VA so he could then be referred to a prosthetist to make the orthotics. WTF was he even doing with me then? Why TF couldn't his PCP at the VA sign the form? Why TF couldn't he wait however many months it takes for a VA podiatrist appt to sign the damn form?
The only time i fix hammertoes is distal ulcers or overriding toes. No reward for them.What is the protocol for when patients don't fit into a protocol?
I had one lady who wanted a gradual RTW. After being out 3 months, she wanted to return 20 hours/week for no more than 6 hours/shift. I hate when patients have these excruciatingly specific requests. I could farm it out to my MA but any mistakes and the pt is taking it up with me.
Also I had a different patient recently who had a hammertoe arthroplasty. Youngish guy, say late 20s. After 2 months out of work, he came to me with his parents and his mother indignantly pointed remarked that "whoever filled this form out marked that this was not a work related injury." I told her, no it wasn't, it was an elective hammertoe. She said according to whatever she pulled up on google, a hammertoe could be considered a work related injury if his work aggravated the pain he was having, and that he should be collecting workman's comp in addition to short term disability. Annoyed, I responded that workman's comp is for when you lacerate your hand on a saw or fall off a ladder and injure your neck, not for hammertoes. I then told her I wasn't going to commit perjury just so they could get more free money.
I swear, those hammertoe arthroplasties have some serious surgical morbidity!
Don’t fill it out until they bring you notes and a letter from the doctor why they didnt do it, so you can extend it. 8/10 they never come back.New patient with plantar fasciitis
Someone else already operated on her
Someone else already extended her FMLA and also work disability so she can sit 80% of the time
First time seeing her.
She wants the same accommodations.
Brought the paperwork with her for me to fill out.
Its ridiculous.
You really earned your $25 there 🙂Latest inane question from disability form:
"Please list things the patient CANNOT do:"
-unable to stand/walk extended durations in closed toe shoes
"Please list things the patient SHOULD NOT do:"
-juggle chainsaws