Guest guest Posted May 20, 2005 Report Share Posted May 20, 2005 Doctors, others Yesterday the OBCE addressed the pending petition regarding interferential therapy and communicated with the WC department in response to their request for OBCE's opinion. Supporting letters from WSCC were also provided. This morning I attended the Workers Comp Department Medical Advisory Committee meeting at the Labor & Industries building in Salem. They were discussing the RS-4i device. The committee learned (for the first time it seems) this is a bi-model device performing, first interferential electrotherapy & then electro muscle stim, as a combination therapy. The device is provided for home use by patients and includes a data card that can track actual usage. (RS Medical said they charge $250 rent/lease per month to patients for use of this device, which costs up to $2,495, with a 30% discount provided in some situations. A company rep assists the doctor to fit the patient with the device -- either on a belt or a vest -- and the company rep also programs the doctor's instructions into the device. My understanding is the company bills directly to payers for this therapy.) After much discussion, the committee took no action towards a recommendation regarding this specific device. They addressed the confusion caused by the Liberty NW Insurance Company petitions, first requesting the RS-4i device be rendered non-compensable, and then last week's 2nd petition requesting all interferential therapy be rendered non-compensable. Instead, WC dep staff is contacting Liberty to seek clarification regarding their petitions, and what exactly they are requesting. At one point a committee member (Liberty's Med Director I think) said it was just the home interferential therapy they were concerned with. The chiropractic representative on this committee, Prideaux DC, questioned the scope of these petitions as lacking clarity so the committee could not know exactly what they are being asked to address. It was also pointed out that interferential is one of several electrotherapies in common use. Certainly no one was questioning TENs, and it was suggested that interferential should be compared in effectiveness to TENs. The committee's chair emphasized the Advisory Committee's role is not to get involved in reimbursement issues or cost of device, but to review the supporting evidence that validates the technique or treatment, with an emphasis on RCTs, followed by retrospective and case studies, that all meet criteria of valid, well done (free of bias and flaws), and of sufficient size. They listened to an extended presentation by RS Medical, the Vancouver WA based company that provides the RS-4i device to clinics across the country, including a bibliography of evidence on both interferential current and muscle stimulation. Two medical doctors provided supporting testimony based on their clinical and anecdotal experience. They claimed use of this device in some cases obviated need for other modalities & pain control drugs, thus justifying the cost. Committee members asked both if they had documented their positive outcome claims in any way, neither had. Both said that RS Medical was paying them their lost earnings for this morning's testimony. No one from Liberty NW Insurance Company appeared to formally testify regarding their petitions. Discussion ensued regarding the quality of the evidence before the panel, with several panel members stating it is known there is a lack of RCTs for these and many other modalities, yet they are in common use and known to have many clinical benefits. Likewise the Liberty petition included multiple references to clinical studies which they say cause doubt about the clinical effectiveness of interferential therapy. Should the process go forward, (it may not) no doubt the chiropractic profession will wish to identify, review, and present the available clinical evidence supporting interferential therapy in some coherent fashion. That's what the Committee clearly is requesting. The WC department did not initiate this proceeding, but has to review the petition requesting administrative rulemaking. They may deny the petition/s or subsequently enter into rulemaking with a further public comment & public hearing process. Dave McTeague, Ex. Dir. Oregon Board of Chiropractic Examiners 503-378-5816 ext. 23 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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