{"id":13586,"date":"2015-06-24T10:01:38","date_gmt":"2015-06-24T10:01:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nsbri.org\/?p=13586"},"modified":"2015-09-02T10:02:10","modified_gmt":"2015-09-02T10:02:10","slug":"experts-offer-innovative-ways-america-can-reduce-the-billion-dollar-workers-comp-crisis","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/nsbri.org\/2015\/06\/experts-offer-innovative-ways-america-can-reduce-the-billion-dollar-workers-comp-crisis\/","title":{"rendered":"Experts Offer Innovative Ways America Can Reduce the Billion Dollar Workers Comp Crisis"},"content":{"rendered":"

Experts Offer Innovative Ways America Can Reduce the Billion Dollar Workers Comp Crisis<\/h1>\n

Start by Short-Circuiting Worker Injuries Before They Reach “Creeping Catastrophic” Stage<\/h2>\n

NEW YORK, NY, Jun 18, 2015 (Marketwired via COMTEX) — Addressing the billion-dollar U.S. workers compensation crisis plaguing both the labor force and the healthcare industry, a panel of experts asserted that the system needs to embrace more innovative offerings that show promise in helping patients return to work more quickly and effectively. In particular, they called for a break from dependence on prescription drugs and other pain-masking treatments. The discussion, sponsored by ZetrOZ, Inc., featured experts with deep experience in workplace injury, health care, insurance and pain management.<\/p>\n

The panelists agreed the nation’s workers comp system has grown unwieldy and ineffective, with five percent of all claims — characterized as “catastrophic” or “train wreck” cases — accounting for 75 percent of all costs. Further, they said, the system is weighed down by a “prescription painkiller” paradigm, even though medical evidence shows the ineffectiveness of opiate pain relievers, which are badly overused. They also noted that passive physical therapy and surgical intervention often do little to cure an injury or help a patient return to work and other normal activities.<\/p>\n

The panel, moderated by Michael Shor, MPH, Managing Director at Best Doctors Occupational Health Institute, took place on Wednesday, June 10 at Chelsea Piers in Manhattan. Expert panelists included Dr. Ralph Ortiz, Director of the N.Y. State Pain Society and founder and director of Medical Pain Consultants; Robert Woods, Senior Vice President of Energi, Inc.; David Cohen, executive vice president at Standard Oil of Connecticut, Inc.; and Dr. Gerard Malanga, a Rutgers University clinical professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation and medical director of Horizon Casualty Services.<\/p>\n

“The system is failing,” reported Dr. Malanga, “The medical and insurance communities must look to embrace new treatment protocols and expand the definition of evidence-based medicine. We should consider using novel technologies such as sustained acoustic medicine which has shown impressive effectiveness for soft-tissue injuries, the most common form of workplace injury.”<\/p>\n

Other recommendations from the panel included:<\/p>\n