“Go to urgent care.”
These instructions sound familiar, don’t they?
You likely heard them after reporting a work injury.
Indeed, many employers tell supervisors to send injured employees to urgent care after a work accident.
But you may be concerned about urgent care’s ability to handle work injuries. Especially if you have a broken bone, head trauma, or a herniated disc in your back or neck. Or if you need diagnostic testing, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or a CT scan.
We get it.
Occupational injuries and illnesses can end careers. Or, at a minimum, cause extended disability from work.
And a doctor you have never met at an urgent care center you never go to may cause uncertainty.
This article answers these questions and more:
Read on for more information about workers compensation.
Then call us at (804) 251-1620 or (757) 810-5614 for a free consultation.
We get top-dollar workers compensation settlements for injured workers in Virginia and Maryland. And we want to get results for you.
The American College of Emergency Physicians defines an urgent care center as “a walk-in clinic focused on the delivery of medical care for minor illnesses and injuries in an ambulatory medical facility outside of a traditional hospital-based or freestanding emergency department (ED).”
Ambulatory care is medical treatment given on an outpatient basis.
If you are like me, you can only drive up to a few blocks before you see an urgent care center. Indeed, three of these clinics have opened within one mile of our firm’s Richmond office in the past five years.
Similarly, many urgent care centers have opened near our Newport News office.
So, the data on the number of urgent care centers isn’t surprising.
The Urgent Care Association (UCA) says there are over 14,000 urgent care centers in the United States.
Virginia alone has more than 300 such facilities.
The number of urgent care centers keeps growing, from seven to 10 percent yearly.
You will find urgent care centers in convenient spots, such as shopping centers.
Some are free standing on busy highways or in strip mall parking lots.
One study found that non-hospital-based urgent care centers are located in areas that:
This conclusion is unsurprising.
The ACA says that over 78 percent of the U.S. population lives within a 10-minute drive of urgent care. And the growth of these facilities in suburban areas increased nearly 20 percent from 2019 to 2022.
Few regulations govern urgent care centers compared to other health care providers.
And ownership varies.
Urgent care center owners include:
Major urgent care operators and brands include:
Many of these urgent care clinics treat patients in Virginia and Maryland. Indeed, the UCA reports more than 300 such facilities in Virginia.
Further, Inova (Falls Church), M.D. Express (Hampton Roads), MedStar Health (Columbia, MD), Patient First (Richmond), Bon Secours Mercy (Marriottsville, MD), I & O (Hampton Roads), Centra (Lynchburg), and Sentara (Norfolk) have local headquarters.
Urgent care staff often includes:
Urgent care facilities may provide these services to injured workers:
The UCA reported a median patient volume of 56 patients per day in these facilities.
These visits included:
As you can see, urgent care facilities are high-volume health care providers.
Occupational medicine and workers comp visits contribute significantly to their revenue and profits.
Indeed, urgent care centers rely on workers comp because of the seasonal nature of what they treat. For example, many non-workers comp patients come to these facilities for sore throats, colds, sinus infections, and the flu. And these are seasonal illnesses.
Urgent care has these advantages over emergency rooms (ERs) and primary care physicians (PCPs):
Urgent care has its drawbacks when it comes to treating workers compensation patients.
These drawbacks include:
Yes.
Your employer and its workers comp insurance carrier must pay for treatment given by or at the direction of an urgent care facility if you have an Award Letter for lifetime medical benefits and:
Similarly, your employer and the insurer must pay for urgent care visits if they deny your claim, but you ultimately win on eligibility (compensability) at a workers comp hearing.
In our firm’s experience, workers compensation insurance carriers and third-party administrators (TPAs) prefer urgent care centers over hospital emergency departments.
Two reasons explain this preference.
First, the urgent care facility will charge and accept less money than the ER.
Second, the insurer must offer a list of physicians besides the ER because the hospital will not continue to treat you after discharge.
Yes.
Medical providers at urgent care facilities can give work restrictions. Indeed, I have seen countless urgent care medical records restricting injured workers to light duty or disabling them from all work pending a visit with a specialist.
You can use these disability letters as evidence to support a claim for wage loss payments, including temporary total and temporary partial disability benefits.
No.
Urgent care facilities will not perform surgery for workers compensation patients.
For example, you must see another doctor if you need surgery for a torn rotator cuff, a total knee replacement, or a spinal fusion.
Urgent care for an occupational injury can help start the recovery process sooner.
But you must take charge of your care and ensure you receive referrals if you need a specialist.
Our law firm ensures the insurance carrier does what it is supposed to and fights against any medical treatment denials.
Then we can use your urgent care notes to make a strong settlement demand and negotiate a fair deal for you.
Contact us now to start.