APPROVAL-WORTHY TREATMENT EXTENSION REQUESTS FOR BC RMTs
Get your extension requests approved.
So your MVA patients get the treatment they need.
(And you make more consistent money!)
Get your extension requests approved.
So your MVA patients get the treatment they need.
(And you make more consistent money!)
You’re a great RMT with happy patients. But your treatment extension requests keep getting denied.
(Even when your patient clearly needs more treatment!)
Sure, you could make your own template, but chances are, it still won’t be what the adjuster wants.
You could try to chart more thoroughly. But how? You’re already doing everything.
And yes, you could keep reaching out to the BC RMT Facebook Group for help. But it’s never been that helpful.
Plus, those options all demand more of your unpaid hours. And do you really want to keep doing this for free?
This online continuing education course teaches you to master the nuance of charts, reports, and requests for BC MVA patients. So your extensions get approved and your patients get the treatment they need. Without frustration, confusion, unpaid admin hours, or adjustor back-and-forth.
It’s perfect for BC RMTs who are tired of getting extension requests denied and discharging patients who are still in pain!
Follow our flowchart-style assessment guidelines and checklist-style charting templates. Then, copy-paste the things adjustors care about into your request forms for easy approvals.
Our two-treatment assessment model results in a prioritized list of the functional limitations your treatment plan should focus on first—and the ones to request extensions for later.
Learn to effectively chart and explain your patient’s functional limitations, your treatment plan, and any exercises, home care, or other active components of your treatment plan.
Ready to not hate the MVA process?
Hey there! I’m Richelle Seki, an RMT, clinic owner, and acupuncture school dropout working to improve the efficiency of admin for practitioners while simultaneously improving care for patients.
As a problem-solver who gets a little obsessed with finding solutions, I couldn’t stop thinking about why my treatment extension requests were getting denied. I worked hard and charted thoroughly, and my patients were always happy. What was I doing wrong?
Through way too much research, and after taking hundreds of hours (and thousands of dollars worth) of charting courses, I figured out the problem: adjusters and case managers don’t speak “practitioner objective measurements” nor do they extend care based on patient levels of pain (that’s too subjective for them). All they really care about—and need to see from us—is function and functional limitation.
After realizing this, I swapped out the way I used to chart for a style that prioritized functional abilities. And you know what? It worked! Before long, my requests were routinely being approved. And denials became a rare occurrence. Now, my entire clinic uses this method. And we haven’t looked back once!
Learning to chart, report, and request treatment extensions in an approvable way benefits everyone involved.
RMTs love it because it shows them how to speak the adjuster’s language.
Patients love it because instead of focusing on pain and what they cannot do, it celebrates their progress and puts the focus on what they can do.
Clinic owners love it because booking more treatments without needing to reach new clients improves everyone’s bottom line!
And stop getting surprised by denied extension requests in the middle of your treatment plan!
Dig into patient education, professional boundaries, and how to execute treatments 1-12 in a way that sets you up for more in the future.
Learn to take a detailed MVA history, identify any affected regions of the body, chart on functional limitations, and set approval-worthy goals.
Identify and complete any secondary assessments your patient needs by following a flowchart-style assessment guide and checking any applicable boxes.
Pull together your assessment information, chart notes, and functional goals and submit a treatment plan extension request that’s designed to be approved.
14 hours of video course content
45 Ready-made PDF and Jane charting templates
4 Client case studies with sample charts, Treatment Plan Extension Requests and tips for best practice
Sample emails to dispute claim denials
Counts towards Obligations, Patient Care and Knowledge Growth section of the RMT Practice Development Program
Certificate of Completion
1 year of unlimited access to all materials
(for the first 20 candidates)
A: No, but it could affect the way you assess. With this method, the first and last two treatments of the session plan are focused on assessing and reassessing functionality and other measures. So, you'll want to prep your patient for that and set expectations around it. Otherwise, you can treat the way you normally would!
Remember: yes, this might be a change. But it's in the name of getting your patient the most treatment possible and giving them the long-term care they need.
A: Online, through videos, PDFs, and documents. If you have Jane, charting templates will be available for you to upload!
A: Yes! If your patient had a minor fender bender, you probably don't need to be as thorough as we teach you to be. But if they've had a serious accident (or you want to treat them for longer than 8 months), the method we teach is in everyone's best interest.
A: 12-14 hours. Think of it as a weekend-long PDP course!
A: Yes! You can print everything and use it in your charts, regardless of how your clinic charts.
A: Unfortunately, because our chart templates are instant downloads, we cannot issue refunds once the course has been purchased. But if you’re unsatisfied, please send us an email and let us know so we can try to make it right.
We think adjusters want numbers, but they don't. The language we're taught as RMTs is ROM, pain, and tests. But the insurance folks don't speak that language.
What *actually* gets your requests approved is a list of functional limitations that can be resolved with an additional 12 treatments.
And that’s exactly what you’ll learn to chart, report on, and request in this course.
I’m all for making an informed decision.