Evaluating Patient Records
Life care planning for catastrophic injury cases is a structured, evidence-based process designed to evaluate, document, and cost out both immediate and lifelong care needs. The procedure begins with a comprehensive review of documents—such as medical records, therapy reports, educational history, and prior assessments—to form a factual baseline of current health status.
Consulting with Patients and Practitioners
Certified life care planners then conduct in-depth consultations with the client, family, treating physicians, and/or rehabilitation specialists to identify required medical services, therapies, assistive technologies, home modifications, transportation needs, and caregiving support. A holistic review further examines psychological, social, and vocational factors, often bolstered by tools like the OOMPFA metric, ensuring all care projections are methodologically sound and empirically backed.
Assessing Costs and Opposing Plans
Beyond need assessment, IMS professionals perform detailed cost analyses and rebuttals to establish defensible, peer-reviewed care plans that articulate the rationale, frequency, duration, and total cost of each recommended service. These reports are essential in both plaintiff and defense strategies, providing attorneys with expert evidence to justify future damages and serve as a credible critique of opposing care projections.
Delivering Credible Testimony
In addition to detailed, well-documented reports, life care planning experts can provide clear, defensible testimony during depositions and at trial to support or challenge the damages narrative.