Dr. C is an orthopedic surgeon who had been seeing personal injury patients on a lien basis for approximately eighteen months when he engaged PAID. His surgical volume in the PI space was steady — primarily lumbar and cervical disc surgeries, with a smaller component of extremity fracture and soft tissue repair work arising from motor vehicle accidents. His plaintiff attorney relationships were developing, and referrals were increasing.
Clinically, his outcomes were strong. Operationally, his practice was held together with institutional memory and improvisation.
The cracks first became visible during lien resolution. Defense counsel in two separate cases retained billing experts who challenged Dr. C’s surgical fees as exceeding reasonable and customary benchmarks. In both cases, Dr. C had no formal fee schedule documentation, no ICD-10 and CPT pairing rationale, and no component-based cost justification for his all-inclusive surgical charges. His response to both challenges amounted to producing the operative report and hoping it was enough.
It wasn’t.
Both liens settled at significant reductions. The plaintiff attorneys, frustrated by the back-and-forth, began informally steering new referrals toward other surgical specialists whose billing held up more cleanly in negotiation.
The documentation problems extended beyond billing. Dr. C’s operative and progress notes were clinically thorough but legally thin. The subjective portions of his notes — the section that captures the patient’s reported history, symptom progression, and functional limitations in their own words — were brief, formulaic, and largely interchangeable from visit to visit. There was little in the record to distinguish the texture of this patient’s experience from any other. Defense IME physicians had ample room to work.
“I was doing the right clinical work. I had no idea the records weren’t reflecting that to the people who controlled my reimbursement.”
Dr. C engaged PAID following the second lien reduction. The engagement began with a comprehensive operational audit — reviewing existing intake processes, note templates, fee schedule documentation, and billing workflows against the standards that defense billing experts and plaintiff attorneys apply during lien resolution.
Three areas of intervention were prioritized:
The operational difference became apparent within two lien resolution cycles. Defense billing challenges in subsequent cases were met with prepared, detailed cost justifications rather than silence. Plaintiff attorneys began reporting that Dr. C’s records came to them ready to work with — requiring minimal supplementation before demand packages went out.
One of the attorneys who had quietly redirected referrals away from Dr. C resumed sending cases. His explanation was straightforward: the records had changed, and the quality of the records is what determines how smoothly a case resolves.
Lien-based medicine will always involve negotiation. No infrastructure eliminates that reality. But the difference between a practice that enters negotiation with documented, defensible billing and clinically rich records is the difference between negotiating from strength and negotiating from exposure.
Dr. C now operates from strength.
“What PAID built for my practice wasn’t complicated. It was just exactly what I should have had in place from day one. Every PI specialist working on liens needs this infrastructure. I just wish I had done it before the reductions.”