
Many of you learned to perform FCEs via a process I call “clinical mythology.” As a student or young physical or occupational therapist, your clinical instructor/mentor taught you how to perform these tests using their own particular “method”– not following any standardized process or using any procedures supported by research.
And why not? Much of clinical learning occurs in this fashion. Many of our clinical tests and measures are passed along from one clinician to another using protocols much less precise than our grandmother’s recipe for pound cake that has been passed through the family for generations. That’s just how it happens.
And it works pretty well…for most things. Except that the results of FCEs are often used as evidence in workers’ compensation cases, whereas most of our other clinical measures are not. For FCEs, it behooves us to pay attention to the tests and protocols we use and the research that supports them. If we end up on the witness stand and do not want to have our testimony dismissed, research supporting our tests and measures is important.
Bottom line, our reputation is at stake.
This is particularly true if our FCE reports include statements related to the level of effort the client expended during testing.
When clients/patients participate in an FCE and have pending legal action against their employer, we’re really asking them to testify against themselves if they do well on the FCE. It’s little wonder that some don’t give their full effort. In fact, it’s surprising that any of them do.
Over the years, clinicians have been asked to comment on the level of effort they believe the patient/client exerted during the test. Was it a full effort? Or did they stop themselves before a full effort was exerted? Did they perform consistently across multiple functional tasks, or were there significant inconsistencies? How were these determinations made? Purely subjectively? Based on specific validated measures?
Expect to be asked all these questions and more if you are deposed or asked to testify at a workers’ compensation trial. And even if you never testify, I know most of you want to sleep at night knowing that your testing and reporting was fair to the patient/client and the employer/insurance carrier. All of these parties have a substantial financial issue at stake.
A 2023 legal case clearly illustrates the importance of using validated measures in an FCE and understanding the research that supports them.
A Florida Circuit Judge struck the bulk of the opinions of a physical therapist in a Jones Act personal injury case in Escambia County, Florida. The Order, dated August 3, 2023, can be accessed here.
The employer hired and paid the therapist to conduct a Functional Capacity Evaluation of a Deckhand injured on the job. The FCE lasted four hours, and the report indicated that the therapist conducted a “validity assessment” as part of the FCE.
Based on his “validity assessment,” the therapist reported that the injured Deckhand was faking symptoms. According to the therapist’s testimony in deposition (which can be accessed here), he makes similar claims of faking in 50% to 60% of his examinations of injured workers. He also admitted that most of the time, he is hired by employers, rather than by injured workers.
The Circuit Judge struck the therapist’s “validity assessment” opinions on the grounds that:
The Circuit Judge ruled his “validity assessment” opinions were “unreliable after plaintiff attorneys pointed out that they have never been tested, never been subjected to peer review and publication, have no known rate of error, and are not generally accepted in any scientific community.”
The Circuit Judge also struck the therapist’s opinion on a medical issue because it “constitutes speculation.”
According to the therapist, the FCE system he used was also used by 240 clinics in 43 different states to conduct over 22,000 exams a year. This emphasizes that just because a test is widely used, it doesn’t make it valid.
There are numerous issues with how this Functional Capacity Evaluation was conducted, making it a clear example of the challenges that can arise when tests are not validated for the purpose for which they are being used. Several aspects related to testing, communication, and reporting could have been handled differently. To provide clarity, I’ve organized the concerns by category.
The therapist made claims that the patient was possibly “faking” and “exaggerating symptoms”, based on assumptions that are not supported by research:
These conclusions drawn by the therapist regarding alleged “symptom exaggeration” and possible malingering lack support from established research.
Statements made by the therapist that may suggest a lack of objectivity include the following:
Insufficient review and understanding of the medical history, accompanied by assumptions that appear to reflect bias in its interpretation.
No one wants to be embarrassed by a negative reputation online or otherwise. And no one wants to be perceived as biased, towards either the plaintiff or defense side. Our ethical responsibility is to provide an objective third-party assessment regardless of the referral source.
To remain objective and avoid a reputation of being biased, I recommend the following:
Remember Benjamin Franklin’s famous quote regarding reputation: “It takes many good deeds to build a good reputation and only one bad one to lose it.”
In this age of fierce competition among physical therapy businesses, it’s tempting to use whatever shortcuts are available to gain referrals. But if we position ourselves as an evaluator that will provide a predictable result to benefit one side of the legal equation and use subjective and unvalidated assessments, we are stepping outside the bounds of ethical practice.
If you want more information on a validated and legally defensible testing protocol, contact ErgoScience today with validity assessments you can defend.
References
(1) Lechner, DE
(2) James, LP; The Relationship Between Isometric and Dynamic Strength Following Resistance Training: A Systematic Review, Meta-Analysis, and Level of Agreement. International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance. Volume 19(1) pp 2-12. https://doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2023-0066
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