The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancebright-tern-569

Insurance cut off grandma's PT after just 6 sessions — she's barely functional and we're lost

I've been the primary caretaker for my grandmother since her accident eight months ago. A distracted driver ran a red light and T-boned her on her way home from the grocery store. She suffered a serious cervical spine injury — not a complete break, thankfully, but enough to leave her with severe weakness all the way down her left side. She can feel her limbs, but she can't reliably control them. Getting out of a chair, walking to the bathroom, gripping a cup — all of it requires help.

Her neurologist and the physical therapist both said she needs intensive, consistent PT over many months to have a realistic shot at meaningful recovery. The insurance company agreed to cover outpatient PT but then cut her off after six sessions citing something about "plateau in measurable progress." Six sessions. She's 74. This isn't a sprained ankle.

The PT place submitted an appeal with documentation and the insurance company just... sat on it for weeks, then denied it again. We looked into a skilled nursing facility that does intensive rehab but the coverage limits make it basically unaffordable to stay longer than a few days.

I'm doing what I can at home — stretching, assisted walking with a gait belt — but I'm not a therapist and I know I'm probably doing it wrong. I'm terrified I'm going to hurt her or that she's just going to lose whatever progress she's made.

Has anyone successfully fought an insurance company for more PT coverage after an accident caused by someone else? Is there any way to get additional therapy paid for through the at-fault driver's liability coverage while the injury claim is still open? I feel like we're just watching her slip backward and nobody cares.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 10
    plain-dove-810

    I went through something almost identical with my dad after a rear-end collision left him with a lumbar injury. The insurance company kept using that 'plateau' language too and it felt completely made up — he was nowhere near plateaued, he just wasn't recovering fast enough for their timeline. We ended up getting a second opinion from a different physiatrist who wrote a much more detailed functional assessment. That letter made a real difference in the second appeal. Don't give up on the appeals process, just make sure the medical documentation is really specific about what she can't do and why more PT is medically necessary.

    • 22
      wise-crow-667

      First — please don't beat yourself up about the home exercises. You're doing your best and that counts for a lot. That said, if you can get even one or two sessions with the PT specifically focused on teaching you a safe home program, that's really valuable. A lot of PTs will do caregiver training sessions for exactly this situation. Also ask her doctor about whether occupational therapy has been explored — sometimes OT can be approved separately and addresses a lot of the daily function stuff like transfers and grip that you're struggling with. It's a different code than PT and sometimes easier to get covered.

  • 18
    daring-heron-039

    That 'plateau' denial is one of the most common tactics insurers use to cut off PT early. It sounds clinical and objective but it's often just a cost-control decision dressed up in medical language. Push back hard. Request the full explanation of benefits in writing and specifically ask them to identify the clinical criteria they used to make that determination. Sometimes just asking that question makes them reconsider because they know their reasoning won't hold up to scrutiny.

    • 5
      quiet-dreamer963

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 15
    curious-crow-921

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest — those plateau decisions are frequently made by reviewers who have never met the patient and are working off a checklist. What moves the needle is when the treating physician and therapist submit very specific, functional, goal-oriented documentation. Not 'patient needs more therapy' but 'patient cannot ambulate 10 feet without fall risk and requires X additional sessions to achieve Y measurable goal.' Language matters enormously in those reviews. Also, if there's an open liability claim against the at-fault driver, that's a separate pot of money that can sometimes cover ongoing treatment costs — definitely worth looking into.

    • 0
      quiet-passenger775

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 13
    steady-beaver-524

    A few things worth knowing: most states have an independent medical review process where you can challenge an insurance denial through a third party — it's usually free and the insurer is bound by the outcome. Also, if the at-fault driver had bodily injury liability coverage, medical treatment costs are often recoverable as part of the personal injury claim, which is separate from her health insurance. That doesn't help immediately but it's relevant when the claim settles. You might want to at least consult with a PI attorney just to understand what's in play — most do free consultations and it costs nothing to ask.

    • 3
      gentle-parent420

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

    • 0
      soft-spoken-late-shift449

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 18
    genuine-crane-015

    Not legal advice, but this situation is worth a free consultation with a personal injury attorney who handles serious injury cases. If the other driver was at fault, their liability policy is potentially on the hook for the full cost of her recovery — including all the PT the health insurance won't cover. An attorney can also help navigate the subrogation issues between the liability claim and whatever her health insurance has already paid out. The long-term value of getting that right can be significant for someone with a serious spinal injury.

  • 10
    swift-grouse-313

    I'm so sorry you're carrying this. Taking care of a family member after a serious injury is physically and emotionally exhausting, and then fighting insurance on top of it is just brutal. I really hope you find some answers here. Please make sure you're taking care of yourself too — caretaker burnout is real and you can't pour from an empty cup.

  • 12
    cool-mole-670

    Three things: 1) File the external appeal through your state's insurance commissioner — look it up, it's usually a simple form and the insurer hates it. 2) Ask the PT clinic if they have a cash-pay rate while the appeal is pending — sometimes it's more reasonable than you'd expect and you may be able to get reimbursed later. 3) Talk to a PI lawyer before you settle anything on the liability claim. Don't sign a release until you fully understand the ongoing care costs. That's the part people regret most.

    • 3
      grounded-co-pilot844

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.