Injury Care Plans

Attorneys often ask whether life care planning applies to a specific type of case—such as traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, chronic pain, burns, or pediatric injuries.

Turning Point Life Care Planning develops comprehensive life care plans for individuals who have sustained traumatic or catastrophic injuries. These injuries often result in complex medical, rehabilitation, and support needs that may extend for many years or throughout an individual’s lifetime.

Our Certified Life Care Planners evaluate medical records, functional limitations, and current standards of care to develop individualized plans outlining the services, equipment, and support necessary to promote health, safety, and quality of life.

These plans may be used to evaluate future care needs, analyze claims, or assist in understanding the long-term implications of injury in both plaintiff and defense contexts.

Traumatic Brain Injury

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can result in a wide range of physical, cognitive, behavioral, and emotional challenges. Presentation varies from mild to severe, with some individuals experiencing persistent symptoms that impact daily function and independence.

Life care planning for traumatic brain injury may include evaluation of:

Plans are developed to reflect the individual’s functional limitations, anticipated needs, and expected course of recovery or progression.

Spinal Cord Injury

Spinal cord injuries often result in significant and permanent changes in mobility and independence, requiring long-term medical care and support.

Life care plans for spinal cord injury may address:

These plans account for both immediate needs and the long-term maintenance and replacement of equipment and services over time.

Orthopedic Trauma

Serious orthopedic injuries may involve fractures, joint damage, amputation, or complex musculoskeletal conditions that impact mobility and function.

Life care planning for orthopedic trauma may include:

Planning focuses on how injury-related limitations affect daily function and future medical care requirements.

Burn Injuries

Burn injuries often require both acute treatment and long-term management, including reconstructive procedures and ongoing skin care.

Life care plans for burn injuries may include:

Care planning considers both the physical and psychological impact of burn injuries over time.

Chronic Pain and Complex Medical Conditions

Some injuries result in persistent pain or complex medical conditions requiring coordinated, multidisciplinary care.

Life care planning may incorporate:

These plans reflect the ongoing nature of care and the impact on function, activity tolerance, and quality of life.

Psychological and Psychiatric Injuries

In some cases, individuals experience significant psychological or psychiatric effects following injury, which may require ongoing treatment and support.

Life care plans may include:

Planning accounts for how psychological conditions interact with overall health and function.

Pediatric Injuries

Injuries sustained during childhood require consideration of growth, development, and changing needs over time.

Life care planning for pediatric cases may include:

Plans are designed to adapt to the evolving needs of the child across developmental stages.

Working with Attorneys and Rehabilitation Professionals

Turning Point Life Care Planning collaborates with attorneys, case managers, rehabilitation professionals, and medical providers involved in complex injury cases.

Our life care planners are retained to develop life care plans, as well as to review and evaluate existing plans, analyze medical and rehabilitation needs, and assess the reasonableness of projected care.

Each life care plan is developed through a structured process that may include medical record review, clinical assessment, research into current standards of care, and analysis of anticipated future needs.

The goal is to provide objective, well-supported life care plans that assist professionals in evaluating and planning for the long-term consequences of injury.

Conclusion

Life care planning may be used to develop comprehensive projections of future care needs or to evaluate and analyze existing recommendations within a case.

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