Doctors and Medical Care

This article describes the types of doctors, medical facilities & diagnostic tools used to treat accident victims in personal injury cases.

Medical Treatment Options For Personal Injury Accidents

There is a wide range of treatment options for accident-producing injuries. Treatment often includes:

  • Pain management
  • Anti-inflammatory medication
  • Orthopedic evaluation
  • Neurological evaluation
  • Surgery
  • Physical therapy
  • Hot and cold packs
  • TENS unit (electrical stimulation

Medical Facilities, Doctors, Diagnostic Imaging

General Hospitals

There are thousands of hospitals nationwide. Most are “general hospitals” set up to diagnose and treat most major medical conditions.

Nearly 20% of the hospitals in the nation are “specialty” hospitals specializing in diagnosing and treating specific types of medical injuries and disorders.

A general hospital may not offer the latest and most cutting-edge diagnostic tools or treatments or be staffed by highly trained specialists. If you suffer from a particular type of injury, you might be better served by seeking out a hospital devoted to treating people with similar conditions. For example, a person with severe and widespread burns should be treated by a specialized burn center.

The following are specialty services and physicians commonly used in urgent care settings for those who have suffered serious personal injuries.

Emergency Rooms

If you were involved in an accident and sustained moderate-to-severe injuries, you might go to a local hospital’s emergency room for treatment.

Not all emergency rooms are the same. It will depend on the kind of hospital and the certification level of the emergency room. If you were taken by ambulance, the hospital you went to was probably based on your condition and the proximity to the closest emergency room that can handle your type of injury.

In either case, an emergency room physician will have seen you.

Urgent Care Centers

Many major metropolitan areas have twenty-four-hour urgent care facilities. These centers are designed to serve the immediate medical needs of the patient. These facilities are attended mainly by critical care physicians, registered nurse practitioners, and nurses trained in urgent care medicine.

The injury does not have to be life-threatening or dangerously severe to visit such a facility. Quite the contrary, if you are unsure of the potential severity of your injury, the urgent care doctor can assess the extent and nature of your injuries, prescribe medication, and perform diagnostic tests such as taking x-rays or ordering CT scans.

Insurance Adjusters: In personal injury cases, insurance adjusters expect claimants of accidents to obtain urgent care immediately and will think less of the person’s claim if they don’t.

In personal injury litigation, the defense will attempt to argue that the claimant was not seriously injured because they did not seek immediate medical care. However, many patients do not receive immediate medical care due to shock or because certain injuries do not show up immediately but days after the accident. This is especially true in cases ranging from soft tissue to closed-head injuries.

Doctors That Treat Accident Injuries

Types of Specialists

The specialists described below are commonly used in accidents involving moderate to severe brain and orthopedic injuries.

Emergency Medicine Physicians

These highly skilled trauma specialists manage patients requiring immediate medical care. These physicians are usually found in emergency rooms in busy hospitals and can quickly assess patients requiring immediate needs—a medical process known as triaging.

Their objective is to stabilize the patient so that the right specialist can be brought in to manage the patient’s treatment.

Once stabilized, the patient will likely be referred to a specialist for follow-up and treatment.

Orthopedic Surgeons

Orthopedic surgeons commonly treat moderate-to-severe injuries in personal injury cases. These highly trained surgical physicians diagnose, treat, and perform surgery on people with broken bones and joint injuries, including nerve compression conditions of the spine and hip injuries.

Orthopedic surgeons have vast experience treating back and neck injuries and performing spinal surgeries such as removing a bulging or herniated disk, broken bones, and joints. Orthopedic surgeons have one of the most extensive training periods.

Typically, after four years of university, the orthopedic physician will attend four years of medical school and another four to six years of residency training.

Most orthopedic surgeons will then obtain board certification in their specialty after residency. Board certification demonstrates the highest level of training possible in their specialization.

Neurologists

Neurologists are highly skilled in diagnosing and treating brain and nervous system conditions and injuries. However, neurologists do not perform surgery. Their role is more diagnostic. However, neurologists are often used in helping determine whether a patient is a surgical candidate.

Neurologists also employ various diagnostic tests, such as nerve conduction studies and various cognitive assessments.

Neurosurgeons

Personal injury accidents sometimes involve severe head and spine injuries. When this happens, a neurosurgeon is called into the case to evaluate and, if necessary, perform emergency surgery on the patient.

Neurosurgeons, like Orthopedic surgeons, perform surgery on neck and back injuries involving spinal cord injuries and herniated disks – which is common in cases involving high-speed auto accidents involving blunt trauma and resulting in a subdural brain hematoma which is bleeding and swelling of the brain.

Neurosurgery has one of the most extended training periods of any medical specialty. Typically, after four years of university, the neurosurgeon will attend years of medical school and then five to seven years of residency training.

The surgeon will seek to be board-certified in their specialty after residency. Board certification demonstrates the highest level of training within their respective specialty.

Diagnostic Imaging Tools

Different types of doctors require different kinds of diagnostic tools depending on the severity of the personal injury sustained by the patient.

For example, it is common for chiropractors to order radiographs to determine the degree of the patient’s lordotic curve before performing a spinal manipulation on the patient. Or for Neurosurgeons to order detailed MRI imaging of a patient’s brain before performing surgery on the patient.

Types of Diagnostic Tools

This section will cover four types of imaging tools trauma doctors use to diagnose accident-causing injuries:

  • Radiographic X-Ray
  • Magnetic Resonating Imaging (MRI)
  • Computed Tomography (CT)
  • Ultrasound Imaging

Medical Imaging – X-Rays

Traditional Imaging

Diagnostic imaging is the process of looking inside the human body through pictures rather than through intrusive surgery. Radiographs produce shadowy images projected onto a sheet of film.

X-rays are still used as a first-line viewing of minor personal injury cases where they are looking for an inexpensive way of viewing structural damage to skeletal structures such as fractures.

The traditional radiographic imaging process, known as the X-ray (or radiograph), was developed nearly a century ago. The scientific community hailed the invention as a spectacular medical breakthrough. Indeed, one could only imagine their excitement – the ability to see inside their patient without cutting them open.

While the quality of the images has improved, the technology is essentially the same. While the X-ray image has vastly improved, the picture remains grainy.

Radiographs are still used to examine structural breaks involving bones and joints, though they cannot produce images of soft tissue. Radiographs are still valuable, especially for chiropractors who use them to examine the spine’s curvature and other bone and joint structures.

Next, we will look at the limitations of radiographs compared to the next generation of diagnostic imaging tools we have today, such as MRI.

The MRI

Next-Generation Imaging

Diagnosing serious personal injuries often requires the use of an MRI. Also referred to as magnetic resonance imaging, the MRI is considered the most powerful diagnostic tool for seeing deep inside the human body with fantastic clarity.

The Advent of 3-D Imaging

MRIs are often used in diagnosing serious personal injury cases where height, depth, and layered resolution of the damaged area are required, such as in cases involving blunt trauma to internal organs and structures.

Advantages of MRI

  • While the radiograph can produce grainy images of internal structures, the advent of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) offers a 3D representation of organs that the traditional X-Ray cannot.
  • Another significant advantage of MRI machines is that they do not emit radiation.
  • The quality of the MRI image is not only three-dimensional and possesses superior contrast; the images of internal structures such as organs can be viewed in multilayered vertical and horizontal sections.
  • The MRI can show the exact location and shape of a disk bulge or herniation and display detailed images of lesions and spinal cord abnormalities.

Disadvantages of MRI

  • The most common complaint is the time it takes and feeling enclosed in an MRI scanner. One complete scan can take about an hour to perform. It is non-invasive, painless, and without side effects.
  • The major disadvantage of MRI is its high cost. A basic scan of the cervical and lumbar region of the spine can exceed one thousand dollars.
  • The MRI uses strong magnetic fields to create its images, so people with implanted metallic objects or pacemakers are prohibited from having the test.

CAT Scans

Viewing Internal Organs

Cat Scans are often used in serious personal injury cases where high resolution is required, such as in trauma caused to internal organs.

Also called computerized tomography, the patient is asked to lie on a narrow table within the scanner. Like an MRI, CT scans offer a very high resolution of the part of the body being scanned.

A dye must often be injected into a vein to obtain a high contrast of the scanned target.

The major drawback is the need for the injected dye, which is iodine-based and can cause an allergic reaction in some people. Dye injections may cause an uncomfortable warm sensation as it travels through the body.

Parts of The Body Studied

The average CAT scan costs between $1,000 and $1,200 and is quicker than an MRI. The time required to have a CT scan will depend on whether your physician recommends you should have the CT scan with or without dye contrast.

Ultrasound Imaging

Quick and Portable Visualization Device

According to John Hopkins Medicine, a significant benefit of ultrasound imaging is that it allows quick visualization of the organs and structures within the abdomen noninvasively, including:

  • Liver
  • Gallbladder
  • Pancreas
  • Bile Ducts
  • Spleen
  • Abdominal Aorta

How Ultrasound Works

Ultrasound emits ultrasound waves at high frequencies onto the skin’s surface and directly above the organ or structures being viewed. The ultrasound waves move through the skin to the organs and structures directly below.

The ultrasound waves bounce off the organs like an echo and return to the Ultrasound instrument, which processes the reflected sound waves into an image of the organs and structures examined.

Medical Technology Continues to Improve

Accident-Causing Traumatic Injuries

As technology continues to shape emergency medicine, trauma doctors and urgent care trained nurses will use more handheld devices to record and interpret their patients’ real-time medical conditions resulting in more accurate and efficient diagnoses and treatment options.

Artificial Intelligence

Advances in artificial intelligence and supercomputing will soon allow fast, efficient, and inexpensive forms of diagnostic imaging and images through knowledge-based AI readers that can assist doctors in making more accurate diagnoses and available treatment options.

Telemedicine For Non-Emergency Consultations

Telemedicine is a new internet process that provides non-emergency remote clinical services in real-time, including two-way communication between patients and healthcare providers.

The Goal of Telemedicine

Telemedicine can soon offer non-emergency consultations and evaluations through technology that delivers greater levels of real-time guidance and access to patient medical records and test results, allowing medical specialists to diagnose, monitor, and consult with other specialists based in remote locations.

Consult With A Medical Professional for Non-Emergency Advice

Consider contacting Amwell, which is an online telemedicine provider.

Related Articles and Services…

Sponsors

Affiliate disclosure

GotTrouble.org is a one-stop free and open consumer information and expert resource.

Our information helps guide people through the complexity of life-changing legal, financial, and emotional challenges.

One way of doing this is by providing our visitors with a wide range of third-party resources. Some of which are affiliates.

Should you visit an affiliate, we will disclose this fact, and we may earn a commission. We ask that you use your independent judgment in deciding whether an offered service or product fits your needs and purposes.

If you have questions, please get in touch with us at inquiries@GotTrouble.org.