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New York workers’ comp & no-fault DME

Hinged knee braces for workers’ comp & no-fault claims

A hinged knee brace your treating provider prescribed after a work injury or car accident — for a ligament or meniscus injury, instability, or post-operative range-of-motion support, handled under your New York claim from the prescription through delivery and fitting.

Your treating provider decides what’s medically necessary; this page explains the process.

Does workers’ comp or no-fault cover a hinged knee brace in New York?

Yes — when your treating provider prescribes a hinged knee brace for a work injury or motor-vehicle accident, New York workers’ comp or no-fault can cover it. A prescription is always required; some workers’ comp braces also need prior authorization. Send the prescription through our referral form and we review it the next business day.

Illustrative render of a hinged knee brace on a plain studio background
  • Rx-first

    Prescription confirmed before fulfillment

  • Next-day

    Referral review

  • WC + NF

    New York claim paths we handle daily

  • 5

    Boroughs served from Brooklyn

What knee-brace situations are covered?

Coverage follows the claim and the prescription, not a catalog. The common paths we handle in New York:

  • Work injuries (workers’ comp)

    Hinged knee bracing prescribed after an on-the-job knee injury — a ligament or meniscus injury, or instability — billed to the workers’ compensation carrier on the claim.

  • Motor-vehicle accidents (no-fault)

    Knee bracing prescribed after a car accident, billed to the no-fault (auto) carrier once the claim details and assignment of benefits are in place.

  • Post-operative & range-of-motion needs

    Whether it’s a hinged brace set to the range of motion the surgeon ordered after knee surgery, or a knee immobilizer for an acute injury, we fill exactly what the prescription specifies — confirmed against the order before anything ships.

What prescription and documents do you need for a knee brace?

A prescription from the treating provider is always required — it sets the brace and any range-of-motion settings the knee needs. For workers’ comp, some braces also need a prior authorization (PAR) — submitted through OnBoard by the Board-authorized prescribing provider, not the DME supplier — and we flag when one is needed. For no-fault, we collect the claim number, carrier, accident date, and assignment-of-benefits paperwork so the carrier can be billed directly.

Does CityDME submit the workers’ comp prior authorization?

No. When a workers’ comp brace requires prior authorization, the PAR is submitted through OnBoard by the Board-authorized prescribing provider — DME suppliers are not eligible to submit PARs. We review the order and tell you exactly when a PAR is needed so it is not the reason a patient waits.

How do I send a knee-brace referral?

Patients, attorneys, treating providers, and adjusters can all start it. Send the prescription and claim details through our referral form, and the Brooklyn desk runs a completeness review the next business day. If anything is missing, we tell you exactly what to send.

  1. 1. Send the prescription. Include the claim type — workers’ comp or no-fault — and whatever claim details you have.
  2. 2. We review it the next business day. We check the order for completeness and flag a PAR if the item needs one.
  3. 3. We deliver and fit. Once the documentation is complete, we schedule delivery, setup, and fitting.

Is fitting and delivery included, or an extra charge?

Under the New York fee-schedule reimbursement for a covered brace, delivery, setup, and any necessary fittings and adjustments are part of the service — not a separate add-on. That includes setting a hinged brace to the range of motion the prescription specifies. $0 out of pocket where your claim applies and documentation is complete.

Which New York rules apply?

Knee bracing is billed under New York’s claim rules — the workers’ compensation DME fee schedule, or the no-fault (Regulation 68) fee schedule for auto claims. A prescription is always required, patient billing for covered services is limited, and for workers’ comp any prior authorization is provider-submitted through OnBoard. The plain-language explainers live here:

Questions before you send a referral? Call (973) 850-3121.