If you have just been in a motor vehicle collision in BC and ICBC has approved your active rehab benefit, you may be wondering what the next 12 weeks actually look like inside a multidisciplinary clinic. This is a composite walkthrough — built from the patterns we see most often, with anonymized details that do not represent any specific real patient — of how a typical ICBC active rehab plan unfolds at Artemis Wellness Clinic at 5911 No. 3 Rd #130, Richmond BC (steps from Brighouse SkyTrain, 604-242-2233, artemis.janeapp.com). The goal is to demystify the process: what happens at intake, how disciplines coordinate, how the plan adjusts as you recover, and what discharge looks like. This is education, not a guarantee — every real plan is individualized.
The Composite Patient: “Sarah” (illustrative)
To make this concrete, we will follow a composite patient profile we will call “Sarah.” Sarah is fictional — assembled from the most common patterns we see in post-MVA presentations — but the structure of her plan reflects how real plans unfold:
- 38-year-old administrative manager, lives in Richmond near Aberdeen Centre
- Rear-end collision on Westminster Highway, low-speed (~25 km/h impact)
- Three days post-collision: stiff neck, mid-back pain, mild headaches, sleep disrupted, anxiety about driving
- ICBC claim opened the same week; pre-approved Enhanced Care active rehab benefit available
- No fractures, no concussion, no surgical referral
- Presents to Artemis on day 5 post-collision for initial assessment
Sarah is approximately the median ICBC patient profile we see. The plan below is what her care coordination tends to look like across the standard 12-week window. Real Sarahs vary; some recover faster, some slower, some develop complications that require plan adjustment.
Week 1: Initial Assessment and First-Line Treatment
Intake visit (Day 5 post-collision, 60 minutes with physiotherapist). The physiotherapist takes a detailed history, performs a movement assessment, identifies the primary mechanical issues (cervical and upper-thoracic restriction with associated headache pattern), screens for red flags (none), and scopes the initial 4-week treatment plan with input from the on-site team. ICBC paperwork is started at the front desk; the clinic direct bills ICBC so Sarah pays no out-of-pocket for the visit.
Treatment plan as written at end of intake:
– Physiotherapy 1x/week for 6 weeks (manual therapy + structured home exercises)
– RMT 1x/week for 6 weeks (cervical, upper trapezius, suboccipital release)
– Acupuncture starting week 2: 1x/week for 4 weeks (sleep regulation, headache management, anxiety)
– Kinesiology to be added in week 5 if recovery on track
Day 7 visit: First RMT session. The RMT has already read the physiotherapy intake notes (one shared chart). 60 minutes focused on cervical and upper trapezius. Plus 5 minutes coordinating with the physiotherapist about a movement restriction the RMT identified that the physiotherapy session can target next visit.
This is the coordinated 5-discipline care model in operation: the disciplines don’t just exist in the same building, they actively share information about Sarah.
Weeks 2–4: Combined Visits, Pattern Establishment
By week 2 Sarah is into the rhythm: physiotherapy Tuesdays, RMT Thursdays, acupuncture Fridays. Many of these visits are coordinated as combined hours when scheduling allows — Tuesday becomes “physiotherapy 45 min + targeted RMT 30 min” in the same visit window. Sarah parks once, walks in once, visits two practitioners.
Sleep improving by week 2-end: acupuncture targeting nervous-system regulation has measurable effect on sleep latency and quality within 5-7 sessions. Sarah’s sleep is back to ~80% of pre-accident pattern by week 3.
Headaches subsiding by week 3: cervical mobility work + suboccipital release + acupuncture combination addresses the typical post-MVA cervicogenic headache pattern.
Mid-back pain trickier: still present but lessening. Physiotherapy adds thoracic mobility drills to home program.
ICBC paperwork stays clean: each session billed directly. Sarah does not see invoices or pay anything — the clinic handles the back-end with ICBC. See our ICBC physiotherapy in Richmond BC guide for the broader ICBC mechanics.
Weeks 5–8: Adding Kinesiology, Tapering Other Disciplines
Around week 5, Sarah’s pain is significantly reduced. Many ICBC patients at this point start to taper their physiotherapy and RMT as they feel “better” — and this is where uncoordinated clinics often discharge prematurely. Her physiotherapist, looking at the chart and the schedule, suggests a different transition: introduce kinesiology now while physiotherapy and RMT are still active.
Why bring in kinesiology in week 5: because the deconditioning from 5 weeks of guarded movement is real, even as pain subsides. Without explicit rebuild work, Sarah’s strength deficits and movement asymmetries persist quietly under the comfort of pain reduction — and surface 6 to 12 months later as recurrent pain or new injury under load. This is the well-documented discharge cliff pattern.
The plan adjusts:
– Physiotherapy taper to every 2 weeks for weeks 5-8
– RMT taper to every 2 weeks for weeks 5-8
– Acupuncture continues weekly through week 6, then every 2 weeks
– Kinesiology starts week 5: 1x/week for 8 weeks, focused on rebuild of cervical and upper-thoracic capacity, return-to-driving confidence, and general work-conditioning
The combined session count: still well within ICBC’s 25-per-discipline pre-approved window for the first 12 weeks.
Weeks 9–12: Late-Phase Coordination and Return-to-Activity
By week 9 Sarah is functionally back to normal life — full hours at work, driving without anxiety, sleep at baseline. The pattern of “remaining tightness on long workdays” persists, common at this stage.
Late-phase plan:
– Physiotherapy every 3 weeks (check-ins, exercise progressions, problem-solving)
– RMT every 3 weeks (general maintenance, addressing whatever is tightest)
– Acupuncture as-needed (Sarah opts for one more session for a stress-related flare in week 11)
– Kinesiology continues 1x/week — this is the rebuild phase
Discharge framework conversation in week 10: the physiotherapist and kinesiologist together review with Sarah what discharge will look like. Not a hard cut. The plan: physiotherapy and RMT graduate to “as needed for flare-ups” by week 12. Kinesiology continues into the post-ICBC phase as a self-pay or extended-health-billed service for another 6-8 weeks to fully consolidate the rebuild.
This is the structural difference: in a coordinated clinic, week 12 is not a cliff. It is a transition into a rebuild phase that respects the gap between pain resolution and full functional recovery.
After ICBC Coverage Ends
Sarah’s ICBC active rehab benefit reaches its functional close at week 12. Her physiotherapy and RMT visits become standard private visits (covered by her extended health benefits via Pacific Blue Cross — direct billed). Kinesiology continues for 6 more weeks to complete the rebuild, billed under her extended health.
Outcome at week 18 (6 weeks post-ICBC discharge):
– Pre-accident activity baseline restored
– Sleep at baseline
– No remaining pain at rest or under typical workday load
– Cervical and upper-thoracic strength testing within 5-10% of expected baseline
– Confidence driving fully restored
– Plan: monthly RMT or acupuncture for general maintenance, no ongoing physiotherapy or kinesiology unless re-injury occurs
This is what a successful coordinated ICBC active rehab plan looks like at week 18. Not all patients reach this outcome; some need longer; some need different combinations; some have complications that change the trajectory entirely. The structure of the plan — multi-discipline from week 1, coordinated transitions, rebuild phase explicitly added — is the part that scales across most presentations.
What Could Have Gone Differently (And Often Does)
Sarah’s composite walkthrough is the well-running case. Common variations we see:
Concussion adds: when the initial collision involves any head impact or whiplash with neurological symptoms, vestibular physiotherapy and a slower acupuncture protocol get added. Recovery timelines extend by 4-12 weeks.
Pre-existing chronic pain: previously managed back pain or migraine often flares post-MVA. Plan extends accordingly; sometimes ICBC extension paperwork is required (we handle this).
Anxiety becomes the primary issue: some patients develop driving anxiety or generalized anxiety after an MVA more than they develop persistent musculoskeletal issues. Acupuncture + kinesiology combination becomes the primary care, with physiotherapy and RMT as adjuncts.
Failure to rebuild: when patients refuse the kinesiology rebuild phase (“I feel fine, I’m done”), the recurrence rate at 6-12 months is measurably higher. We try to communicate this clearly at the transition; ultimately the patient decides.
Honest assessment that rehab plateaued: occasionally we reach a point where multidisciplinary care has done what it can do and the remaining issue requires a referral elsewhere (orthopedic surgical opinion, pain clinic, specialized pelvic or vestibular work). We make that referral honestly rather than continuing to bill sessions that won’t move the needle.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many sessions of each discipline does ICBC actually fund?
Under Enhanced Care, the standard pre-approved treatment count is 25 sessions per discipline within the first 12 weeks. So Sarah could in theory have 25 physiotherapy + 25 RMT + 25 acupuncture + 25 chiropractic + 25 kinesiology = 125 sessions in her first 12 weeks if all were clinically warranted. In practice most patients use 30-50 sessions total across the disciplines in that window.
Do I need a doctor’s referral to start?
No. RMT, physiotherapy, acupuncture, chiropractic, and kinesiology in BC do not require a physician referral.
What if my injuries are more serious than the composite case described?
The structure scales. More severe collisions trigger more disciplines earlier, longer treatment windows, sometimes ICBC extension paperwork. The coordination model remains the same; the volume and tempo change.
Does Artemis direct bill all of this so I don’t pay out of pocket?
Yes. We are an ICBC-approved active rehab clinic and direct bill ICBC for all five disciplines under Enhanced Care.
What if I want to extend rehab beyond ICBC’s 12-week window?
Common. We handle the extension paperwork (physician recommendation often required) and most patients also have extended health benefits that pick up where ICBC funding tapers. See our how long does ICBC cover treatment guide for the detailed mechanics.
How is this different from going to separate clinics for each discipline?
The four mechanics from our coordinated 5-discipline model — one shared chart, in-person handoffs, combined visits, cross-discipline plans. Separate clinics can’t deliver these. The functional outcome difference is most visible at the week-5 to week-12 transition, where uncoordinated care often discharges prematurely.
What languages can I do my intake in?
English, Mandarin, and Cantonese are spoken at the clinic by staff including owner Mandy Tam (R.Ac, R.TCM.P). Punjabi-language patient support is also accommodated.
Can I see the same physiotherapist or RMT throughout my plan?
Yes — continuity of practitioner within each discipline is the default. Coverage by another team member happens only if your primary practitioner is unavailable for a specific session.
What to Expect When You Book
If you have just been in a motor vehicle collision in BC and your ICBC active rehab benefit is approved, the first step is a 60-minute initial assessment with one of our physiotherapists. We handle ICBC paperwork. We scope the multi-discipline plan based on your specific presentation. Artemis Wellness Clinic is at 5911 No. 3 Rd #130, Richmond, BC V6X 0K9, steps from Brighouse SkyTrain. Phone 604-242-2233. Online booking: artemis.janeapp.com. Five disciplines, ICBC direct billing, multilingual intake. For our complete clinic overview, see the comprehensive guide.







