Title: Workers' Compensation
1Best Practice Strategies of a Workers
Compensation Program
- August 26, 2010
- Bill Unger, CPCU
2- Note
- State and Federal Laws vary by jurisdiction.
ALWAYS check with your attorney or insurance
agent for specialized counsel.
3- Focus of this presentation
- A new look at a common issue
- Best outcome of a WC claim
- Manage it right for employee and employer
- Minimize Cost
- So, What are the best practice strategies that
companies use to lower their Workers Compensation
cost of risk?
4- Most manage by reacting
- Some manage whole process with greater
effectiveness and savings - Those that do.have a succinct process for the
best outcome
5Have the greatest impact on your employers
largest insurance cost
- Workers Compensation premiums comprise 62 of
total insurance costs - Human Resources Risk Managers need hard
numbers to sell their program and show value to
the organization
6Work Related Injuries and Costs
- Workplace injuries in the US have a direct cost
(wages, medical cost, etc.) on employers of
131,000,000,000 - Indirect costs (productivity, overtime, training,
administrative overhead) are estimated at
381,000,000,000. (nearly 3 times direct) - Total estimated costs 512,000,000,000
information reported by National Safety Council
7Work Related Injuries and Costs
- More than 80,000,000 lost work days are due to
occupational injuries - The Bureau of Labor statistics - 1.2 million
employees lost an average of seven (7) days due
to their injury/illness.
information reported by National Safety Council
8National Trends
- During the last 10 years the rate of lost time
injuries has decreased by an average of nearly 3
per year - However, the overall cost of injuries and illness
increased 6.4 per year. In the past 5 years it
has increased by over 10 annually.
9National Trendscontinued
- Demographic changes to the work force are
challenging -
- Over 60,000,000 workers are 55
- 53 (32,000,000) are 65
- An aging labor force will create greater injury
severities, longer lost time disabilities, and
more challenging RTW situations
10- Sometimes there are opposing incentives by
Employer and Employee in a WC claim -
- Employer Return the employee to work at all
costs - Employee Maximize the amount he or she cannot do
11- Understand all the Principles in Play
- The definition of disabled under WC and ADA
statute are different. - An injured employee claiming WC benefits may be
subject to FMLA and ADA laws. - Employer must make a determination early in the
claim to understand rights and obligations - Seek legal advice early to avoid a retaliation
claim or costly WC mistake
12Core Principles of Workers Compensation Claims
- Identify where accidents/ injuries are occurring
or likely to occur. Eliminate or lessen the
exposure - Prompt Reporting of Claims to Management - Late
reported claims after 29 days can increase the
cost by 45. - Have a solid, written Return to Work Program
- Should be defined as temporary, not a regular
job, and be composed of pieces or parts of
regular jobs.
13ContinuedCore Principles
- Utilize medical payment specialists, PPO
networks, and pharmacy management. Savings can
be up to 35. - Focus and communicate early and often with your
injured employee Adjuster - Litigation increases cost of a lost time claim by
70 - Human element part of a claim is very important
- Establish very early in a lost time claim the
adjusters strategy for closure - Know risks and costs if employee termination is
inevitable
14- The end result of all your efforts will show
- Experience Modification Factor
- Premium Savings / Cost
- Indirect Cost Savings
- Bottom Line!
15- When do losses really count?
- What can you do to minimize the future cost of
insurance? - Medical Only claims vs. Lost Time Claims
- ERA states
- Net vs. Gross Reporting States
- State Waiting Periods
- Managing the Claim, Employee
16NCCI States (in blue)
- Monopolistic States
- Wyoming, Ohio, Washington, North Dakota (orange)
17Experience Modification Factor
18How can you lessen your actual losses? Your past
history follows you for four years. For
example, 2010 year is calculated with 2006, 2007
and 2008 losses
19(No Transcript)
20State Differences for ERA
- Employers must know what States have ERA
- Nebraska Big impact with medical only claims
- Iowa RTW will have no impact on EMOD. Every 1
counts the same. However, IA is a NET reporting
state (more later).
21Experience Rating Adjustment ERA States
ERA States reduce med-only claims by 70
22What is the impact on direct cost?
- All medical-only claims receive a 70 discount
- Any claim with 1 or more indemnity reserve loses
the 70 discount - If employee returns to work within the waiting
period, demand that no reserve be put in the
indemnity category
23- Focus Point
- Losses are assigned a numeric injury (IJ) code by
your carrier. This indicates what kind of loss
you have. i.e. 6 medical only - Experience Rating Adjustment (ERA) was introduced
in 1998. The change was due to employers paying
their own small claims out of pocket - ERA reduces medical only claims by 70 before
they are calculated in the mod
24Codes 1 9 indicate the severity of the claim(s)
5 temporary total or temp partial 6 Medical
only 9 Permanent partial disability
25- Focus points
- Have periodic claim reviews
- Do not allow reserves in wrong bucket
- Important NCCI snap shot is 6 months following
your effective date for the 3 prior loss years - Audit your results
26Audit your results!
Error 1
Error 2
Open or final claim
Codes 1 9 indicate the severity of the claim(s)
5 temporary total or temp partial 6 Medical
only 9 Permanent partial disability
27ERA Example 1
- Company has a 4,000 medical only claim (6)
- Loss into EMOD at 1,200 (30)
- Impact on EMOD - .15 of 1 point (.0015)
- 3 year premium impact - 1,350 (33 of total)
28Example 2
- Company has a 4,000 claim and includes two days
of indemnity (only 213 of lost time) - Loss into EMOD at 4,000
- Impact on EMOD - .50 of 1 point (3 times greater
impact) - 3 year Impact - 5,880 (147 of loss)
- Cost variance is 4,530 vs. medical only
29Example 3
- Claimant has knee injury from slip and fall.
Returned to work on 3rd day. (not a lost time
claim) 4 weeks of therapy and all expenses
totaled 14,000. - Loss limited to 4,200 in EMOD
- Impact on EMOD - .32 of 1 point
- 3 year premium impact - 3,840
- Compare that to 2
30Example 4..same claim but,
- Claimant has knee injury from slip and fall.
Returned to work on 9th day. 4 weeks of therapy
and all expenses totaled 14,000. - Loss of 14,000 in EMOD
- Impact on EMOD 1.05 points
- 3 year premium impact - 12,600 vs. 3,840
31Example 5
- Company has a back claim with surgery. Lost time
claim with 22 weeks of disability with a total
cost of 150,000 - Loss into EMOD 150,000
- Impact on EMOD 7.82 points
- This customer has a premium of approximately
500,000 per year. IF this claim did not
happen, the premium could be nearly 40,000 less
per year. - Note Insurance carriers get paid twice EMOD
and loss ratio -
Assumption of annual policy premium of 500,000
32- Small Claimsit does not pay to handle on your
own. - Missing out on any PPO discounts and
customary/usual - discounts
-
- Statute of Limitation never starts if not
reported - Every state is different
- NE prohibits any payment.
- Note - IA encourages small payments
-
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34Second Strategy Gross Reporting vs. Net
ReportingNCCI allows a few states to exclude
medical only losses if on a deductible
NE is not a net reporting state IA, KS, CO, and
MO are Losses within the deductible are not
reported on the unit stat card to NCCI for
promulgation. (thus ability to push down emod
rate)
- Maine
- Maryland
- Missouri
- New Mexico
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Alabama
- Colorado
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
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36Does a medical deductible make sense?
This insured has a 1.20 EMOD and averages 50
claims per year
Deductible Level Total Losses with Ded. Applied Mod Factor Unlimited Mod Deductible Level Total Losses with Ded. Applied Mod Factor Unlimited Mod
100 1,002,439 1.16 1.16 1,000 953,564 1.13 1.13
200 996,939 1.16 1.16 1,500 926,564 1.11 1.11
300 991,439 1.15 1.15 2,000 899,564 1.09 1.09
400 985,964 1.15 1.15 2,500 873,939 1.08 1.08
500 980,564 1.15 1.15 5,000 779,610 1.01 1.01
37- Managing a claim to its best outcome regardless
of claimant
38- Proactive Steps to avoiding WC claims
- Pre-screen applicants prior to hiring
- Do you have a process?
- Are you hiring the right people?
- Are they passing a thorough background check?
- Are they passing a compliant ADA physical?
39- Management must foster sense of safety
- and injury prevention
- 85 of all accidents are from employee error
- 10 of all accidents are from unsafe workplace
conditions - 5 are other
- Safety Committee must be involved and active.
- Review all accidents, unsafe issues, communicate
with rest of employee base
40- Ergonomics and Body Mechanics
- Review of workstations
- Rotate repetitive motion tasks
- Older workforce creates challenge
41- Reactive Steps to a WC claim
- Investigate and Report immediately
- Communicate to the 3rd power
- Return to work is a must!
- Direct medical care when possible
- Manage claim until closure
42- Investigate and Report immediately
- Take notes, pictures, eye witness statements, and
note environment - Communicate to the 3rd power
- Show care and concern
- Be an advocate for the employee
- Inform them on what happens next
- Provide a WC take home information packet
43Return to Work
- If employers opt to keep the employee out of work
until MMI or a release to full duty, the cost
impact can be tremendous. - Being unaware of waiting periods will drive costs
up because every day counts including weekends.
- After 12 weeks of disability 50 of injured
workers never return to work.
44- Advantages of a RTW program
- Employee feels in control
- Recovery is faster thus less medical and
indemnity - Reduce Fraudulent claims
- Fosters communication with injured employee
45Return to Work - RTW
- Published with versions of modified positions
- What has to happen for this injured worker to
return to work on the FIRST day following an
injury? - The original job should be the goal/focus from
the moment of injury. - How will you coordinate the transitional duty
program with Team Leader, Supervisor or Manager?
46Return to Work
- Waiting Periods
- Nebraska 7 days
- Iowa 3 days
- Kansas 7 days
- Missouri 3 days
- South Dakota 7 days
- Colorado 3 days
- California 3 days
- Texas 7 days
47Barriers to RTW
- Disconnect between Employer and Employee
- Unaware of work available
- Adversarial start due to injury
- No communication between Employer and Physician
- Patient provides the only information - every
employee lifts 100 lbs over their head - No job descriptions with no information on
transitional duties available.
48Barriers to RTW
- How does a Dr. decide on the length of
restrictions and time off? - Length of time between Dr. visits
- There is not set standard and mostly subjective
- It is imperative the Employer is involved
immediately with the Clinic when the Employee
first goes for treatment.
49- Direct medical care when possible
- The most central and important relationship in a
WC claim is the patient/physician relationship - Obtain timely IME if questions
- Demand a written treatment plan from Physician
for employee/employer. This should provide
detailed description of restrictions
50Choice of Physician
- Nebraska Employee (form 50)
- Iowa - Employer
- Kansas - Employer
- Missouri - Employer
- South Dakota Employee
- Colorado Employer
- Illinois Employee
- Texas Employee
- California - Employer
51- Form 50 - Choice of Physician Rule
- Established in 1999
- Employer must inform the employee of their right
to choose a family physician as the primary
treating physician - Must be done after every notice of injury
-
-
52- Manage Claim until closure
- Stay involved with employee
- Employer has strong incentive to stay involved
due to EMOD - Provide assistance to Insurance Carrier
53Claim Service Excellence
- Same day return phone calls on possible lost-time
claims - On-line tools with ability to review adjuster
notes - Reserve change and settlement notices email
alerts - Quarterly claim reviews
- Claim review at 5th month before NCCI snapshot
54- What are the key components to reducing Workers
Compensation Costs? - Evaluate each State and how losses apply
- ERA and Gross/Net States
- Waiting periods
- Gross/Net reporting States
- Understanding the Experience Modification Factor
- Identifying and Mitigating Losses
- Early return to work program
- Directing care when possible
- Managing Claim until closure
55- Remember, savings from your Workers Compensation
Program become.Profit! - Questions?