Title: INJURY MANAGEMENT
1 INJURY MANAGEMENT
2 AGENDA
- Define Injury Management
- Discuss Elements of Injury Management
- Risk Management
- Facilitation of Return to Work
- Medical Treatment
- Economic Costs
- Generic Case Management Model
3What is Injury Management?
- Prevention of injuries
- The return to work of an injured person
- The medical treatment of an injured person
- Control of economic factors that impact on an
insured party
Involves the total management process of personal
injury that includes the
4PREVENTION OF INJURIES
5PREVENTION OF INJURIES
How do we prevent injuries?
A Risk Management program
6Risk Management Program
- Purpose
- To effectively manage Occupational Health and
Safety by -
(a) regularly reviewing and identifying any
potential workplace hazards (b)
assessing the risks associated with them (c)
implementing control measures to effectively
eliminate or reduce the risk.
7Risk Management
- Involves
- Hazard Identification
- Risk Assessment (of hazards identified)
- Risk Control
- Review of Outcomes
The co-operation of employees is vital in
identifying hazards so that effective control
measures can be put in place.
8Risk Management
- Hazards may be identified via
- Analysis of injury, accident and near miss data.
- Consultation with employees.
- Walk through surveys and hazard inspections.
- Hygiene monitoring reports.
- Occupational Health and Safety Reports.
- Material safety data sheets.
- Sickness records.
- Analysis of Regulations, Codes of Practice,
Australian Standards
9Risk Management - Basic Hazards
- Gravity
- Falling objects people
- Mechanical Energy
- Moving plant, equipment, machinery
- that can crush.
- Biological
- Blood / body organs
- Human waste
- Animal waste
- Manual Handling
- Reaching
- Awkward Postures
- Lifting
- Hazardous Substances
- Gases, dusts, mists fumes
- Flammable materials
- Poisonous substances
- Thermal Energy
- Extremes of heat cold in working environment,
and in substances used - People / Tasks
- Fatigue
- Stress
- Job Design
10Risk Management
- Involves
- Hazard Identification
- Risk Assessment (of hazards identified)
- Risk Control
- Review of Outcomes
The co-operation of employees is vital in
identifying hazards so that effective control
measures can be put in place.
11Risk Management
- Involves
- Hazard Identification
- Risk Assessment (of hazards identified)
- Risk Control
- Review of Outcomes
The co-operation of employees is vital in
identifying hazards so that effective control
measures can be put in place.
12Hierarchy of controls
- Elimination
- Substitution
- Engineering Controls
- Isolation
- Enclosure
- Containment
- Administrative Controls
- Personal Protective Equipment
13Risk Management Activities Following Injury
Injury
14RETURN TO WORK
15WHAT IS A RETURN TO WORK?
- Maintaining or returning a worker to their
original job, on partial or full hours - OR
- Returning an injured worker to work on modified
or alternative duties on partial or full hours - OR
- Returning a worker to work but not at their
injury employer (job seeking)
16Return to work the Law
- Under Section 122 of the Accident Compensation
Act, the employer is required to provide
suitable employment for the first 12 months
after the first day of commencement of weekly
payments, whether the worker is capable of full
or partial duties - Failure to comply with requirements to provide
employment (Sec 242 of the Accident compensation
Act) can lead to prosecution in the Magistrates
court and fines up to 25,000
17Facilitating a Return To Work
- Developing a RTW plan
- A documented individual action plan (prepared in
accordance with medical advice) and developed to
maintain the injured workers at work or return to
work after injury. It provides details of - Suitable duties
- Medical restrictions
- Treating practitioners details
- RTW goals
- Any assistance to be provided to the injured
worker, catering for any special needs
185 Steps to developing RTW plan
- Review jobs at the workplace
- Assess jobs inline with medical capacity
- Decide if the jobs are suitable
- Document plan and send to Treating Health
Practitioner for endorsement - Offer the worker the RTW plan
19Workers response to formal offer of RTW plan
- Employers can request workers to respond in 14
days to either accept or reject the RTW offer - Response should be in writing
- The offer should include documentation stating
that failure to respond will be taken as
non-acceptance of the offer - If non-acceptance is considered unreasonable,
action should be taken to reduce, or terminate
weekly payments (consult WorkCover Insurer).
20Number ThreeMedical Treatment
21Approved practitioners for the worker
- General Practitioners family doctor
- Specialists
- Exercise Physiologists
- (AAESS Accreditation Required)
- Physiotherapists
- Occupational Therapists
- Chiropractors
- Osteopaths
- Remedial massage therapists
- Acupuncturist
- Hand Therapist
These need to be registered with the VWA
22CASE EXAMPLE Back Injury
- Worker sustains back injury
- GP
-
- Physiotherapist
-
- Specialist
- Multidisciplinary program
23Independent Medical Assessments
- Section 112 examiners
- Medical Specialists orthopaedic, rheumatology,
neurology, psychiatry, musculoskeletal,
occupational physician (workplace assessment),
general surgeon, plastic, dental - Physiotherapist
- Chiropractor
24Number FourEconomic impact
25Case Study
- Mark is 45 years old and is a little unfit
- Worked in a warehouse for the past 11 years
- He has seen numerous changes, although he is
sceptical of the results of changes - Marks supervisor found it hard for Mark to try
new approaches and felt Mark had a bad attitude - One day Mark and his supervisor argued about a
change in a procedure. Both became irate towards
one another. - Later in the day, Mark was reaching for a box on
the shelf and twisted his back and felt a painful
stab. - Mark put in a WorkCover claim, which has been
accepted.
26What happens without a return to work approach?
- Mark goes to the doctor to obtain WorkCover
certificates - He is certified unfit for work for 1 month
- There is no contact from work to see how he is
going - A friend from work tells him that someone has
been hired for his position on a temporary basis - Mark is worried that he would never be able to do
his old job again and feels his employer wasnt
too interested in having him back - The insurer contacts the employer and the
employer informs them that they dont want Mark
back until he is fully fit for his pre-injury
job. - After 3 months Marks back still hurts. He has
been referred to a rehabilitation program and
over several months he regained some capacity for
work - At 6 months there were still no return to work
opportunities at his employer, the insurer refers
him to occupational rehabilitation. - 8 weeks later he was hired at a retail outlet on
a WISE placement program. - Mark was off work for a total of 8 months, his
marriage suffered and so did his friendship with
the people at work
27What happens with a return to work approach?
- Marks supervisor sees that Mark is in pain after
the initial injury and asks a co-worker to drive
him to the doctor. - The supervisor calls Mark up to see how he was
going after his doctors visit - Mark informs his supervisor that he will be unfit
for a few weeks. - As the RTW co-ordinator of the business, the
supervisor prepares a return to work plan. - For the next few days, the supervisor made sure
the co-workers called Mark to tell him about the
social news as well as the company news. - The supervisor keeps in touch with Mark and talks
about modifying his job so he could return to
work when he is able to. - The supervisor phones Marks doctor up to inform
them that Marks job can be modified. - A couple of weeks later, Marks condition
improves and the supervisor invites Mark to the
workplace to talk about his return to work. - They develop a return to work plan together which
they both signed off and then sent to the
treating doctor. The doctor signs the plan. - Mark returns to work on a graduated basis after 2
weeks.
28FINANCIAL COSTS
- WITHOUT A RTW APPROACH
- 8 months workers compensation
- payments (PIAWE 600) 15,960
- Occupational rehab 3,330
- Multidisciplinary program 3,000
- WISE program
- (12 months wage subsidy) 10,430
- Medical treatment 6,500
- Other claims costs 60,000
- TOTAL 99,220
- WITH A RTW APPROACH
- 12 weeks of weekly
- compensation including
- partial comp 4,902
- Medical visits and ongoing
treatment 2,000 - TOTAL 6,902
29HUMAN COSTS
- WITHOUT A RETURN TO WORK PLAN
- Mark lost his job
- He is in marriage counselling with his wife
- Some of his co-workers think he is faking his
injury - Some co-workers are angry with the company for
doing little to help Mark - Mark develops secondary psychological issues
- WITH A RETURN TO WORK PLAN
- Mark feels he is important to the company
- The other co-workers can see the company cares
- Increased morale in the workplace
- Increased productivity
30Injury Management
- How the WorkCover Insurer can help you
31At WorkCover Agents, each claims team has
- A Health Medical Specialist (HMS) employed part
time
An Injury Management Adviser (IMA) employed
full time
32Health Medical Specialists
- Musculoskeletal physicians
- General surgeons
- General Practitioners specialising in
Occupational Medicine - Emergency Registrars
- Sports Medicine Physician
33Health Management Specialists
- Assist team members in understanding medical
issues of claims. - Review reports treater reports and independent
medical (112) reports. - Make recommendations regarding assessment and
treatment. - Monitor of pharmaceutical issues types of
medicines prescribed and costs. - Contact other medical practitioners (General
Practitioners, Surgeons, Specialists).
34Injury Management Advisers
- Physiotherapy
- Exercise Physiologists
- Occupational Therapy
- Human Movement
- Nursing
- Occupational Rehabilitation
- Occupational Health and Safety
35Injury Management Advisers
- Advise the case manager on appropriate treatment,
rehabilitation and other services with a focus on
early recovery and return to work - Assist the case manager regarding timely
referrals for rehabilitation - Identify Red Flags
- Back injuries
- Overuse injuries
- Stress
- Major trauma crush injury, amputation, head
injury
36Injury Management Advisers
- Complete initial contacts and risk reviews with
worker, employer and medical practitioner on
receipt of new claims. - Review claims at 4, 9, 15 and 20 weeks (from most
recent cease work dates). - Attend multidisciplinary team meetings to review
individual claimants. - Complete monthly reviews of Occupational
Rehabilitation services for individual
claimants.
37Resources for Injury Management Advisors
- HMS
- Independent Medical Examinations
- Occupational Rehabilitation Providers
- Multidisciplinary programs such as spinal
management, chronic pain, sprains and strains
program.
38Example 1 Tom
- 32 year old male
- Employed as animal catcher
- Small employer
- Injured left knee whilst at work, 24/07/03
39Case Study Tom cont
- Off work 2 weeks
- Attempted RTW- lasted 1 day
- Then off work no end in sight
- Reviewed at Multidisciplinary Team Meeting
40Case Study Tom cont
- Referred to Occupational Rehabilitation to
establish Toms - Current medical and status
- Functional abilities and limitations,
- Medical intervention required
- Demands of pre injury duties
- Availability of alternative duties.
OR provider would meet with employer and worker,
and also talk with general practitioner
41Case Study Tom cont
- OR provided feedback that there were no
alternative duties, however Tom was likely to be
fit in the near future. - GP must have had some concerns as he had referred
Tom to a specialist. Tom was scheduled to attend
review with specialist earliest appointment mid
October. - In the meantime independent medical (112) had
stated that Tom required arthroscopy.
42Case Study - Outcome
- W With HMS intervention, obtained earlier review
and arthroscope completed 2nd October - N
- N
- N
- NNow awaiting recovery to facilitate a RTW as
soon as medically cleared
43Summary
- You must be committed to effective Injury
Management - WorkCover agents can provide you with the
resources to optimise the Injury Management
aspect of your claims - A large focus of Injury Management is on return
to work
Employer involvement is critical for a
sustainable return to work