Title: Risk Management User Group
1Risk Management User Group
2WELCOMEMichael L. Hay, CRM, CGFM, CPPM
3MEETING AGENDA
- 830 900 Healthcare Networks Jonathan Bow
- 900 930 Return to Work Gordon Leff
- FY06 Claims Update
- 930 1030 Travel Safety Officer Garry
Parker - 1030 1045 BREAK
- 1045 1115 SORM 200 Update Mary Loza
- 1115 1130 Training Updates Brad
Prais - 1130 1200 Loss Trending
Benny Vanden Avond - Cost of Risk
-
4HEALTHCARE NETWORKS
- Jonathan Bow
- Executive Director
5CLAIMS UPDATE
- Gordon Leff
- Deputy Director
- Claims Operations
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12Return to Work and Stay at Work Bona Fide
Offers of Employement
13Texas Workers' Compensation Act (Labor Code,
Title 5, Subtitle A, Section 412.051)
- A program designed to assist employees who
sustain compensable injuries to return to work
14Immediate savings when TIBS cease
Potential benefits in return-to- work program
15Other Benefits to the Employer - Direct Savings
- Productivity increases and human resources are
utilized to the maximum extent - Wage costs for substitute employees are saved.
- Litigation costs are normally prevented or
reduced - Possible reduction or ending of medical costs
16Benefits to the Employer - Indirect Savings
- Work delays and business interruptions are
eliminated when the experienced employee returns
to work. - Co-workers are not required to perform extra
duties to compensate for the absent employee. - Communications and relations between employees
and management are enhanced. - Recruitment and staff training costs of new or
substitute employees are saved. - Goodwill and a positive image with the public and
employees are created, as the employer is
perceived as a caring employer
17Benefits to the Injured Workers
- Employee concerns about continued employment are
resolved. - Full or partial wages are earned which brings the
employee's income closer to pre-injury wages than
workers' compensation temporary income benefits
alone. - They remain active and mobile when returned to
the productive workforce. - Self-esteem, morale and personal security are
maintained or restored through gainful employment
and a productive life style. - Stress, boredom, and depression associated with
the injury/illness and being out of work are
reduced or eliminated, not only for the injured
worker, but for the family or significant others.
- Physical conditioning through a work-life
discipline is maintained.
18Your front-line supervisors must be on board!
19Successful return-to-work programs
- Knowledgeable, proactive return to work
coordinator - Continuous education and training
- Job descriptions
- Job hazard analysis
- On-going identification of positions suitable for
alternate duty assignments - Written communications
- Early intervention and prompt, sympathetic regard
- Consistent application of a detailed return to
work policy and procedures - Forms
- Accurate and systematic evaluation
20You and Your front-line supervisors must be on
board!
21http//www.sorm.state.tx.us/Workers-Compensation/
Return to Work Programs
- "Position Description
- DWC 73 "Return-to-Work Status"
- SORM 85 Return To Work Policy
- Bona-fide Job Offer of Employment Notification
22Bona-Fide Offer of Employment
23First
- a) An employer or insurance carrier may request
the treating doctor provide a Work Status Report
by providing the treating doctor a set of
functional job descriptions which list modified
duty positions which the employer has available
for the injured employee to work. The functional
job descriptions must include descriptions of the
physical and time requirements of the positions.
24Second
- (b) An employer may offer an employee a modified
duty position which has restricted duties which
are within the employee's work abilities as
determined by the employee's treating doctor.
25Third
- In the absence of a Work Status Report by the
treating doctor, an offer of employment may be
made based on another doctor's assessment of the
employee's work status provided that the doctor
made the assessment based on an actual physical
examination of the employee performed by that
doctor and provided that the treating doctor has
not indicated disagreement with the restrictions
identified by the other doctor.
26 This is Critical
27Fourth
- c) An employer's offer of modified duty shall be
made to the employee in writing and in the form
and manner prescribed by the Commission. A copy
of the Work Status Report on which the offer is
being based shall be included with the offer as
well as the following information - 1) the location at which the employee will
be working - 2) the schedule the employee will be
working - 3) the wages that the employee will be paid
- 4) a description of the physical and time
requirements that the position will entail
and - 5) a statement that the employer will only
assign tasks consistent with the employee's
physical abilities, knowledge, and skills and
will provide training if necessary. - None of these elements may be overlooked and the
offer MUST be made in writing.
28Fifth
- d) A carrier may deem an offer of modified duty
to be a bona fide offer of employment if - 1) it has written copies of the Work Status
Report and the offer and - 2) the offer
- a) is for a job at a location which is
geographically accessible as provided in
subsection (e) of this section - b) is consistent with the doctor's
certification of the employee's work abilities,
as provided in subsection (f) of this section
and - was communicated to the employee in writing, in
the form and manner prescribed by the Commission
and included all the information required by
subsection (c) of this section.
29Sixth
- (e) In evaluating whether a work location is
geographically accessible the carrier shall at
minimum consider - (1) the affect that the employee's physical
limitations have on the employee's ability to
travel - (2) the distance that the employee will have to
travel - (3) the availability of transportation and
- (4) whether the offered work schedule is similar
to the employee's work schedule prior to the
injury.
30Seventh
- (f) The following is the order of preference that
shall be used by carriers evaluating an offer of
employment - (1) the opinion of a doctor selected by the
Commission to evaluate the employee's work
status - (2) the opinion of the treating doctor
- (3) opinion of a doctor who is providing regular
treatment as a referral doctor based on the
treating doctor's referral - (4) opinion of a doctor who evaluated the
employee as a consulting doctor based on the
treating doctor's request and - (5) the opinion of any other doctor based on an
actual physical examination of the employee
performed by that doctor.
31Eighth
- (g) A carrier may deem the wages offered by an
employer through a bona fide offer of employment
to be Post-Injury Earnings (PIE), as outlined in
129.2 of this title (relating to Entitlement to
Temporary Income Benefits), on the earlier of the
date the employee rejects the offer or the
seventh day after the employee receives the
offer of modified duty unless the employee's
treating doctor notifies the carrier that the
offer made by the employer is not consistent with
the employee's work restrictions. For the
purposes of this section, if the offer of
modified duty was made by mail, an employee is
deemed to have received the offer from the
employer five days after it was mailed. The wages
the carrier may deem to be PIE are those that
would have been paid on or after the date the
carrier is permitted to deem the offered wages as
PIE. (Post Injury Earnings)
32Important Concept Coming Up
33- The employee may decline the employer's offer of
an alternate duty job and remain on leave.
However, the Texas Workers' Compensation Act
allows income benefits to be reduced when an
employee refuses a bona-fide offer of employment.
This reduction in benefits is permitted
regardless of FMLA.
34Changes in the Designated Doctor and Required
Medical Examination rulesAs of January 1, 2007
Rule 126.7 (c), the Designated Doctors role has
expanded to include the resolution of questions
regarding
- (1) impairment caused by employees compensable
injury - (2) the attainment of MMI
- (3) the extent of the employees compensable
injury - (4) whether the employees disability is a direct
result of the work-related injury - We are already being warned not to use this rule
for 3 or 4, but thats a different class. - (5) the ability of the employee to return to work
(RTW) or - (6) issues similar to those described in 1-5.
35Sample RTW forms are provided on SORMs website
at
- WWW.SORM.state.tx.us/Claims_Cordinator_Handbook/fo
rms.php
36Bona Fide Offer of Employment Letter (SAMPLE)
- Delivery Confirmation Requested
-
- Dear (claimant)
-
- Our office is in receipt of medical information
from Dr. _____________ outlining the restrictions
under which you are able to return to work.
Pursuant to Workers' Compensation Commission Rule
129.6, this letter is a Bona Fide Job Offer for
you to return to work consistent with information
provided herein. Our office will abide by the
physical limitations as outlined by the
physician. The office will only assign tasks
consistent with your physical abilities,
knowledge and skills and will provide training if
necessary. -
- Position title 2. Hours of duty ____a.m. /
p.m. until ____ a.m. / p.m. 3. Wages ____Hourly
____Weekly ____Monthly 4 Job description,
including duty hours, and maximum physical
requirements of the position (lifting and
approximate lbs. approximate time stooping,
pushing, standing, sitting, etc.) 5.Address,
location, and approximate distance in miles from
employees residence6.
Beginning date of the position _________ Ending
date of the position________ -
- Should you have any questions, please contact
the undersigned below. -
- Sincerely,
37For more information about return to work, please
go to SORMs website at
- http//www.sorm.state.tx.us/Workers_Compensation/R
eturn_To_Work/return_to_work.php
38Travel Safety
- Officer Garry Parker
- Texas Department of Public Safety
39BREAK
40SORM 200 DATA
41SORM 200
- The State Office of Risk Management 200 (SORM
200) is the sole source for collecting statewide
information from state agencies regarding their
expenditures for risk management activities,
insurance purchases and non-workers compensation
claims made or settled against the agency. - The intent of the SORM 200 is to capture costs
associated with agency Risk Management Programs,
and to compile information necessary for SORM to
include the administrative costs of risk in the
Office's biennial report to the legislature.
42SORM 200
- The SORM 200 is divided into two parts
- Part I - Risk Management Expenditures the
intent of this section is to capture those costs
associated with agencys direct risk management
costs. - Part II - Insurance and Risk Related
Expenditures used to submit non workers
compensation insurance information for the
current fiscal year.
43SORM 200
- Data for SORM 200 is requested from each agency
for online input by October 30 of each fiscal
year. - Database is closed on October 30 and any
additions or corrections can only be entered by
SORM personnel. - Data is being analyzed for data integrity.
44Cost of RiskFY 03, 04, 05
CASH BASIS Risk Management Programs Workers Comp Claims Cost Containment Settlements Judgments Bonds, Insurance Deductibles Actuarial Services Court Costs Attorney Fees Risk Management Claims Admin Lost, Damaged Destroyed Property FY 03 27,262,588 67,571,177 1,279,956 3,512,080 11,732,279 12,000 1,901,062 6,086,276 539,687 FY 04 33,029,737 54,650,872 1,146,711 5,653,484 15,417,895 4,500 1,866,369 6,458,034 504,585 FY 05 26,171,311 52,534,024 1,380,950 4,190,858 14,934,033 13,000 971,006 6,525,055 3,103,681
ACCRUED COSTS Reserves for Future Claims Incurred But Not Reported TOTAL COST OF RISK 63,259,241 67,860,000 251,016,345 50,99,367 84,966,000 254,690,553 54,103,732 77,929,244 241,856,894
45Expenditures vs COR
FY 03 FY 04 FY 05
Cost of Risk 251,016,345 254,690,553 241,856,894
Risk Management Expenses 27,262,588 33,029,737 26,171,311
Percentage RM Expenses/COR 11 13 11
46Loss Prevention Effect Ratios
FY 03 FY 04 FY 05
RM Expenditures 27,262,588 33,029,737 26,171,311
Cost of Risk (Cash Basis) 92,880,759 85,702,449 83,652,607
Ratio COR/RM Expenditures 3.4 2.6 3.2
47Property Casualty Claims
- Virtually, any event, where damages to persons or
property, that may cause a financial loss to the
agency must be reported. This includes - 1. Injuries or damages (insured or uninsured)
automobile accidents involving agency owned
vehicles whether owned, non-owned or hired - 2. Agency owned vehicle damage (automobile
physical damage) or third party vehicle damage
(automobile liability - property damage) - 3. Property damage which may includes
theft/vandalism of personal property.
48Property Casualty Claims
- 4. Right to sue notices from EEOC or Department
of Human Rights (employment practices type),
injuries to volunteers (accident type) - 5. Injuries to the public within/on state
owned/managed facilities or premises (slips and
falls).
49Auto Liability ClaimsFY 06
50Insured Auto Claims FY 06
51Uninsured Auto Claims FY 06
52EPL Claims FY 06
- Employment Practices Claims
53Uninsured EPL ClaimsFY 06
54Property ClaimsFY 06
55Uninsured Property ClaimsFY 06
56Insured Property ClaimsFY 06
57 58Agency Outreach Training
- Bradley Prais
- Training Specialist
59Regional Open EnrollmentResults
- 3 Completed 700 Students, 32 Agencies
- Most Popular
- Bloodborne Pathogens
- Stress Management
- Anger Conflict in the Workplace
- Problems
- Limited attendance by smaller field offices
- Limited announcements to field offices
60Sample Schedule AM
Day 1 Day 1 Day 1 Day 2 Day 2 Day 2 Day 3 Day 3 Day 3
Room 1 Room 2 Room 3 Room 1 Room 2 Room 3 Room 1 Room 2 Room 3
900
915 Stress Notary Office
930 Public Safety
945 CPR Supervisor's
1000 ADSO Accident Claims Role Claims
1015 Investigation Coordinator in Coordinator
1030 Vicki Ergo Safety
1045 Anger in
1100 HAZCOM Diane Workplace
1115 Conflict
1130
1145
1200
61Sample Schedule PM
Day 1 Day 1 Day 1 Day 2 Day 2 Day 2 Day 3 Day 3 Day 3
Room 1 Room 2 Room 3 Room 1 Room 2 Room 3 Room 1 Room 2 Room 3
1245
100
115
130 Solving Slips, Trips Back Inj
145 ADSO Conflict Falls Lifting Workplace
200 (Cont) Violence
215 for
230 Defensive First Claims Managers Claims
245 Driving Aid Coordinator Coordinator
300 Workplace (Cont) Confined (Cont) Bloodborne (Cont)
315 Violence Spaces Pathegons
330 15 Pax Short
345 Van
400
415
430
445
500
62Regional Open EnrollmentsSchedule
- Harlingen February 13-15 Hosted by TSTC
- Nacogdoches June 12-14 Hosted by SFA
- Open Dates April, August, October
63New Classes
- Driving Safety 4hrs
- CPR First Aid 8hrs, Limited availability
- Office Safety 1hr
- Claims Coordinator 2 days
- Supervisors Role in Safety 3hrs
64Pinpointing your Exposures
- Loss Trending and Benchmarking through the State
Office of Risk Management
Presented by Benny Vanden Avond SORM Risk
Management Specialist
65Risk Management Process
- Step 1 Risk Identification
- Step 2 Risk Analysis
- Step 3 Consider Alternatives
- Risk Control
- Risk Finance
- Step 4 Implement
- Step 5 Monitor
66Risk Identification Techniques
- Insurance Surveys
- Property Inspections
- Internal Resources
- External Resources
67Risk Identification through SORM
- Onsite Consultations Risk Management Program
Reviews - Risk Tex Articles
- Risk Management User Groups
- Insurance Policy Reviews
- Risk Evaluation and Planning System (REPS)
68Risk Identification through REPS
69Risk Identification through REPS
70Risk Identification through REPS
71Risk Identification through REPSQuestions,
Questions, Questions
72Identified Risks
Two Employees complained about indoor air quality
22 Automobile Accidents occurred in Fiscal Year
2005, but only six occurred in Fiscal Year 2006
Our agency spends 17.04 of our Risk Management
Program Expenditures on Employee Salaries
Blah, Blah, Blah
73Risk Identification through REPS
74Identified Risks
Two Employees complained about indoor air
quality Have you had previous complaints?
22 Automobile Accidents occurred in Fiscal Year
2005, while six occurred in Fiscal Year 2006 Has
your fleet size significantly changed?
Our agency spends 17.04 of our Risk Management
Program Expenditures on Employee Salaries How
does this compare to other state agencies?
75Risk Management Process
- Step 1 Risk Identification
- Step 2 Risk Analysis
- Step 3 Consider Alternatives
- Risk Control
- Risk Finance
- Step 4 Implement
- Step 5 Monitor
76Risk Analysis Techniques
- Loss Trending
- Benchmarking
77Loss Trending (Trend Analysis)
- Loss forecasting technique that identifies past
loss patterns and uses them to forecast future
losses
78Loss Trending through SORM
- REPS
- Online Property and Casualty Claims Reporting
System (OPCC)
79Loss Trending through REPS
80Loss Trending through REPS Data, Data, Data
81Loss Trending through REPS Statewide Trends
- REPS also helps SORM to conduct Statewide Loss
Trending - October 2006 Risk Tex Article
- Smart System REPS Helps Agencies Identify
Risk, Helps SORM Recognize Trends
82Loss Trending through OPCC
83Loss Trending through OPCC
84Loss Trending through OPCC
85Benchmarking
- An entitys use of information about other
entitys in the same industry to set standards
and goals for itself
86Benchmarking through SORM
- REPS
- Cost of Risk Report (CORR)
87Benchmarking with REPS
88Benchmarking with REPS
89Benchmarking with REPS
90Benchmarking with REPS
91Benchmarking with CORR
- Agencies can use the CORR information to
benchmark their risk management expenditure
performance compared to statewide totals - Individual agency expenditure data for the past
four years is available within the RMIS section
of the SORM website. - Agencies should find the percentage columns
particularly useful for benchmarking efforts.
92Benchmarking with CORR
93Benchmarking with CORR
94Benchmarking with CORR
95Benchmarking with CORR
96Benchmarking with CORR
97Benchmarking with CORR
98Benchmarking with CORR
F - Salaries 13,550 17.04
G Benefits 5,500 6.92
H Travel 1,200 1.51
Total Expenditures 79,500 100.00
99Summary
- Risk Analysis is a vital piece of the Risk
Management Process - Loss Trending and Benchmarking are just two of
many risk analysis techniques available - REPS, OPCC, and CORR are valuable risk analysis
tools provided through SORM
100Risk Management User Group
- Thank you for attending
- Happy Holidays!!