Monday, March 9, 2015

Give 'Em What They Want

The stories that have thus far been published by ProPublica, and the report issued by OSHA, had attendees at the Workers' Compensation Research Institute's annual conference upset.

The professionals I talked to take these reports as personal attacks on their integrity and professionalism, and the industry in general.

Indeed, one could take these papers as such, but take a step back for a moment and "listen" to what these critiques of workers' compensation are really saying.

First off, the OSHA report is no more than a recitation of prior studies and other publications on the effectiveness and fairness of state workers' compensation systems. There is no new information presented in that report. Everything that's been said in that report has been published before (citations are found in three full pages of footnotes from 13 to 16).

The Pro Publica report had been researched for about a year, and focuses on illogical variations in benefits, the decline over time of statutory benefits, and bureaucratic benefit delivery systems that imply a cultural bias. The conclusion is that workers' compensation is not a universally applied concept and that state programs vary significantly in the benefits provided.

Both reports seem to imply that the federal government should step in and at least mandate minimums, if not take over programs completely, because the cost of taking care of injured workers is increasingly being borne by the general taxpayer through other governmental benefit systems.

But here's the deal - roughly 80% of all claims are handled without discord, without dispute, and injured workers get back to the job.

The other 20% are where the problems lie, and those generally are either litigated cases where a dispute arose, or confusion ensued, or are catastrophic claims, or a combination. Almost half of these cases are litigated and make up over 75% of claim costs overall (at least in California, but most states cite similar statistics).

If anything, more often than not, a big chunk of this 20% are the product of poor communication and anxiety on the part of the worker: what's going to happen next and how am I going to pay the rent, feed the family?

I think of Dwight Johnson's story and how better communication could have eased anxiety, although eventually (with the help of his attorney, retained ultimately because of communication issues) his case was handled expertly.

Workers' compensation has never been perfect - it can't be. The system covers too many people in too many different situations with broad brushed strokes of benefits that are general in nature. It's one size fits all, so outliers don't fit in very well.

Charles Davoli is a Louisiana claimant's attorney, serves as a labor representative on the Louisiana Governor’s Workers’ Compensation Advisory Council and also serves as Secretary for the Louisiana Workers’ Advocates (LWA) organization, which is a Workers Injury Law and Advocacy Group (WILG) chapter member.

“There’s a death rattle going on in workers’ compensation,” Davoli told the audience during his session at the WCRI conference.

Citing pending constitutional challenges in Florida and Oklahoma, Davoli told folks, “We may in fact be perpetuating something that has outlived its purpose.”

In State of Florida v. Florida Workers’ Advocates the Florida 3rd District Court of Appeals is reviewing a Miami-Dade County judge ruling that, because the grand bargain had been breached over time through legislative "reforms," the exclusive-remedy provision of the state’s statute is unconstitutional.

In Oklahoma, the state's Supreme Court has been asked to review the cases of Duck v. Morgan Tire and Pilkington & Lee v. State of Oklahoma about exclusive remedy and the constitutionality of the “Oklahoma Option,” respectively.

Trends tipping the balance of power in the workers’ compensation system, Davoli said, included the mitigation of attorney involvement, limiting injured workers’ access to justice, attempts to control or influence the impartiality and independence of workers’ compensation judiciary bodies and factors that inhibit or discourage medical providers from treating injured workers.

Chuck's talking about the noise in between the employer and the employee...

We have reporting coming out of think tanks, like WCRI, with lots of data demonstrating gross trends, that seem to contradict, or at least are difficult to coordinate with, the ProPublica and OSHA reports.

These data reports in general are missing three important things:

First, worker interview data is almost entirely missing. 

Second, hardly any researchers seem to discuss any preliminary findings with practitioners and workers; at least they don't report these conversations. 

Third, little of the research appears to ask the question, “How are we doing?” with respect to protecting workers from adverse financial impact of injury.

Yes, different states and systems handle various parts differently; those are legislative issues and perhaps the criticisms of workers' compensation as far as disparity in treatment of various benefits has some foundation. After all, my body doesn't change when I cross the border from California to Arizona, or beyond.

But at least with respect to current operations, problems lie not in the system itself but in the execution of the system.

When it all comes down to the bottom line, the answer lies with the employer - no one else.
Employers, particularly smaller businesses, rely on their insurance company to handle claims. Too many take a hands off approach and don't actively manage their insurance companies, and don't actively engage with the injured worker to ensure he or she gets what was contracted for under the law.

How many employers (I'm not talking about self-insured, self-administered employers - these are folks that have already figured it out) in your hundred count case load can you say who:
  • Manage the claim.
  • Know what the treatment plan is. 
  • Authorize it and move forward. 
  • Take care of the injured worker in the meantime. 
  • Offer modified duty - if appropriate. 
  • Contest ‘empty labor dollars’. 
  • Send the injured worker home to recuperate if that is the right thing to do (TTD). 
My bet is you can count them on one hand in your hundred plus case load.

We focus on lots of little details because there's a bean count at the end of the day, but all too often we're counting the wrong beans.

This is just business math. Sort the Profit & Loss ledger in descending order. If you can eliminate ‘Postage’ completely, for instance, but it consumes only 0.0034 percent of the budget, you're focusing on the wrong thing.

Attack the largest line item – litigated claims. Give the injured workers what they want and what they are entitled to – sometimes even if they are wrong (misdirected opiates excepted - but authorize rigorous physical therapy instead, for example).

In the old days the mantra was "close the claim." Let the employee and employer move on with their respective lives.

That mantra is still repeated, but we have thrown up many roadblocks to that end goal chasing 'Postage' costs - but they don't have to be there.

There are options in state law that allow us not to send a case to utilization review, for instance - the claims adjuster is the first UR. We don't have to send an investigator to interview every claimant that had bilateral amputation of the lower limbs to see if he really is disabled (sheesh). Not every medical vendor is trying to cheat - most just want to be paid fairly for their time and services.

The criticisms are about that 20% of all claims that become problematic, usually through a failure in communication and failure to manage expectations.

So communicate gently and peaceably. Let both the employee AND the employer know what the steps are, who will be talking with them and why, and what is or is not allowed under the law both short and long term, and what is expected of each of them as ACTIVE participants.

I still believe that what we will have in 10 years will be markedly different than what we're doing now, but in the meantime we owe society the best that we can provide. Sometimes that means doing things differently, and perhaps against our instincts.

6 comments:

  1. I agree for the most part, just one little thing on the 80% of the claims go just fine.

    The ProPublica report mentioned that many folks just give up and dont even try and put their OJI's on their insurance.

    It was found that 40% I think they said of OJI's amputations were being put on folks private insurance rather than the comp.

    And how many of that 80% are being thrown right back into jobs that they are just getting re inured and re injured in? Or telling their co work I cant lift any more because my Dr. told me not to, so you co worker have to tear up your back now. Sorry.

    How many herniated dics are just being called sprains?
    And folks being told to just keep stretching and deep breathing and calling in sick each time you flare up, so as you get fire in the end.

    80 percent do not go just fine. They just choose not to fight back is all. Or the next time their injuries harm them, they do not use comp they put it on their reg insurance.

    So I do not believe that 80 percent number of the claims go fine, is correct.

    How many of that 80% are just giving up & putting their injures on reg ins?

    Nationalize Work Comp or get some real strong federal mandates going to protect the workers its supposed to be there to serve. Is the only way labor will ever find equity in our system today.

    For having 50 little chicken coops for the the Fox''s to raid is just to tempting for the fox's and too many for the farmer to police. Thus the little chickens get eaten in the end. Peace and thanks as always, and as an injured workes I found those reports to be spot on.

    And this video of it was the best media the injured workers have gotten ever.

    It is an injured workers REVOLUTION. Weather the big boys or the status qou likes it or not.

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  2. OH yeah the link to the video is here. Peace @ACLU If your over 35 in Workers Comp systems you will be discriminated against. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/state-cuts-mean-workers-comp-isnt-working-many-need/

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    1. Darren - 80% of the claims IN THE SYSTEM go just fine. Maybe there are claims that don't go into the system. Those aren't counted. All that are counted in that 80% are the ones that actually are processed as work comp. Perhaps you are correct, but there are no statistically valid studies about how many go unreported. Until that happens, I'll stick to my the 80%.

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    2. Your 80% is most likely correct. However 80% is not 100%. Let me put it this way. Lets say I went out and threw bricks through 20% of the windows in my town. I don't think the Police or the Courts would accept defending myself by saying "I didn't throw bricks through 80% of the windows in this town, so what's your problem." And then let's say I further defend my actions by saying "If only those 20% had communicated with me properly their windows wouldn't be broken."

      Now you and I both know that the policy of some insurance companies is to "muddy" or prevent adequate communication with the injured worker. You may pretend you don't know, but you know.

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  3. David, is that 80% reported injuries where the injured worker gets patched up and go back to work or 80% of work injuries that had filed an application for adjudication of claim?

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