Football league team sidelined by high comp costs


North Dakota’s only Indoor Football League team will stay on the sidelines this year because of high workers compensation premiums, according to The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead.

The Bismarck Bucks team announced that it will forego playing this season because it can’t afford the premiums for medical coverage through the state’s comp program Workforce Safety & Insurance. The team intends to seek legislation allowing the team to opt out of mandatory coverage through the state’s monopoly workers comp program, according to the newspaper.

Workers comp costs for the 25-player team and its coaches and other staff exceeded the payroll costs for the entire operation, Derrick Bulawa, CEO of BEK Communications Cooperative, which owns the Bucks, told the newspaper.

 

 

 



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Texas bill would allow bundling group health with work comp


Texas companies may soon be able to offer their employees a workers compensation plan with accident and health coverage on the same policy, potentially increasing the number of insured workers throughout the state.

H.B. 351, filed Nov. 14, would allow workers compensation insurance companies to contract with their counterparts in accident and health insurance to offer employers a packaged coverage plan.

While H.B. 351 would allow insurers to bundle coverage, it would not authorize comp insurers to write group accident and health insurance policies. The measure would require that the group health policy “be provided by an entity that is authorized to write group accident and health insurance and is separate from the workers’ compensation insurance company.”

The bill would allow packaged plans to provide benefits for industrial injuries through the group accident and health policy, it prohibits any cost-sharing requirements for work comp medical benefits.

H.B. 351 would also require any employee contributions for group accident and health coverage to exclude any portion of premiums allocated to the work comp benefits.

Similarly, the measure would prohibit providers from pursuing a private claim against a work comp claimant covered by a packaged plan for any part of the cost of services provided for an industrial injury, except those allowed under state law.

WorkCompCentral is a sister publication of Business Insurance. More stories here.

 

 

 



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Chronic pain study suggests meds management better than therapy


A study on chronic lower back pain among veterans who have been taking opioids long term found that targeted management of medication resulted in better outcomes when compared with cognitive behavioral therapy, but that the results did not give a clear indication of which approach is better.

Researchers who published their findings in the Journal of the American Medical Association network on Thursday concluded that the results “indicate that a collaborative care medication optimization approach has a statistically significant but clinically modest benefit when compared with CBT for 12 months.”

With 261 veterans involved in the study, researchers reviewed cases and treatment plans with physician and pharmacist investigators during weekly meetings for 131 of them, adjusting pain medications as appropriate. The other 130 veterans received eight, 45-minute cognitive behavioral therapy sessions over nine months, focusing on “barrier identification, skill learning, and practice” and “reflection, practice assignments, and goal setting” in managing their pain.

The study measured “brief pain inventory” scores among participants at six and 12 months, finding that pain improvements were “significantly greater” in the medicine group at 12 months. Scores on the BPI range from 0 to 10, with higher scores representing greater pain impact. Also measured were secondary outcomes, including pain-related disability, pain catastrophizing, self-reported substance misuse, health-related quality of life, depression and anxiety.

Researchers conclude that the outcomes between the two approaches, which found managed pharmaceuticals as a better approach, “may not be clinically meaningful or generalize to nonveteran populations” and that this “finding suggests that both pharmacological and behavioral approaches are reasonable options for chronic pain.”

The study was conducted by researchers from eight institutions, including the Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, the Veterans Affairs Health Services Research & Development Center for Health Information and Communication, and the Roudebush Veterans Administration Medical Center in Indianapolis.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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Comp benefits to increase 4.7% in Nebraska


The maximum weekly benefit for injuries occurring on or after Jan. 1 will increase by 4.7%, the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court announced.

The maximum weekly benefit will increase to $1,029 from $983. The minimum weekly benefit remains unchanged at $49.

The maximum benefit rate equals 100% of Nebraska’s average weekly wage.

The court said previous maximum benefit rates will continue to apply to injuries and illnesses occurring during their effective dates.

WorkCompCentral is a sister publication of Business Insurance. More stories here.

 

 



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Texas bill would prohibit loss-safety experience in public contracts


Lawmakers in Texas are considering a bill that would prohibit the use of experience modifiers in awarding contracts for public construction projects.

H.B. 679, introduced Tuesday, addresses such ratings — known as “experience mods” — which are calculated taking into account a company’s workplace safety and loss prevention history.

Experience mods, assigned to employers when purchasing workers compensation coverage, which affects premiums, have been taken into consideration when a project is awarded to a contractor. This bill would end that common practice in Texas.

The bill states that an offer to contract on a project may not require a specific mod to accept the offer and that contract solicitation may not require that a contractor have a specified experience mod when bidding.

In other news, the Texas Division of Workers’ Compensation on Wednesday announced that the National Council on Compensation Insurance is proposing changes to its experience rating methodology that it says would make the calculations more accurate.

 

 



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California comp benefits projected to increase more than 5% in 2023


The California Workers’ Compensation Institute said temporary total disability and permanent total disability benefits will increase more than 5% next year due to an increase in the state’s average weekly wage.

The latest data from the U.S. Department of Labor shows the average wage increased 5.159% to $1,651 in the first quarter of this year from $1,570 in the year-earlier period.

As a result, TTD and PTD maximum benefits will increase to $1,619.15 from $1,529.71. Next year’s increase follows a 13.5% jump in benefits that took effect in January.

“Also beginning on Jan. 1, 2023, other workers compensation benefits, including TTD paid two years or more after injury, life pension and PTD payments for injuries on or after Jan. 1, 2003, and installment payments on death claims will be going up due to the (state’s average weekly wage) increase,” CWCI said in a statement.

WorkCompCentral is a sister publication of Business Insurance. More stories here.



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Rise in construction comp claims severity offset by flat frequency


LAS VEGAS — While claim frequency in workers compensation has been flat for a decade, claim severity is increasing, and no industry is seeing it more than construction, according to panelists at the 42nd International Risk Management Institute Inc. Construction Risk Conference.  

“This is driven by medical advances,” said Mark Walls, vice president, communications & strategic analysis, for Safety National Casualty Corp. “They’re getting better treatment; they’re getting a medevac helicopter to a level one trauma center.

“The people living (after catastrophic accidents) used to die. But those people are really messed up, and so it tends to be a very, very expensive claim because of that. We have seen in our data set a 30% increase over the last three years of claims with over $10 million.”

Mr. Walls joined two other panelists discussing workers compensation issues facing the construction industry, including claims severity, labor force challenges and marijuana legalization.

While some challenges are ongoing, and not easy to quantify, injury severity in construction – where worker accidents are often more catastrophic than in other industries — is leading to a rise in high-dollar claims.

As an example, amputations — comparatively common in the construction industry — used to cost much less; a $5,000 prosthetic was commonplace, Mr. Walls said. Now, with technological advances that provide more function for an amputee, costs can rise to $40,000 for a device that is not as durable as the traditional prosthetic.

Another example common in the construction industry involves those who are paralyzed after accidents, he said. The traditional life expectancy for such injured workers had been a decade and can now be three times that long, he said.

“The medical science here is amazing,” he said. “But there are costs. These big claims are getting much, much bigger, and unfortunately these are the types of claims that you often see in your industry.”

Meanwhile, claims frequency in construction has remained flat over the past decade, with the exception of the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw a sudden drop and subsequent increase in frequency, according to panelist Donna Glenn, chief actuary for the National Council on Compensation Insurance.

The generally flat trend helps offset rising costs related to severity, and it’s why the construction industry should continually focus on workplace safety, she said.

Safety “is the fuel behind the long-term frequency decline,” she said, when questioned about technological advances making workplaces safer, such as wearables that alert workers of hazards. “The fact that (the industry) is continuously improving (on safety) is contributing to that continuation of prevention.”

Panelists also addressed the challenge of finding qualified, experienced workers and what it means in terms of injury risks.

“Data shows that there tends to be a higher accident frequency rate for the newer workers,” Mr. Walls said. “The other concern becomes if you don’t have enough workers, your people are having to do more with less; they’re working longer hours. That can lead to over-exertion and chances of injuries occurring.”

The aging workforce is another challenge, as such workers tend to take longer to heal and can have comorbidities that complicate their recovery, Ms. Glenn said.

The potential impact of marijuana legalization is another issue facing the construction industry and its ability to prevent accidents. There is limited adequate drug testing in this area,  and some jurisdictions bar drug testing in some cases.

It’s likely workers, many in the states that have legalized marijuana for medicinal and recreational purposes, are partaking, Mr. Walls said.

“As employers in a higher risk industry, I’m sure it gives you great comfort to know that at any given time a percentage of your workforce is stoned,” Mr. Walls said, noting legalization efforts are underway for other drugs. Colorado, for example, just legalized hallucinogenic mushrooms.

“This is a huge challenge for employers because your drug testing policies vary,” he said.

Another issue, he said, is that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration does not allow employers to have a blanket post-accident, drug-testing program for fear that workers will not report accidents and injuries out of fear.



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COVID-19 workers comp claims fall in 2021


COVID-19-related workers compensation claims fell last year compared with 2020, when the pandemic first hit the United States, but indemnity-only claims continued to represent the biggest share, a group of rating agencies said in a report released Tuesday.

The average claim cost over the two-year period was $9,600, according to the report from the National Council on Compensation Insurance and nine other rating bureaus.

Countrywide, COVID-19 comp claim counts and losses decreased by more than half, with COVID-19 claim counts falling to 4% of all claims in 2021 from 11% in the prior year and total payments falling to 1% from 2%.

Most states saw a peak in COVID-19 claims in the fourth quarter of 2020, the study notes.

About 75% of COVID-19-related lost-time claims in 2020 and the first half of 2021 were from the health care sector, while the sector only accounts for about 9% of non-COVID-19 lost-time claims. Health care facilities with overnight care, which includes retirement homes and nursing homes, had the highest relative share of COVID-19 claims.

The analysis relied on data from 45 jurisdictions, representing $1.1 billion in COVID-19-related losses from about 117,000 claims. In addition to the NCCI, rating bureaus participating in the study were from California, Delaware, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

 

 

 



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COVID-19 workers comp claims fall in 2021


COVID-19-related workers compensation claims fell last year compared with 2020, when the pandemic first hit the United States, but indemnity-only claims continued to represent the biggest share, a group of rating agencies said in a report released Tuesday.

The average claim cost over the two-year period was $9,600, according to the report from the National Council on Compensation Insurance and nine other rating bureaus.

Countrywide, COVID-19 comp claim counts and losses decreased by more than half, with COVID-19 claim counts falling to 4% of all claims in 2021 from 11% in the prior year and total payments falling to 1% from 2%.

Most states saw a peak in COVID-19 claims in the fourth quarter of 2020, the study notes.

About 75% of COVID-19-related lost-time claims in 2020 and the first half of 2021 were from the health care sector, while the sector only accounts for about 9% of non-COVID-19 lost-time claims. Health care facilities with overnight care, which includes retirement homes and nursing homes, had the highest relative share of COVID-19 claims.

The analysis relied on data from 45 jurisdictions, representing $1.1 billion in COVID-19-related losses from about 117,000 claims. In addition to the NCCI, rating bureaus participating in the study were from California, Delaware, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

 

 

 



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