Who insures short-duration work-injury caused absences?

07 Nov, 2014 Terry Bogyo

                               

Most people would say, “work-related injuries that result in workers losing time and earnings are covered by workers' compensation”.  In most Canadian provinces, that statement would be true.  In three Canadian provinces (PEI, NB and NS) and all US states, short-duration time-loss claims may receive no compensation under workers' compensation statutes currently in force.  In all but seventeen states, most injured workers with less than two weeks of missed work due to their injuries will never receive compensation for an initial waiting period of three to seven days.

For these shorter-duration work-injury or illness caused absences, the worker is essentially self-insured for the waiting period.  From a workers' compensation insurer perspective, these claims may have minor costs for health care but are essentially costless in terms of compensation for temporary disability resulting in lost wages.  I can find no jurisdiction with a waiting period that publicly quantifies either the number of cases where a waiting period was served or the value of uncompensated lost wages being borne by injured workers who miss more than the day of injury.

Without data, it is hard to estimate the number of work-related absence cases that are going uncompensated because of waiting periods.   Without measurement, it is hard to see if this burden is shrinking or growing.  Without a financial implication, the case for prevention may be less than it might otherwise be.

Jurisdictions such as British Columbia that compensate for time lost beyond the day of injury may provide an indirect indication of what is not being compensated in jurisdictions with waiting periods.   Using WorkSafeBC claims originating with injuries in 2010 and considering all the days paid through to October 2014, approximately 23% of work injury claims were compensated for 1 to 3 days.  Using a one-week measure, about 36.5% of claims received compensation for one week or less. Almost half the claims show a worker with temporary disability of two weeks or less; nearly 60% of these 2010 injured workers  have three weeks or less  lost due to work-related injury.   If a similar distribution of work-related injury absences applies in the US, then about half of work-related injuries involving time-loss are at least partly insured by injured workers themselves.

These shorter duration time-loss claims provide critical data on the causes and nature of injuries (data that are not typically collected if no wage-loss compensation is paid).  These data can inform prevention activities and public policy that will reduce future incidents.  More importantly, the compensation for wages lost not only lessen the burden the injury imposes on the worker but also creates an incentive toward prevention of all injuries and not just the most costly ones.  This is critically important because the difference between a multi-million dollar claim and one involving just a day or two of wage loss is often a matter of millimeters.

From the perspective of the insurer, the shorter duration claims are the least costly; from the perspective of the injured worker, three days or a week of lost wages is a significant cost.   Collectively, workers with short-duration, unreimbursed time-loss claims may well be self-insuring a material portion of the cost of workplace injuries.  That burden should be quantified and included in the calculation of the cost and consequences of work-related injury, illness and disease.

About Terry Bogyo:

Terry Bogyo

Terry is an active researcher, speaker and commentator on workers compensation issues. Now retired, he was the Director of Corporate Planning and Development for WorkSafeBC. His responsibilities included environmental scanning, strategic planning and inter-jurisdictional comparisons.

Terry says of himself: I am a student of workers' compensation systems. Many years ago I discovered two things about this area. First, workers' comp and OH&S are of vital importance to people. Protecting, caring for and providing compensation to workers are important, noble and morally responsible endeavors. The second thing I learned was that no matter how much I knew about workers' comp/OH&S, there was always so much more to learn. This is an endlessly challenging area of study. My purpose, therefore, is not to lecture, but to reflect on the ideas and issues that are topical in this area... and to invite others to share in a learning experience. By adding your knowledge and insights, others with similar interests can participate in the discovery and study of this important domain.

His blog is "Workers' Compensation Perspectives".


  • arizona california case management case management focus claims cms compensability compliance conferences courts covid do you know the rule exclusive remedy florida FMLA fraud glossary check health care Healthcare iowa leadership medical medicare minnesota NCCI new jersey new york ohio opioids osha pennsylvania Safety state info texas violence virginia WDYT west virginia what do you think women's history month workers' comp 101 workers' recovery workers' compensation contact information Workplace Safety Workplace Violence


  • Read Also

    About The Author

    • Terry Bogyo

    Read More

    Request a Demo

    To request a free demo of one of our products, please fill in this form. Our sales team will get back to you shortly.