Keeping Lawyers Out
Nothing against lawyers, but litigation sparked by a workers’ compensation claim can be expensive, time-consuming and often downright nasty. That’s why employers need to realize that once a legitimate claim has been approved, their work has just begun.
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Disputed workers’ compensation claims are a fact of life.
For a variety of reasons – from a debate over whether the
injury occurred on the job to a dispute over just how badly the
worker is impaired – claims sometimes are denied, in whole or
in part.
Workers’ compensation expert John Valente – author
of the book “Workers’ Compensation: Managing Workplace
Injuries and Lowering Costs” – notes that in such
circumstances, injured workers often feel the need “to hire a
lawyer to help navigate through the sometimes turbulent waters of
workers’ comp.”
“They want to know their rights. They want to know their
responsibilities,” Valente explains. “They want to find
somebody who is going to protect their interests.”
But sometimes even when a workers’ compensation claim is approved, injured workers believe that they need to get a lawyer involved. That’s where employers come in.
Why Litigation Is a Bad Thing
The fundamental purpose of the workers’ compensation
system, in Valente’s words, is “to provide a
predictable, prompt, efficient process that returns the injured
worker to the work force as soon as possible.”
That said, Valente notes that getting lawyers involved in the
workers’ compensation process – when it’s not
absolutely necessary – is counterproductive to that
purpose.
“‘Lawyer’ is equivalent to cost – time
cost, financial cost, sleep cost,” Valente explains.
“Litigation in any kind of case is adversarial, at the very
least, and in some situations, litigation can become very nasty.
... [I]n workers’ compensation, that’s not
beneficial.”
Not only can litigation slow the injured worker’s return
to work, Valente adds, but it also can create lingering bad blood
between the worker and his or her employer.
“Accusations get made that, if taken personally, can make
a continued relationship between the parties difficult,”
Valente says. “And that’s not helpful when your goal is
to return the injured worker to work in the quickest and most
cost-effective way possible.”
Still, Valente adds, “that’s not to say you
don’t fight the good fight when there’s a disputed
case.”
“Disputed issues exist. Fraud exists. Questions about
compensability or the amount of benefits exist,” Valente
says. “But really, the key is keeping lawyers out of the
system when you don’t have those kinds of issues. And in most
instances, injured workers don’t need to hire lawyers unless
all or part of their claim is denied.”
Why Lawyers Get Involved
According to Valente, there are two common scenarios that tend
to spur workers to contact lawyers when it’s not absolutely
necessary. The first scenario is poor communication. The second is
when workers think that they’re being denied something that
they’re owed.
In the first scenario, communication – from the employer,
the insurance adjuster or both – “has been lacking or
nonexistent.”
“It’s important for employers to remember that just
because somebody has been hurt at their workplace and they’ve
reported it to their insurance company, they don’t just wipe
their hands of the whole thing,” Valente explains.
“They don’t just say, ‘OK, I’ve done what I
have to do. I’m finished.’”
In the second scenario, injured workers whose claims have been
approved think that they are being denied benefits to which they
are entitled. Workers might come to that conclusion for any number
of reasons: A wage replacement check doesn’t arrive on time
(or at all); the local pharmacy refuses to fill a prescription for
the worker’s pain medication (because the insurance company
hasn’t reimbursed the pharmacy); or the worker receives a
collection notice for unpaid medical bills (because the insurance
company hasn’t paid the hospital).
In such circumstances, workers tend to panic – and
that’s when they call lawyers.
“And [lawyers] play on their fear,” Valente says.
“Because what happens is you’re sitting at home,
you’re on the couch – legitimately, you’re not
supposed to be at work, you’re supposed to be resting your
back or you just had surgery on your left elbow and you’re in
recovery – and you’ve got somebody telling you,
‘Hey, I’ll look out for you, because the insurance
company isn’t going to.
“And then you think, ‘You know what? That darn
insurance company, they didn’t pay me last week. I had to
call them because they didn’t send me the check and I just
got a bill saying that there’s a collection notice here for
some unpaid medical bills. I’m going to call this attorney,
because he’s going to take care of this for me. He’s
going to look out for me.’”
What You Can Do
Despite your company’s best efforts to eliminate hazards
and prevent workplace accidents, a worker suffers an on-the-job
injury. You promptly report the injury to the workers’
compensation insurance provider and quickly launch an investigation
to determine how it happened, how future injuries can be prevented
and whether the workers’ compensation claim is
legitimate.
It turns out that the workers’ comp claim is legitimate
– the worker was hurt on the job, as several witnesses can
attest – and the injury will require surgery, physical
therapy and several weeks of recovery at home.
Now what?
Keeping in mind that the goal of the workers’ compensation
system is to return injured workers to work as quickly as possible,
Valente urges employers to take an active role in the
worker’s recovery process.
“In the majority of these circumstances, the injured
worker is somebody who is a valued, contributing employee that you
want back – because it’s easier to get that person back
than it is to train somebody else,” Valente says. “So
you want to assist that person to the best of your ability and let
them know that you’re there for them.”
That begins with ...
The Once-a-Week Rule
Valente recommends designating someone at the company to call
injured workers once a week. The weekly call to injured workers can
nip a problem in the bud – such as the collection notice that
just showed up in the worker’s mailbox – before it
escalates.
“If the employer washes their hands of the claim when they
turn it over to the insurance company, the employer doesn’t
know what’s going on,” Valente says. “So now, if
the employer makes a weekly phone call to the employee and is not
intrusive, does not force themselves into asking personal questions
– ‘Hi Sally, this is John over at the company. We miss
you. Just wanted to check in. Is there anything you need or
anything we can do for you?’ – if Sally trusts her
employer, she’s going to tell you that she received a
collection notice. She’s going to tell you that her wage
replacement benefits haven’t been paid.”
If a worker reveals that indeed he or she has been receiving
collection notices for unpaid medical bills – or gives any
other indication that the workers’ compensation claim has not
been processed properly – it’s time to call your
workers’ compensation insurance provider.
Intervening on behalf of your injured worker not only is your
moral obligation as an employer, but it also is your obligation as
a consumer. After all, Valente emphasizes, your company is paying
for an insurance product and has every right to grill the insurance
provider if the injured worker’s legitimate claim has not
been processed properly or efficiently.
“You pick up the phone,” Valente explains,
“and you call your insurance company and you say,
‘Sally just got a collection notice. Do you have the bill?
Why hasn’t it been paid? That bill should be paid
immediately. Or do you have a reason for denying it? Because she
hasn’t been told that you’ve denied
it.’”
Intervening on an injured worker’s behalf – and
resolving the problem – pays numerous dividends. It keeps
lawyers out of the process, it eliminates obstacles to the person
returning to work as quickly as possible and it builds trust and
morale – with the injured worker and with his or her
co-workers.
“Because ... workers don’t live in a vacuum,”
Valente says. “They spend 8 hours a day on the factory floor
with their co-workers. That’s how it works.”
Report All Injuries
Another way to keep lawyers out of the workers
compensation’ process is to report all injuries.
Valente recalls one real-world example in which a worker tripped
over a mop bucket and tweaked his back. The worker informed his
supervisor of the incident and then went to the break room to rest
his back. About 15 minutes later, the worker told his supervisor
that his back was better, and the worker returned to the factory
floor.
About a month and a half later, the worker told his supervisor
that his back still hurt and that he needed to go to the hospital.
The supervisor – who had forgotten about the initial mop
bucket incident – told the worker to go to the human
resources department and file a workers’ compensation
claim.
The workers’ compensation insurance adjuster – who
saw a claim for an unwitnessed, unreported accident that happened a
month and a half before the worker required medical attention
– denied the claim on the grounds that it was
fraudulent.
“Well now the worker thinks he’s getting the screws
put to him by his company,” Valente says. “So now all
of a sudden you have bad feelings between the worker and the
supervisor, the worker and the company and the supervisor and the
HR people. And this guy goes and gets a lawyer. So the company gets
a lawyer and I get called in.”
Upon further investigation, Valente found out that the
supervisor, on the day of the mop bucket incident, had made a note
on his run sheet that the worker had tripped over a mop bucket and
had hurt his back. But the supervisor had not formally reported the
injury.
While the story has a happy ending – the insurance
provider eventually approved the injured worker’s claim
– Valente can’t help but think about “the wasted
money, the wasted time and the bad feelings” sparked by the
supervisor’s simple failure to quickly report the
injury.
The injured worker isn’t the only one who now has a reason
to mistrust the company.
“You also have to worry about it with all of his buddies
on the production floor who say, ‘Geez, they tried to put the
screws to Billy, what are they gonna do to me?’”
Valente says.
The moral of the story: Report all injuries, no matter how
insignificant they seem.
“Because ... the cut on the finger today turns into a
staph infection tomorrow, and then you start getting issues,”
Valente says.
And issues, as we’ve discovered, often lead to lawyers.
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© 2009 Penton Media Inc.