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MASSACHUSETTS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COSTS PER CLAIM TYPICAL
BUT GREW RAPIDLY, WCRI STUDY REPORTS
CAMBRIDGE, MA, March 12, 2008 –
Workers’ compensation costs per claim in Massachusetts
were typical among 14 study states, but grew rapidly in four
out of five study years, including a nearly 10 percent
increase in 2005 claims evaluated in 2006.
The study by Cambridge, Mass.-based Workers
Compensation Research Institute (WCRI) found that the rapid
growth in total costs per claim in Massachusetts in
2005/2006 was driven by rapid increases in medical costs per
claim, as well as two new cost drivers in the most recent
study year: indemnity benefits per claim with more than
seven days of lost time and benefit delivery expenses per
claim.
Over the five-year study period, the average
medical cost per claim with more than seven days of lost
time increased, on average, nearly 11 percent annually,
including a 12 percent increase in the latest year.
Indemnity benefits per claim with more than
seven days of lost time in Massachusetts increased 10
percent in 2005/2006, after little change in the prior two
years. In addition to wage growth of 3 percent, a nearly one
week increase in the average duration of temporary
disability was the main contributor to the increase.
The average benefit delivery expense per
claim with more than seven days of lost time and such
expenses increased 9 percent in 2005/2006, following little
change in the previous two years. A major factor
contributing to this increase was rapid growth in the
average medical cost containment expense per claim.
These were among the findings of a study by
the Workers Compensation Research Institute. The WCRI study,
CompScope™ Benchmarks for Massachusetts, 8th
Edition, provides a meaningful comparison of the
workers’ compensation systems in Massachusetts and 13 other
important states on key performance measures such as benefit
payments and costs per claim, timeliness of payments, and
defense attorney involvement, by analyzing a similar group
of claims and adjusting for interstate differences in
industry mix, wage levels, and injury types.
The other states in the study were Arkansas,
California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland,
Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas and
Wisconsin.
Despite the increase in the average medical
cost per claim with more than seven days of lost time,
Massachusetts had the lowest average medical payment per
claim with more than seven days of lost time among the 14
study states, some 48 percent below the 14-state median for
2003 claims evaluated in mid 2006.
According to another WCRI study, The
Anatomy of Workers’ Compensation Medical Costs and
Utilization in Massachusetts, 6th Edition,
prices and utilization for most medical services in
Massachusetts were lower than typical of the states studied.
The medical fee schedule in Massachusetts, among the lowest
in the country, was a contributing factor in the lower
prices.
WCRI also found that injured workers received
their first indemnity payments faster in Massachusetts than
in other study states. Some 53 percent of injured workers in
Massachusetts received their first indemnity payments within
21 days of injury, 12 percentage points above the 14-state
median for 2005/2006 claims.
The
Workers Compensation Research Institute is a nonpartisan,
not-for-profit membership organization conducting public
policy research on workers’ compensation, healthcare and
disability issues. Its members include employers, insurers,
insurance regulators and state administrative agencies in
the U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand, as well as
several state labor organizations.
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