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WISCONSIN WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COSTS PER CLAIM CONTINUED TO
GROW, WCRI STUDY REPORTS
Average Costs per Claim Still Among the Lowest of 14 Study
States
CAMBRIDGE, MA, April 2, 2008
–
The average workers’ compensation total cost per claim in
Wisconsin
grew rapidly for four of the five years in
the study including 8 percent in 2005/2006 claims, according
to a new study by the Workers Compensation Research
Institute (WCRI). This growth was driven primarily by the
increase in the medical payments per claim.
Medical costs per claim with more than seven
days of lost time grew throughout the study period, with
double-digit growth in four of the five years in the study,
including 14 percent in 2005/2006.
The study by the Cambridge, Mass.-based WCRI
also noted that the average total cost per claim in
Wisconsin was among the lowest of 14 states – 36 percent
lower than the median of the study states for 2003/2006
claims.
On nearly all measures examined in the study,
Wisconsin was lower than typical. An exception was that
medical costs per claim with more than seven days of lost
time were fairly typical for 2003/2006 claims. According to
another WCRI study, Wisconsin had the highest average prices
paid among the study states, but this was offset by lower
utilization of medical services.
Several factors played a significant role in
the lower cost per claim in Wisconsin, including faster
return to work; much lower permanent partial disability (PPD)/lump-sum
payments per claim; and among the lowest expenses per claim
for delivering indemnity and medical benefits to injured
workers.
The average indemnity benefit per claim with
more than seven days of lost time in Wisconsin grew by
nearly 9 percent in 2005/2006, following little change in
the prior year.
This was due to small changes in a number of
factors according to WCRI: an increase in the average
duration of temporary disability; growth in the average
weekly wage; an increase in the average permanent partial
disability (PPD)/lump-sum payment per PPD/lump-sum claim;
and a moderate increase in the frequency of PPD/lump-sum
claims.
Benefit delivery expenses per claim with more
than seven days of lost time and expenses rose 15 percent in
2005/2006, driven mainly by medical cost containment
expenses.
Medical cost containment expenses per claim
increased 21 percent in 2005/2006. Although growing at a
rapid rate, the average medical cost containment expense per
claim with expenses in Wisconsin was still the lowest of the
14 study states at all claim maturities, WCRI noted.
WCRI reported that Wisconsin was among the
fastest of the study states in terms of timeliness of first
indemnity payment. Fifty-three percent of injured workers in
Wisconsin were issued their first checks
within 21 days of injury, compared to the 14-state median of
41 percent. Faster payments may have been influenced by the
state agency’s efforts to monitor timely payments and to
provide payors with feedback about their performance.
The WCRI study, CompScope™ Benchmarks for
Wisconsin, 8th Edition, provides a meaningful
comparison of the workers’ compensation systems in Wisconsin
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 type.
The other states in the study were Arkansas,
California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland,
Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania,
Tennessee, and Texas.
The
Workers Compensation Research Institute is a nonpartisan,
not-for-profit membership organization conducting public
policy research on workers’ compensation, health care and
disability issues. Its members include employers, insurers,
and governmental entities, insurance regulators and state
administrative agencies in the U.S., Canada, Australia and
New Zealand, as well as several state labor organizations. |