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STUDY
PROVIDES BASELINE TO MEASURE IMPACT OF REFORMS
ON
ILLINOIS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION SYSTEM
CAMBRIDGE, MA, February
22, 2012 –
A new study, CompScope™
Benchmarks for Illinois, 12th Edition,
by the Workers Compensation Research
Institute (WCRI) provides useful baseline data to measure
the future impact of 2011 reforms in Illinois, designed to
ensure that the state’s workers’ compensation costs are
reasonable and competitive.
The reform legislation addressed key cost
drivers in the workers’ compensation system, especially
medical prices, by reducing fee schedule rates by 30
percent, introducing preferred provider networks for
selecting treating physicians, implementing American Medical
Association (AMA) guides for evaluating impairment and
requiring clinical reports by physicians.
“While it is too early to see results from
the 2011 legislative changes,” said Ramona Tananbe, WCRI’s
Deputy Director and Counsel, “WCRI’s new study can provide
insight into the results of major reforms enacted in 2006
and see in what areas Illinois may experience medical costs
higher or lower than that of a typical state.”
For example, WCRI found that the 2006 price
regulations had a short-term impact on the trend on medical
payments per workers’ compensation claim. Medical payments
per claim grew two percent from 2005 to 2006, following the
direct impact of the new fee schedules. However, medical
payments per claim increased an average of nine percent per
year after 2006. This was similar to the growth prior to the
introduction of the 2006 fee schedule, which limited growth
rates in the fee schedule rates to changes in the general
consumer price index or CPI. The main driver of this
post-reform growth was related to hospital inpatient and
outpatient payments per claim, according to WCRI.
Another key cost driver in the Illinois
workers’ compensation system during the study period was
indemnity benefits, which include payments for temporary
disability, permanent partial disability and lump-sum
settlements. Indemnity benefits per claim with more than
seven days of lost time were, on average, 33 percent higher
in Illinois than in the typical state. Several factors
produced this result. Illinois had longer duration of
temporary disability and more frequent and costly lump-sum
settlements.
In addition to providing baseline information
on medical costs, the WCRI study provides other key metrics
to monitor the impact of the 2011 legislation on additional
cost drivers, including indemnity benefits, lump-sum
settlements, and medical-legal expenses - such as expenses
for medical reports and independent medical examinations.
The study also shows how the Illinois workers’ compensation
system compares to the other 16 states in the study on these
and other key metrics.
The Cambridge-based WCRI is recognized as a
leader in providing high-quality, objective information
about public policy issues involving workers' compensation
systems.
ABOUT WCRI:
The Workers Compensation Research Institute
(WCRI) is an independent, not-for-profit research
organization based in Cambridge, MA. Since 1983, WCRI has
been a catalyst for significant improvements in workers'
compensation systems around the world with its objective,
credible, and high-quality research. WCRI's members
include
employers; insurers; governmental entities;
managed care
companies; health care providers;
insurance
regulators; state labor organizations; and state
administrative agencies in the U.S., Canada, Australia and
New Zealand.
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