Four months into the COVID pandemic, early data show workers’ comp insurers are doing the right thing.
Two data sources support this assertion: CWCI’s just-released analysis of 1,077 California claims, and a dozen conversations I’ve had with insurers, large self-insured employers and service providers over the last two days.
First, California Workers' Compensation Institute: CWCI’s researchers and statisticians analyzed 1,077 COVID-19 claims from 28 insurer and self-insured CWCI members. Notably, these are claims filed before April 30, a week before the governor’s order granted a disputable presumption.
Key findings:
Other denials were due to:
Next, I’m in the midst of a second national survey of payers and service providers about their experience with COVID-19 (details on the first survey are here).
Key preliminary findings (based on a dozen completed surveys):
What we know so far:
Based on what we know today, workers’ comp insurers, state funds and self-insured employers are doing the right thing. Despite that, several states are contemplating bills or executive action to make workers’ comp the default payer for COVID-19.
California’s Senate Bill 1159 is the poster child. From CWCI:
“By including all types of employment without regard to the level of risk actually posted, the presumptions greatly expand the nature and scope traditionally encompassed by presumptions of compensability in California."
More specifically, the bill makes workers’ comp responsible for COVID-19 diagnoses even among workers deemed “low risk” for contracting the disease at work by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration — that is, workers with “minimal occupational contact with coworkers or the public.”
COVID-19 is a relatively small occupational issue, but a huge societal one.
Yes, workers who contract the disease through work should be covered by workers’ comp — and all the evidence to date indicates that’s happening. But work comp should NOT be the piggy bank for any and all COVID claims, which is precisely what SB 1159 and similar actions in other states would do.
What’s driving this is our totally dysfunctional health care system, one that relies on private insurers, employers and employees to generate much of the revenue and all of the profits. Hospitals, health systems, medical practices and other providers are in desperate financial shape; it will get worse over the next few months.
Dumping the responsibility for a societal pandemic on a tiny industry that pays less than 1% of total U.S. medical costs is not only irresponsible, it also won’t work. Workers’ comp insurers, excess insurers, employers and governmental entities don’t have the financial resources, skills, staff or capability to manage and pay for the care of hundreds of thousands of patients while also covering their lost wages.
This is society’s problem. It’s time governors, state legislators, Congress and the president do their job. Take responsibility, just as the workers’ comp industry has.
What does this mean for you?
Workers’ comp payers: Keep doing what you’re doing.
Joseph Paduda is co-owner of CompPharma, a consulting firm focused on improving pharmacy programs in workers’ compensation. This column is republished with his permission from his Managed Care Matters blog.
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