Copyright

(c) 2010-2024 Jon L Gelman, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

CMS Publishes Intrim Record Layout for Mandatory Reporting

CMS (The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) has published a proposed format for reporting data under the Medicare Secondary Payer Act. Section 111 of the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007 (MMSEA) (P.L. 110-173) madates reporting where, "...the settlement, judgment, award or other payment date is July 1, 2009 or subsequent and claims on which ongoing responsibility for medical payments exists as of July 1, 2009, regardless of the date of an initial acceptance of payment responsibility."

NJ Senate Passes WC Coverage Legislation

The NJ Senate passed (40-0) a substituted bill requiring the investigation of cases where employers fail to obtain workers' compensation coverage. The substituted bill adopts the suggestions of Governor Corzine who had proposed some changes in his October 2008 condititonal veto message.

The legislation requires the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor (IFP) to establish a liaison with the NJ Department of Labor and Workplace Development and authorizes the investigation of cases involving failure to obtain Workers' Compensation coverage.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

CMS Announces Intention to Clarify MSP Recovery Language

CMS has announced it intends to clarify the language in recovery scenarios where occupational exposures occurred prior to the effective date of the Medicare Secondary Payer Act.

Barbara Wright of CMS said at a recent town hall meeting,...
"If all exposure (peaks) before 12/5/80, then it is CMS policy that it will not assert a recovery claim with respect to any liability settlement. And that can depend on -- again I’ll use asbestos as the example. Let’s say that you’re suing five different entities. I’ve seen situations where three of the entities -- all exposure connected with them -- did in fact end before 12/5/80 wherefore at the last one there was some exposure after 12/5/80. We are looking at language that could potentially eliminate reporting when it’s clear that the exposure ended before 12/5/80. "


As CMS ramps up for mandatory insurance carrier reporting, additional town hall conferences have been scheduled.

National Health Leaps Ahead on Agenda


It should no surprise to anyone that the Obama Transition is already targeting national health care as a first year agenda item. With Senator Edward Kennedy and the Clintons anticipated to be major participants in the new Obama Administration, the health care issue has now leaped to forefront.

Senator Kennedy's return to the Senate this week coincided with his announcement of the formation of 3 working groups to assist in the development of heath care legislation. He announced the following participants to his team: Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.); Sen.Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) and Tom Harkin (D-Iowa). They planned a meeting for today in an effort to plan out the immediate effort. This signals that health care reform will emanate from the Congress and not The White House.

Insurance company reaction was immediate. The carriers offered full medical coverage for pre-existing coverage providing that there was a global requirement for all to be insured.

As this program rolls out it is most certainly anticipated that workers' compensation medical coverage be included in the global effort. Studies have long shown that the litigation progress delays the delivery of benefits, increases administrative costs and depletes much needed medical resources from health research efforts.

Monday, November 17, 2008

The Rush to Follow Oregon

Praising of the Oregon workers' compensation system continues in earnest by the insurance industry. The Workers' Compensation Research Institute's (WCRI), Duncan Ballantyne, presented the winning factors about the Oregon system at a seminar to reform the Oklahoma system.

A reform movement has been launched in Oklahoma to overhaul the Oklahoma system. Orgeon contines to have very low workers' compensation rates and utilizes an administrative system to resolve work related claims. Legislation has been authored by Rep. Mark McCullogh to abolish the adversarial system in Oklahoma.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Workers' Compensation Medical Benefits are in Critical Condition


Now that Barach Obama is a going to be at the helm of the US, greater attention is being focused on the need for a national health care system incorporating workers’ compensation medical coverage. With private insurance companies failing, unemployment increasing, the cost of medical care soaring, more attention has now been placed on the elimination of medical care as a workers’ compensation benefit paid by Industry.

It is not all surprising that Dr. Peter Barth reported to the WCRI Conference in Boston, that workers’ compensation programs may be swept up into a national health care system. He reminds us that this was attempted in the Clinton proposal. The enactment of such a proposal looks even more urgent now.

The medical system overall is now being stressed by: an aging workforce; medical conditions manifested by stress and aging; consumerism in health care; the attempt to shift costs from major medical plans and CMS to workers’ compensation; new and expensive treatment modalities, procedures and pharmaceutical products,and the expansion of palliative and “end of life care.” It is anticipated that the average cost may amount to $500.000 per claim.

The workers’ compensation system just can’t deliver medical treatment quickly and cheaply enough. The systems are frough with administrative costs delay. It is adversarial requiring legal timetables of investigation, litigation, adjudication and appeals. The progress of disease is not subject to court rules or judicial administration. Immediate and emergent medical treatment protocols follow a biological timetable not a legal one.

National health reform that embodies workers’ compensation as an element is a long awaited solution to coordinate and advance the delivery of health care to all Americans. Old, inefficient and archaic systems need to be abandoned if progress is to advance. Moving forward to the inclusion of workers' compensation into a universal and nationalized program for health care is an important and innovative change. The change is crticial and necessary to advance with science, the economy and the social structure of America.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

“Going Green”-Alternate Dispute Resolution Proposed for Comp

A proposal has been introduced in the NJ Assembly formalizing an alternate dispute resolution (ADR) program for workers’ compensation. The proposal would allow the establishment of such a system through collective bargaining units and insurance carriers and group self-insurance plans.

Such programs have been utilized throughout the United States for decades and are commonly called “carve-out” programs. Labor and Industry have found them cost-effective and an expeditious manner of handling work related benefits. The cost of the NJ system, has been estimated at $1.8 Billion. The Star Ledger, in a series of articles entitled “Waiting in Pain,” highlighted the frustrations that have emerged because of delays encountered in the present system. The series focused on delays caused by multiple and fragment hearings.

The proposal has been introduced at a time when workers’ compensation systems and Industry as well as injured workers are seeking ways to reduce the spiraling costs of the administration of workers’ compensation and to enhance the delivery of benefits. Workers’ Compensation is struggling to reduce costs and employ environmentally friendly systems. The ADR program is an attempt to reduce costs and reduce environmental impact.

“Going Green” is a concept now being utilized by administrative and judicial systems throughout the country. One company, CourtCall®, utilizes telephonic conferences to avoid court appearances to help save the environment. Workers' Compensation claims in NJ require multiple appearances of the parties for both pre-trial conferences and hearings over extended periods of time.

Some reviewers have suggested elimination of the high cost of workers’ compensation program entirely as a value no longer justifying tort immunity. Instituting an ADR system, in a time of economic stress and increasing environmental costs associated with administration of a formal system, may offer an option to explore.