A Costly Conundrum For Staffing Firms: Fewer Claims But Higher Medical Costs

There is an interesting paradox within workers’ compensation. It’s both good news and bad news for the staffing industry. Because of automation and greater attention to safety, work injuries are decreasing. According to Peter Rousmaniere, a well-known consultant in risk management, they have dropped by 35% since 1993. But, as he points out, the cost of claims administration has increased as have medical benefits. Benefits currently cost $65 million a year. 1A company can have 50 employees, but one injury, depending on the type, can cost an employer hundreds of thousands of dollars.

So why the rise in medical, if claims are dropping, and what does this mean for staffing firms? Staffing firms are employers too. In most states, staffing firms are jointly responsible for workers’ comp and must carry appropriate coverage for the different jobs classifications they provide. As such, they can pick and choose low risk categories. But supply and demand dictates that employers may require unskilled and semi-skilled workers with greater risk such as in some manufacturing and logistics jobs. They may also require skilled labor in risky services such as health care in correctional facilities.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration is putting a microscope on temporary labor, which one hopes will lead to improvements in safety. The data show that regardless of the profession, claims will continue to decline over the next ten years. At the same time, the use of temporary workers is expected to increase by 13% according to Economic Modeling Specialists International and CareerBuilder. If these trends continue, staffing firms will benefit from the increase in temporary workers and fewer claims. But those claims will be more expensive.
For a small employer this drives workers’ comp rates up making it difficult to find workers’ comp coverage. For some staffing companies the only option is a state fund.

Causes of Increased Medical Costs

  • The cost of workers comp reform. Despite attempts by numerous states to lower the costs of workers’ comp for employers, the results have been mixed. Many of the reforms include fee schedules, medical provider networks and medical treatment guidelines for work injuries, the latter of which can involve a utilization review process to determine the best treatment. Some states including Texas and Ohio have drug formularies for workers’ comp. Other states are considering formularies to control the cost and overprescribing of medication. California has gone through several rounds of reform and seen workers’ comp costs decrease in some areas. But the cost containment mechanisms create a bureaucracy that costs money in administration and compliance. As a result, third-party vendors have sprung up to provide these services. Claims adjusters have to be trained in the new regulations, which vary by state. What’s considered acceptable treatment in one state may not be so in another.
  • Profiteering in pharmaceuticals. As workers’ comp reforms capped fees and limited treatment, many enterprising physicians turned to office dispensing of medications. Because the drugs were dispensed by the doctor directly, the markup would be three or four times the cost of the same medication at a pharmacy. This is lucrative business for physicians, but a major cost driver for employers. Eighteen states, including California, closed this loophole. While costs dropped in California, according to the Workers’ Compensation Research Institute, physicians found ways around the law. If a fee schedule is based on specific dosages, doctors change to a dosage outside the schedule and continue to charge above the average wholesale price. This practice also poses dangers to injured workers, as many of the medications are pain killers including opioids. Easy access and little oversight fuels addiction.
  • Specialty drugs. They’re a breakthrough in treatment, but the cost of these drugs can be high. One such drug, Solvaldi, is used to treat Hepatitis C. Hepatitis C is most common in professions where the possibility of a needle prick can expose workers to blood borne pathogens, such as health care. They can be expensive costing $1,000 a day, according to Teresa Bartlett, senior vice president of medical quality for Sedgwick Claims Management Services Inc. 2Like many medications, as new brands and generics enter the market, costs may drop. A big unknown is whether, despite the cost, these drugs are effective. Insurers and employers—in particular staffing companies providing nurses or health care professionals– need to pay attention to the length of treatment and switch medications if necessary.
  • Compound drugs. The use of compound drugs continues to plague the workers’ comp system, despite attempts to curtail it. Compounds are mixtures of different drugs sold at huge markups. Topical compounds are common and almost identical to off-the-shelf brands with added ingredients of dubious effectiveness such as wasabi. California placed fee schedules on compounds in 2012, but according to research by the California Workers’ Compensation Institute while this resulted in a decline in prescribed compounds, costs continued to grow, partly because of the addition of new ingredients, which increased the expense3. Future studies will determine if this is a trend and if more changes to the fee schedule will fix the problem.
  • Improvements in medical care. This is a good thing for injured workers, but costly for employers. Thanks to breakthroughs in robotics and prosthetics, injured workers are able to regain mobility after catastrophic work accidents. Even those workers with brain injuries and quadriplegics can live longer lives. None of these technologies are cheap and with longer life spans, employers need to take into account the cost of Medicare Set Asides (MSA).
  • Litigation. Litigation is a significant cost driver. Injured workers feel they have no choice, but to get a lawyer, if employers and insurance companies delay or deny treatment. In states such as California reforms over the last several years have limited treatment and permanent disability payments. Some laws are so convoluted that it takes a lawyer just to interpret it. The longer treatment is delayed, the more likely an injured worker will obtain counsel. Employers will also incur their own legal bills and may prefer to settle at some point, even if it means agreeing to treatment outside medically approved guidelines. These claims are usually the most expensive any may involve body parts that are difficult to treat such as backs and shoulders.
  • Challenges to the no-fault system. Factors such as cumulative trauma and comorbidities such as weight or hypertension can aggravate injuries causing litigation. These injuries may also result in temporary or permanent disability. Payers may refuse to pay all or parts of a claim where the injury is aggravated by a pre-existing condition. California is considering legislation that would prevent discrimination against women injured at work, if a payer asserts an injury was caused, or aggravated by, pregnancy or menopause.
  • Delayed Return to Work. Part and parcel of expensive claims is the impact they have on return to work. According to research by the Workers’ Compensation Research Institute, injured workers who feared for their jobs and distrusted their supervisors or claims adjusters were slower or less likely to return to work. This causes claims to linger and increase in costs as benefits continue to accrue. Employers need to do their best to accommodate injured workers, even if it means moving them to a different job. Communication is important, especially if an injured worker feels he or she may get fired or mistreated.
  • Copy service fees. Litigators on both sides of a workers’ comp dispute say they’re being charged ridiculous amounts of money by copy services to make copies of documents related to workers’ comp cases. It is a relatively small cost driver, but whether a fee schedule for copy services is necessary is being debated, particularly in California. Recent legislation in the Golden State includes a requirement to come up with some sort of pricing scheme. Despite its relatively miniscule impact on the cost of a claim, it is one more example of a third party making money off the system.
  • New types of claims. Many states are considering post-traumatic stress disorder as a work injury including Colorado and Connecticut. Connecticut’s bill, should it be signed by the governor, would apply only to firefighter, police and first responders, a cost that will be passed onto taxpayers. Because this a new trend, it is unknown whether it will increase claims, but it could increase in the cost depending on the treatment. It could also spark debates on whether it should apply to the workplace in general because of bullying or harassment. So far these proposals have faced an uphill battle in public safety because of budget constraints.

It is too soon to tell whether state reforms will drive down medical costs. Unfortunately, when one cost is contained another one opens, prompting a new discussion on how it should be addressed. The grand bargain of workers’ compensation is supposed to be between the employer and the worker. On the upside, fewer accidents and cutting edge medical care is getting workers’ back to work and improving quality of life. On the downside, abuse and profiteering by third parties and lack of communication between injured workers, employers and claims adjusters will continue to increase medical costs and poor outcomes for injured workers.

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1 Rousmanieri, Peter. Seismic Shift: An Essential Guide for Practitioners and CEOs in Workers’ Comp. February 2015
2 Goldberg, Stephanie. “Specialty, Compounded Drugs Driving Up Costs.” Business Insurance. March 12, 2015
3 Swedlow, Alex, Gardner, Laura B., Ireland, John, “Differences In Outcomes for Injured Workers Receiving Physician-Dispensed Repackaged Drugs in the California Workers’ Compensation System. California Workers’ Compensation Institute. February 2013.

 

Is The Workers’ Compensation System Broken?

It has been an inescapable topic ever since the investigative outfit, Pro Publica, published its piece on workers’ compensation “The Demolition of Workers’ Comp.” Pro Publica concludes that states’ workers’ comp systems have slashed benefits and medical care to injured workers, while increasing insurance carrier profits. The piece has received praise and criticism from all quarters. Does it portend a change in workers’ comp —perhaps to a federal system?

A federal system is a bad idea for a number of reasons, not least of which is a cumbersome bureaucracy. States also have different industries and populations. For example, farm labor is huge in California, but in other states, it’s oil and gas. Costs related to safety and treatment will vary depending on these factors. These affect the premiums of staffing firms and their client employers. The no fault system, or “grand bargain”–is between employers and workers. It’s not between workers and lawyers or employers and insurance companies. It doesn’t need federalization, it needs enforcement. Preventing profiteering and re-defining the scope of injuries to address the ever growing list of health and workplace conditions is a start.

But for now, safety and adherence to workers’ comp rules and regulations will ensure staffing firms are paying adequate premiums and what’s medically necessary to get injured workers back on their feet. A program such as a Professional Employer Organization (PEO) can help.

Please call us for a FREE workers’ compensation quote at 202-302-1212. Or visit us as www.StaffingCompSolutions.com.

All the best
David Schek
President-Work Comp Staffing Solutions

Over 25 Years of Staffing Workers Compensation Experience

ACA Cost Shifting Could Increase Workers’ Comp Rates

There may more unintended consequences of the Affordable Care Act on employers, including staffing companies, if workers’ comp experts are to be believed. According to recent research by the Massachusetts-based Workers’ Compensation Research Institute (WCRI), the Accountable Care Organizations (ACO) created by the ACA are driving a lot of group health care cases into the workers’ comp system. As is usually the case, money is the primary incentive. Workers’ comp pays higher rates than group health, so why wouldn’t a provider want to shift non-work related injuries to workers’ comp?

WCRI studies show this is happening, especially with soft tissue injuries such as sprains. It’s also more likely to happen in states with a greater number of capitated health plans. ACOs use the capitated pay model. If ACOs gain popularity and these cost shifts continue to happen, staffing companies could see an increase in their workers’ comp rates.

Even though it will be hard to control how physicians classify injuries, staffing companies should pay close attention to their work injury reporting and claims handling, so they can rebut any doctor’s finding that says an injury is work-related when it was not. This latest development makes it all the more important to have an experienced well-staffed back office. A Professional Employer Organization (PEO) can help.

Please call us for a FREE workers’ compensation quote at 202-302-1212. Or visit us as www.StaffingCompSolutions.com.

All the best
David Schek
President-Work Comp Staffing Solutions

Over 25 Years of Staffing Workers Compensation Experience.

Staffing Firms Could Feel The Impact From Changes In State Workers’ Comp Systems

Staffing firms may have to adjust to several changes in state workers’ comp systems. If a bill passes in Tennessee, it would be the third state along with Texas and Oklahoma to allow employers to set up their own workers’ comp programs. Attorneys are challenging Oklahoma’s opt-out law, which only took effect last year. Tennessee’s law would allow an employee to file a lawsuit. Both Connecticut and Arizona are debating bills that would cover emotional and mental distress and post-traumatic stress disorder.

If these bills pass, staffing firms will need to pay careful attention to how they will affect the cost of their workers’ comp coverage and the kinds of risks they take on. Arizona’s PTSD bill only applies to police and firefighters, but it could set a precedent for other types PTSD in the workplace. Connecticut’s bill targets employees with emotional fallout from “extreme workplace violence.” It will not only increase costs for staffing firms, temporary employees who suffer from this distress will likely require special accommodations.

Should these laws come to fruition, a Professional Employer Organization (PEO), can sort out the tangled web of workers’ comp rules and regulations. Please call us for a FREE workers’ compensation quote at 202-302-1212. Or visit us as www.StaffingCompSolutions.com.

All the best
David Schek
President-Work Comp Staffing Solutions

Over 25 Years of Staffing Workers Compensation Experience.

Professional Employer Organizations Are Still The Best Option for Staffing Firms

Staffing firms have many options for their workers’ comp insurance including direct carriers, state funds large deductible policies, and professional employer organizations (PEOs). It’s been noted in the industry that a large deductible policy or guaranteed loss program is preferable, but that is frequently not the case.

If you don’t have a “mature” staffing company with a dedicated risk management program and a chief financial officer in the back office to determine how much risk you can take, a PEO is a much better option. Workers’ comp insurance is one of the biggest expenses a staffing company has, and claims can be costly in time and money. PEOs have low deductibles and are affordable.

As more employers use temporary employees, there are small staffing firms popping up to pick of the slack in key areas. And a dedicated back office to ascertain risk and a strong balance sheet is usually not something they have. PEOs can handle all the staffing firm back office functions associated with workers’ comp requirements, until they can wrap their arms around the business. Once they’re in a stronger financial situation, they can consider other options.

Please call us for a FREE workers’ compensation quote at 202-302-1212. Or visit us as www.StaffingCompSolutions.com.

All the best
David Schek
President-Work Comp Staffing Solutions

Over 25 Years of Staffing Workers Compensation Experience.

Too Many Lawyers Can Increase Your Premiums

Once an employer has confirmed that an injury arose out of employment, the workers’ comp carrier is supposed to pay the claim and work with employer and claimant to get the worker back to work quickly. Unfortunately this doesn’t always happen, if the injured workers don’t think they’re being treated fairly.

When injured workers think they are not getting the care they need or the benefits to which they are entitled, they call a lawyer. Lawyers can double and triple the cost of any claim and possibly increase the premiums your staffing firm pays. In some states, such as California, the law itself can be so byzantine that a lawyer is almost required. That doesn’t have to be the case with all or even most injuries. Here are some tips to avoid litigation.

  • Maintain communication at all times. These are your employees and they are valuable. Check in with them on their case and care, and respond to their concerns and questions.
  • Make sure benefits are being paid in a timely fashion and that the worker is getting all approved care including prescriptions paid for.
  • Assure the injured worker that he will return to work and discuss how and when that will happen.

The laws regarding medical treatment, benefits and return to work requirements can differ by state. Professional Employer Organizations (PEOs) can keep track of the workers’ comp requirements helping provide a valuable source of information to your injured workers. Please call us for a FREE workers’ compensation quote at 202-302-1212. Or visit us at www.StaffingCompSolutions.com.

All the best
David Schek
President-Work Comp Staffing Solutions

Over 25 Years of Staffing Workers Compensation Experience.