Return to Work Programs: Best Practices for Handling Workers’ Comp Claims

Author, Casey Craig, Account Executive, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.

How do you handle the situation when a great employee is injured but not quite ready to return to full duty? We do all that we can to prevent injuries and make sure once they do happen our employees are taken care of quickly and properly. The one true variable we have in our control, after a claim has been filed, is how to accommodate employees that are injured but not able to return to normal duties until deemed fully recovered.

Your experience modification rate (X-MOD) is a very important component in your premiums and potentially securing bids in states like California. Every company has a primary threshold that is unique to the company. This is a dollar amount per claim that, once the medical, permanent disability, and temporary disability surpasses this threshold, has no further impact to your X-MOD. Carriers have medical review teams set in place to ensure that the medical portion of each claim is as low as possible, permanent disability is dictated by the treating doctor, so the only portion of each claim we have control over is how the temporary disability will be handled. Sometimes, even that is out of our control if an injured employee is not able to work in any capacity.

Ideally, your workers’ compensation doctor will quickly give you work restrictions and you will be able to determine if you have any available work within those restrictions. The bigger question is what to do with these employees if they are not fit for regular duty? Is it best to let the carrier handle the temporary disability portion of the claim, have the employee come back and work in your office doing odd jobs, or utilize companies like ReEmployAbility or carrier programs where they can work at any number of nonprofit organizations? Temporary disability mismanagement can add up very quickly and lead to a small claim turning into a claim that heavily impacts your X-MOD.

Making sure your employee feels valued and that they have a job to come back to is a great way to keep claims cost down and employee morale high. When employees sit at home waiting to recover, they may feel helpless and uncertain about their future, are exposed to countless commercials about injured workers and lawyers that claim they can make them rich. Keeping them at work, in some capacity, where progress can be seen and communication continues is beneficial for both the employee and the employer.

The intricacies of how to handle claims is something you hope to never need to be good at as an employer, which is why it is so important to have a broker and claims advocate on your side to help navigate the process with you.

This is a complex topic and if you would like to discuss further or talk about any other insurance needs, I can be reached at (619)438-6900 or you can email me at ccraig@ranchomesa.com.