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🏥 Workers' Compensation Guide

Workers' compensation is one of your largest insurance costs. Managing it well saves money and keeps employees on the job.

How Workers' Comp Works

The Basics

Workers' comp provides:

  • Medical treatment for work injuries
  • Wage replacement for lost time
  • Disability benefits
  • Death benefits

In exchange: Employees generally cannot sue employers for workplace injuries.

Who Pays

  • You pay premiums based on payroll and classification
  • Insurance carrier pays claims when injuries occur
  • Your EMR adjusts based on claim history (3-year window)

Classification Codes

Workers are classified by job type. Each classification has a different rate:

ClassificationDescriptionTypical Rate
5403Carpentry$8-15 per $100
5190Electrical$4-8 per $100
5183Plumbing$5-10 per $100
5213Concrete$12-20 per $100
5551Roofing$20-35 per $100
8810Clerical$0.25-0.50 per $100

Proper classification matters. Misclassification leads to audit problems.

When Injuries Occur

Immediate Response

  1. Get medical attention — Employee safety first
  2. Report immediately — Notify carrier within 24 hours
  3. Document everything — Photos, witness statements
  4. Complete First Report of Injury — State-required form
  5. Investigate — Determine root cause

The First 24 Hours

TimeframeAction
ImmediatelyFirst aid / emergency care
Within 1 hourNotify supervisor
Within 4 hoursComplete incident report
Within 24 hoursReport to insurance carrier
Within 24 hoursComplete OSHA log (if recordable)

Investigation

Every injury should be investigated:

  • What was the employee doing?
  • What was the immediate cause?
  • What was the root cause?
  • What can prevent recurrence?
  • Who witnessed the incident?

Return-to-Work Programs

Why It Matters

ScenarioEMR Impact
Medical-only claim~30% weight
Lost-time claim100% weight

Getting employees back to work quickly keeps claims as medical-only.

Modified Duty

Offer modified duty that accommodates restrictions:

  • Light physical tasks
  • Administrative work
  • Training
  • Quality inspection
  • Inventory

Sample Modified Duty Tasks

RestrictionModified Duty Options
No lifting over 10 lbsPaperwork, phone calls, training
No standing over 2 hoursSeated work, office tasks
No use of right handLeft-hand tasks, supervision
No climbingGround-level work only

Making It Work

  1. Get restrictions in writing from treating physician
  2. Communicate with employee about available work
  3. Document modified duty offered and performed
  4. Update as restrictions change
  5. Maintain contact with employee throughout recovery

Claim Cost Drivers

What Makes Claims Expensive

FactorImpact
Delayed reporting+30-50% cost
Lost time (vs medical only)3x weight in EMR
Surgery$50,000+ per claim
Legal involvement2-3x total cost
Permanent disabilityOngoing payments

How to Control Costs

Before the Claim:

  • Strong safety program
  • Proper training
  • Quality PPE
  • Hazard identification

During the Claim:

  • Immediate reporting
  • Quality medical care
  • Active involvement
  • Return to work program

After the Claim:

  • Root cause correction
  • Training updates
  • Policy review

Fraud Prevention

Red Flags

  • Injury on Monday (alleged weekend injury)
  • No witnesses
  • History of claims
  • Vague injury description
  • Delayed reporting
  • Employee problems before injury
  • Inconsistent story

Investigation

If you suspect fraud:

  1. Document everything
  2. Get recorded statement
  3. Check social media
  4. Notify insurance carrier
  5. Consider surveillance (carrier decision)

Don't accuse — investigate facts and let carrier/adjuster make determinations.

Working with Your Carrier

Be a Good Partner

  • Report claims promptly
  • Provide complete information
  • Respond quickly to requests
  • Participate in claims reviews
  • Ask for loss runs regularly

Request Information

  • Loss runs — Summary of all claims
  • EMR worksheet — Calculation details
  • Classification audit — Verify proper codes
  • Premium audit — Verify payroll calculations

Dispute Incorrect Information

If you find errors:

  • Document the issue
  • Contact carrier in writing
  • Request correction
  • Follow up until resolved

Annual Audit

At policy end, your carrier will audit:

  • Actual payroll by classification
  • Job descriptions
  • Subcontractor certificates

Prepare For Audit

  • Payroll records by employee
  • Job descriptions
  • Certificates of insurance from all subs
  • Quarterly tax returns
  • 1099s issued

Common Audit Issues

IssueResult
Uninsured subCharged to your policy
Misclassified employeeRate adjustment
Underreported payrollAdditional premium
Overtime calculationShould be straight time only