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First Glance at
Accepted Disabling Claims, 2002


by Juli Ross-Mota


The Oregon Workers' Compensation Division (WCD) received 23,482 accepted disabling workers' compensation claims during calendar year 2002. Of these claims, 52 were fatalities. Accepted disabling claims are claims that are accepted by insurers and received by WCD for disabling occupational injuries or diseases. This is the lowest number of accepted disabling claims received since 1966 legislative reforms made workers' compensation insurance mandatory for most employers and standardized data collection began.

Employment, accepted disabling claims and claims rates, Oregon, 1988-2002

Notes:

1. 1998-2001 employment figures are estimated workers' compensation covered employment developed primarily from data supplied by the Oregon Employment Department. Figures represent annual average employment.

2. Claims rates are the number of claims per 100 workers. Disabling claims include fatalities.

3. Fatality rates are the number of fatality claims per 100,000 workers.

4. 2002 Employment, Claims Rate, and Fatality Rate estimates are preliminary. The Covered Employment estimate is based on data from the Oregon Office of Economic Analysis forecast of non-agriculture wage and salary employment.

5. Link to major industry division rates.


The statewide claims rate declined to 1.4 claims per 100 workers, the lowest claims rate ever recorded in Oregon (see table above). The fatalities rate increased to 3.1 claims per 100,000 workers, a rise from the 2001 rate of 2.1 fatal claims per 100,000 workers.

Figure 1. Percentage change of emplyment and accepted disabling claims, Oregon, 1988-2002

The number of accepted disabling claims dropped 4.7 percent from the 2001 figure; at the same time, the number of workers covered by workers' compensation increased by 2.1 percent (see Figure 1). This fits the pattern of recent years, with the exception of 2001, of declining numbers of accepted disabling claims from an expanding pool of workers. Between 1998 and 2002, the number of workers covered by Oregon's workers' compensation law increased 4.9 percent, while the number of accepted disabling claims declined 13.2 percent.

Figure 2. Employment & ADC Trends, Oregon, 1988-2002

The trend of steadily declining numbers of claims and claims rates began in the late eighties (see Figure 2), following record high premium rates, claims costs, and numbers of claims. In 1986, Oregon employers paid the sixth highest average workers' compensation premium rates in the country. At the same time, medical and permanent disability costs for injured Oregonians were among the highest in the nation, while benefits were considered among the lowest. These factors led to many reforms to Oregon's workers' compensation system.

The 1987 legislature took the first major step by enacting HB 2900. This bill expanded OR-OSHA's consultative program, requiring insurers and self-insured employers to provide safety and health loss prevention programs, and increasing penalties against employers who violate the Oregon Safe Employment Act. Three years later, SB 1197 and SB1198 were passed. SB1197 extended HB 2900 by requiring many employers to establish safety and health committees.

With SB 1197, the legislature also changed the definitions of compensability for both injuries and diseases. Reforms required that a compensable injury or disease be established by medical evidence and supported by objective findings. In addition, the compensable injury, not a pre-existing condition, must be the major contributing cause for the worker's condition. For an occupational disease claim to be compensable, the condition must be caused by substances or activities to which an employee is not ordinarily subjected. Injuries from recreational and social activities are excluded. Injuries arising from the use of alcohol or drugs are excluded when proven by clear and convincing evidence that the alcohol or drug is the major contributing cause of the injury. (In 1995, the legislature reduced the standard of proof to the "preponderance of evidence.") More refinements to the reforms were enacted during subsequent legislative sessions.

In 2001, the Legislature enacted several workers' compensation bills that impacted various facets of Oregon's workers' compensation system. The most complex and comprehensive was Senate Bill 485, which was created to correct unanticipated imbalances and consequences of previous legislation. One of the bill's key changes was to the definition of preexisting conditions. The definition was narrowed, and with the exception of arthritis, untreated and undiagnosed preexisting conditions are no longer grounds for denying compensability. Additionally, the burden of proving the existence of a preexisting condition is now placed upon the employer rather than the claimant.

For a more comprehensive and chronological history of legislative reforms, see Appendix 1 of the report Monitoring the Key Components of Legislative Reform.

In addition to the effects of workers' compensation reforms, changes in claims handling procedures and claims management by insurers and employers have been reported as contributing to the decline in accepted disabling claims. Another influence may be a shift in Oregon's economy over the past 15 years, with fewer workers in the hazardous wood products industry, and more workers in comparatively safer high-tech and service industries.

Finally, the increased emphasis on safety and health has played a vital role in the reduction of both the numbers and frequencies of work-related claims in Oregon. With employers, workers, and government working together, Oregon's work sites have become safer.


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If you have questions about the information contained in this document, please contact by e-mail or phone: Juli Ross-Mota, Research Analyst, Research & Analysis Section, Information Management Division (503) 947-7359.

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This web page was last revised: 05/20/2003.