Category Archives: Claims Management

A Fireside Chat with A Claims Adjuster

Our Claims Advocacy Team got to sit down with a workers’ compensation claims professional who specializes in high exposure claims. They discussed a high exposure claim that wasn’t reported timely to the carrier after the incident occurred.  

 

Please Note: This article has been edited for clarification and to protect the identities of those involved in the interview.

 

We’ve decided to call this interview a “Fireside Chat with a Claims Professional”, please tell me, are you actually in front of a lit fire or a fireplace or at least a match? 

Yeah, I have a nice scented candle lit, some nice ambiance for the room. 

What is your current role in the claims process? 

I oversee about 500 files, not directly managing the day to day activities and tasks to move a claim forward, but looking at it from a strategic standpoint, whether it be return-to-work, a settlement, or the resolution of some litigated matters.  I also assist clients in resolving their existing claims files.

Can you describe what a heavy litigated file/high exposure claim is?

Yeah, high exposure is really like your catastrophic claims. For example, someone who might be a paraplegic, quadriplegic, someone that suffers from a traumatic brain injury, or spinal cord injury. Those are leaning towards your high exposure. 

Heavy litigated are files that are going to essentially set a precedent in future case law and how it can impact lawyers and insurers in the future. 

Is the insured involved in the process at all? Or by the time that the issue reaches your hands is it completely out of the insured hands? 

I feel like most of the time the employers (named insured) are aware that I’m working on their files as a resource. Oftentimes I can be involved in the claims review process to help bridge some of the gaps that may be present, with the knowledge to move that file forward. 

 

However, It depends on the account and the type of policy that’s written because they (the insured) may be hands-off. They may have paid their deductible and then the claim is no longer the named insured’s problem. So they leave the claim up to the carrier going forward. 

 

You mentioned once their deductible is paid they often have a hand-off approach because it is no longer ‘their money’. Does the claim, the amount paid on the claim, and the amount paid from the deductible have an effect on their insurance? 

 

It has an impact on their rating. It affects their E-Mod (Experience Modification factor rating). What this means is when the insured goes out into the market place the following year when they are up for renewal,  that claim may show up. the incurred (paid + reserve) impacts their ability to be written for new insurance and essentially tells them what premium they’ll be paying.

 

From what you just told me, it doesn’t make sense for the insured to take a hands-off approach? Does that sound fair? 

 

I certainly think that they (the insured) should be involved because this directly affects and impacts their future with Mod ratings and what they’re going to pay for in the future. But many people still take the backseat approach. 

 

Though this often depends on the level of comfort they have with their carrier. So while I say it’s a backseat approach. It may seem a little hands-off because they feel confident in their carriers’ ability and what we put forth.  They know that we’re going to mitigate their losses as much as possible to bring it to a resolution. 

 

That’s a great point. I imagine this is true with a long-standing client, a company who’s been insured with you for a long time, they know the team and have the same players handling their claims, and they can kind of step back because they know that your team has their best interest at heart.

 

Seasonal/Winter Claims

 

So you’ve seen it all, as you’ve climbed the ranks in insurance and the claims world. Is there one type of claim you encounter where you just roll your eyes when it comes because it is the most common type of claim? This could be a winter claim, an industry-specific claim. 

 

I call them your classic injuries. The two most common ones that are seasonally driven are your slip and falls. They are the most common denominator in terms of what you see for December, January, February March claim volumes that come in. Slip and Fall will rank really high for what we see. 

 

Aside from that, lifting injuries are common as well. 

 

Are these injuries specific to a particular industry?  Do you only oversee construction, real estate, healthcare or are these claims kind of general and not industry-specific? 

 

I think claims like these are industry-specific. Your transportation carriers/delivery services, you typically see slip and falls from the parking lots or while they’re making a delivery to someones’ home. The same goes for lifting injury, that’s primarily where you see those.

 

 Construction is a fall from heights, that’s typically the most common one.  

 

Then the healthcare we see lifting injuries because your home health aides, they’re typically assisting with a client/patient, having to maybe get them up out of bed. Some of those patients are unable to help themselves get up, and typically these employees have to just lift 150 pounds to 200 pounds by themselves with no assistive device to help them do that. We see a lot of lifting and back injuries & neck injuries from that.

 

It sounds like our essential workforce, especially during COVID times are the ones getting injured the most.

Yes. I can agree with that. 

Most Expensive Claim That You Personally Have Seen 

 

What is the most expensive claim you’ve seen? For clarification when I say the most expensive claim it can be a specific body part that is a high dollar amount.

It depends on how high you’re looking to go. I’ve seen some claims that are multi-million dollars.

 

What was that? A multimillion-dollar claim? What was that Injury? 

 

Without disclosing too much detail, one employee rode in the back of a pickup truck of another employee, as they departed the employer’s location and a severe injury was sustained. It’s a multimillion-dollar claim because this employee needs 24/7 care and will need to live in a facility probably for the rest of their life. 

 

That’s tragic and I don’t think many insureds think about claims on that level. Maybe large corporations, like the transportation organizations we discussed earlier (UPS, FedEx, DHL.) Those companies have a large workforce at a national level, so maybe they’re more familiar with those. But smaller commercial clients, don’t see or even think that this could even happen, and now they’re looking at a multimillion-dollar loss that they didn’t budget for when running their business. 

 

Absolutely, and when we start to look at what happened and gather the facts around the event we start to ask questions like “What is your policy about having employees on site after work?” and if there is any surveillance footage of the location and what was actually happening. 

Having that information and the punch cards to show when they came in and when exactly they left.  in a lot of states, there are a number of “coming and going” rules that would either support the acceptance of or denial of that accident/injury, being considered within the course and scope of employment.

 

This ties into my next question, from your side of things I’m sure it’s frustrating when these claims, and you see that more could have been done from the insured standpoint. How can the client help in the claims process so it doesn’t get to your level? At least so they do everything they possibly can to help your team out, to help the adjuster out before it gets to you and it becomes a multimillion-dollar claim.

 

What we see very often, and in the example, we just talked about this claim wasn’t reported to us until several months after the accident happened.

 

Wow. 

 

It is so important to get it to us, even if they are not sure if it would be covered under Workers’ Comp. Oftentimes they (the insured) might think it’s covered under liability or if it’s a motor vehicle accident they strictly put it in as an auto claim. 

 

My advice would be to file that incident report, that first report of injury as soon as the incident happens. Let the carrier investigate it and be sure to really partner with the carrier to ensure that you’re getting them the information that they’re requesting. Preserving any evidence is crucial as well. 

 

So if you have surveillance footage be sure to take that and send it over right away. Witness statements are critical.  When you speak to someone right after an event happens the event is going to be right fresh in their head.  As opposed to trying to track someone down a few months from now, or even a week from now, their recollection of the event might vary. These witnesses might have also spoken to other employees about things being said around the workplace and you risk getting a skewed version of what actually occurred. 

 

Even include the profile for the employee: what’s going on? Oftentimes you’ll see they’ve run out of vacation time and now they’ve filed this claim. Then, we learn from other employees that this person was just taking a vacation. So all that information about what’s going on in this employee’s life and other things they’re aware of like disability claims that were previously filed for this employee in conjunction with just responding to the investigation as soon as it happens is pivotal.

 

I gather that a lot of times in an instance where this doesn’t happen, the insured is afraid of the repercussions and the carrier is going to penalize them. However, you don’t get penalized for doing the right thing, which is if you know something happened, report it. This way the carrier can work with you and guide you and do the investigation early on instead of 4 months out. 

 

So circling back to the example you gave us. What happened in the time it took for that event to hit your desk? 

 

In this situation, it was a case of “Everything that can go wrong, did go wrong.” The insured originally never put it through to workers’ comp. Why? 1. They were trying to pay for anything out of pocket to avoid having the claim show up on their claim history. Secondly, they heard this employee had passed away. The employer didn’t realize that the employee had survived the accident. 

 

Once we finally did receive the claim, the employees that participated in the internal investigation before it reached the carrier were no longer available for comment. 

 

This sounds interesting.

 

I’m not sure if that answered your question, but I’m not sure if this approach helped anybody because the state where this incident occurred is a state that requires you to get prior authorizations, and the employee already incurred several million dollars worth of care before this claim even reached us. There was no direction and we couldn’t negotiate the rates with the home healthcare. At this point, we’re trying to go backwards to try to project what could occur in the future. 

 

What a mess. 

 

This approach doesn’t work well from the financial standpoint either because it doesn’t help the injured worker and then the carrier is trying to quickly piece together to make a decision before the state’s deadline for when you have to file a decision. There is a lot of scrambling. 

 

This sounds so stressful. The insured may be able to self-pay but those accidents need to be very minor. Even if the insured does self-pay there are still forms that need to be filled out and the insured is required to keep them on hand but it sounds like in this instance it was a major accident, to begin with. 

 

Thank you so much for sharing. This touches on what a lot of clients are asking and are worried about. At the end of the day, they all want the best insurance rates and the best insurance coverage, but the only way to achieve that is cooperation and reporting things timely when an employee is injured. 

 

It sounds like in this instance the insured didn’t try to reach out to the injured employee because they didn’t know if he was still alive.

 

There was no contact made. In fact, it was asked for us to not contact the family until we (the carrier) had the full scope of what was going on because at that point we didn’t want to contact the family and give them unrealistic expectations of what would be covered.  The insured definitely learned a lesson on what not to do next time. 

 

Something as simple as reaching out to the employee who was injured, or reaching out to the family if you can’t get the employee,  and they’re not showing up to work is a big step and a huge help to the claims team and to the employer as well. They should know where their employees are. 

 

I find it very important for the employer to be engaged in this process. Whether they are a short-term or a long-term employee. Following up and showing that area of concern, asking them when they might return to work. It makes that employee feel valued. It could also result in a quicker return to work.

 

A great point you’ve touched on. 

 

The employer/employee relationship  

 

I ran into an issue where I was trying to encourage one of my clients to reach out to an employee that had gone MIA for a little bit. Their response was they didn’t want to because they were afraid that the employee would consider it harassment and the employer’s view was “this employee is out on workers’ comp. We have no right to speak to them.”

 

I think a lot of insureds feel this way:  once the employee is out on workers’ comp they’re not allowed to speak to the employee. But, what you’re telling me is this is not truly the case. 

 

To my knowledge, there is no employment law that prevents the employer from checking in on their employees. Disability does that to check in with their employees to check-in and see how they’re progressing and how they’re healing. The employer may not be able to ask directly “When are you returning to work” but they can ask how they’re progressing. 

 

Depending upon the relationship between the employer and the employee, the employee may be forthcoming with more information. 

 

A lot of times these folks are just home and don’t have many other people to talk with. A lot of them are isolated, working-class individuals. So their family, friends, and everyone else is at work, so they’re longing for social interaction. The employer reaching out shows the employee that they’re concerned about their wellbeing and the employee can be eager to come back.

 

It sounds like this is just the kind thing to do. 

I don’t know of any law that stops someone from doing that so we encourage reaching out to the employee. 

I wasn’t meaning this from any legal standpoint. I just meant a lot of employers are like “Well they’re out on workers’ comp. We’re not talking to them”. They’re still your employees.

Especially when some of these employees have been with the company for 15+ years. How do you let this accident happen and not show empathy or concern for how the employee is doing? I think from the carrier side of this we’re in situations where we can’t have direct contact with the employee because they’re attorney represented. Therefore the employer is our outlet to keep us updated.

 

Oftentimes they (injured workers) go to a doctor’s appointment and they give their employer a call with an update: “I just went to my  Dr.’s appointment and I’m going to be out for another 4 weeks. I need to go to physical therapy and then go back to the Dr.’s.” 

 

As a carrier, it takes us a longer route to get this information because we have to call the provider to get information, and sometimes it takes two weeks plus to get the office notes, depending on how long it takes the physician’s office to have their notes dictated. 

 

It’s often helpful to the carrier if the employer maintains that relationship with the employee. It can help get that person back to work sooner, which benefits the claim. 

 

You’re detailing a really important dynamic which we try to communicate to our clients, and it’s nice to hear the same from you, another claims expert. It’s a group effort and the insured is a key player in how these claims can end up. It starts with keeping in contact. Once the adjuster loses contact with the claimant due to attorney representation it sounds like the employer is the key person to maintain that contact and relay important information to you guys. 

 

I think that this is something a lot of people often overlook because it’s not common knowledge.

 

Exactly what I was saying. 

 

This has given us a lot to think about, to share with our clients. Is there anything else that I didn’t touch on that you were hoping to talk about? Any inside scoops.

 

You know, I gave an example of a catastrophic claim and there are other claims out there. What I think is always a challenge for employers is the accident description itself. Sometimes that’s where they start scratching their head. The employer starts asking themselves “Do I report this? Do I not report this? Should I be taking a hands-on approach? Do I let the claims team just handle it?”

 

The employer may not want to reach out during the investigation period, because the employee may start asking questions that they don’t have the answers to. 

 

Right. 

 

I’ve seen all sorts of things, and the issue is that there are various grey areas in claims that can affect whether or not the claim will be accepted by the carrier. 

 

You mentioned some of the more common areas of claims and can some of those be prevented? 100% Yes, but some will inevitably happen. The other side of this is the quicker we can get these resolved, and the greater involvement we can have earlier on, the more likely we will help the injured employee return to work sooner. The more we can do to prevent these accidents from occurring, the safer the staff is and the better things can be. 

 

Risk Management 101. Preach! Thank you so much for your time. Our fireside, Vanity Fair-esque interview. This was a lot of fun! I may be reaching back out to you for a summer edition of this!  

 

Claims management is an integral part of your insurance purchasing process. If you have any questions or need help with claims management within your organization contact one of our Metropolitan Risk Risk Advisors for information on our available programs. 

Protecting Your Workforce From Winter Related Illness

Winter weather creates new challenges for employers trying to protect their employees from work-related accidents. Snow and Ice. How are you protecting your employees from potential slip and fall incidents related to snow and ice? According to OSHA, 20% of all workplace injuries are due to trips, slips, and falls. 

Types Of Cold Related Illness

Every year, around 1,330 people die of exposure to the cold. These deaths are preventable with the proper clothing. The four types of Cold related illnesses are hypothermia, frostbite, chilblains, and trench foot.

Hypothermia

When your body is exposed to cold temperatures, the body begins to lose heat faster than it can be produced. Prolonged exposure will eventually use up the body’s stored energy.

Signs of Hypothermia:

Early Symptoms

  • Shivering
  • Fatigue
  • Loss of coordination
  • Confusion and disorientation

Late Symptoms

  • No shivering
  • Blue skin
  • Dilated pupils
  • Slowed pulse and breathing
  • Loss of consciousness

First Aid for Hypothermia

  1. Move employee to a warm room or shelter
  2. Remove their wet clothing
  3. Warm the center of their body first-chest, neck, head, and groin-using an electric blanket, if available; or use skin-to-skin contact under loose, dry layers of blankets, clothing, towels, or sheets.
  4. Warm beverages may help, but do not give alcoholic beverages. Do not try to give beverages to an unconscious person
  5. After their body temperature has increased, keep victim dry and wrapped in a blanket
  6. If the victim is unresponsive begin CPR

 

Frost Bite 

Frostbite is caused by freezing. It causes loss of feeling and color in the affected areas. Frostbite most commonly affects the nose, ears, cheeks, chin, fingers, and toes. It can cause permanent damages to body tissue and severe cases can lead to amputation. 

 

Symptoms:

  • Reduced blood flow to hands and feet (fingers or toes can freeze)
  • Numbness
  • Tingling or stinging
  • Aching
  • Bluish or pale, waxy skin

First Aid

  • Get into a warm room as soon as possible.
  • Unless absolutely necessary, do not walk on frostbitten feet or toes-this increases the damage.
  • Immerse the affected area in warm-not hot-water (the temperature should be comfortable to the touch for unaffected parts of the body).
  • Warm the affected area using body heat; for example, the heat of an armpit can be used to warm frostbitten fingers.
  • Do not rub or massage the frostbitten area; doing so may cause more damage.
  • Do not use a heating pad, heat lamp, or the heat of a stove, fireplace, or radiator for warming. Affected areas are numb and can be easily burned.

Chilblains

 Chilblains are the inflammation of blood vessels in the skin in response to repeated exposure to cold but not freezing air. 

Symptoms

  • Small, itchy red areas on your skin, often on your feet or hands
  • Possible blistering or skin ulcers
  • Swelling of your skin
  • Burning sensation on your skin
  • Changes in skin color from red to dark blue, accompanied by pain

First Aid

  • Keep hands and feet warm and dry
  • Wear gloves & socks
  • Change damp gloves and socks when needed
  • Move affected person inside

Cold related illnesses aren’t the only hazard that an organization faces with winter. Slip and fall injuries are more prevalent in the winter as well.

Social Engineering: Meaning and Impact

Definition

Social Engineering is the means of deception to extract sensitive, personal information that can then be used for further purposes, such as bank fraud, account takeovers, or identity theft. Cyber hackers primarily use social engineering when attempting to steal information of online users unaware of a hack currently happening. The main type will include phishing which fraudulently fishing for people’s information online through malicious contact.

Importance of Social Engineering

So why is cyber engineering important? Well, it can impact any of us at any time. Think about this. Currently, hackers have software applications designed to override firewalls and cybersecurity worth millions of dollars. However, hackers know technology is strict; a firewall will not listen give up information easily, but humans will. However, in a world of technology and hacking, hackers use human emotion and volatility as its main weapon. Hackers can sue the main target or those who directly know them to get any sliver of personal information that can help them in their quest. This is why every cyber user (which is most to all of us) needs to be aware of social engineering and its extreme dangers.

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Impact of Social Engineering

Every day, cyber-attacks occur on users without them ever having the proper protection against the attack. Then, they lose precious financial or personal information to hackers. Social engineering will continue to happen and impact us as long as certain things remain constant. If users are still inputting too much personal info into websites that can be hacked at any time. If people remain unaware of releasing personal info of themselves or others to a hacker. Or if their cyber liability coverage does not protect themselves or their company against social engineering.

An Example

The scariest part of social engineering is sometimes the hackers never need to come in contact with the targeted account’s user. Once you give your personal information to a website like Facebook or Twitter, the social media company and all its employees with high-level access can access your data and sell it for profit.

In late July 2020, there was an aggressive twitter hack, According to a WSJ article, a user named “Kirk” on a hacking forum claimed he was a twitter employee who had gained access to many twitter accounts and was selling them from $500-$10,000 an account, including Joe Biden, Elon Musk, and others.

The problem with these social media companies is due to the employees’ level of cyber knowledge they will give everyday employees who make normal amounts of money way too much access to the internal networks of its website. These employees can take this information used for large-scheme hacks like that seen a week ago. Or, they can give bits and information to hackers of different user’s accounts, without the user ever knowing.

Social Engineering is a component of cyber liability coverage that is often overlooked by businesses in any ndustry. However, it should be a crucial component of any written policy regarding cyber liability protection, individually or company-wide. For more information, click here.

Why Passphrases are the Future of Logins

Every so often, whether it be for a company software program like MOZ, a school database like blackboard, or even a personal social media account on twitter, you get one of the two ominous messages.

The Unwanted Messages

You get the “time to reset your password” right after you slowly got used to your new password. Now you have to create a new password that’s memorable but is also hard to crack. Yes, it is a measure of security and caution from the website that is admirable. It is a pain at best for the user.

Then there’s the other message: “oops, you forgot your password too many times. Let’s reset it!” This one is arguably worse because of two things. One, you have to create a whole new password just like the mandatory reset times. But, you have to make it easier to remember than your last one, since you just forgot it. That makes hacking for these passwords so easy.

Where we are with Passwords

While there are some awesome dual-factor authentication apps and tricks as well as new biometric security measures, hacking password details could not be easier right now. Soon, we’ll be strictly using biometric passwords like eye scanning and finger pad touch. Or just using dual-factor using an app like duomobile. But for now, passwords are becoming ever so easy to hack for cyber criminals. They have more advanced technology that can run dictionary hacks and algorithm checks at 1,000,000,000 searches a second. And the only thing standing between your account with credit card info and their supercomputer is the password “qwerty12345.” All jokes aside, that password is extremely common, and there’s simpler derivatives of that password that make the 25 most common passwords of 2020.

Passphrases

While waiting for that futuristic physical password technology, allow me to introduce you to a better password type: pass-phrases. Pass-phrases are exactly what it sounds like. It’s not a word with numbers and symbols, it is a whole phrase that may include further numbers and symbols. While some say it is only a small step of improvement over passwords, let me tell you why they are much more protected.

Benefits of Passphrases

First, the guideline check is simple. They’re just as protected against password guidelines on the vast majority of sites. They are also supported by many sites as well, meaning you will be able to use these wherever you can use your normal pass-word.

They’re more secure. It’s that simple. The more characters and difference in the change of characters, the better. As in, if your password is football10!, that is a password a hacker can crack manually, it’s so straightforward. Now imagine it being “Mile High Miracle 512!” That’s 21 characters compared to 11, which makes the computers check for 10 factorial more possibilities. Simply, that means “football10!” Is a mid-sized fish in a river, “Mile High Miracle 512!” Is a krill in the Pacific.

Example of good Passphrases

Also, football is too simple, and there’s no change after football. Being as specific as possible is best. Take Mile High Miracle 512! Mile High Miracle is a nickname for a specific famous game that my favorite team, the Baltimore Ravens won (it’s a reference to them beating the Denver Broncos in Denver). Next, the 512 part. The game is mostly famous because of one play. The Baltimore quarterback, number 5, threw a last-gasp touchdown to Baltimore wide receiver number 12, to tie the game. 512 is incredibly more random than 10, yet feels more memorable. See how easy that was?

Concluding Thoughts

My point is that passphrases are easier to remember than those one word and 2 number passwords. Especially if they’re close to your heart and mean something. That could mean a song lyric/title/album, or a movie phrase, or a famous sports moment. So if you are a big music fan, next time you are resetting your Chase account, take a minute before you rush to put “RockFan12345.” Think about passphrases, and try something more along the lines of “St41rway 2 Heav3n” instead. Trust me, the time it’ll take to remember which e becomes a 3 is the difference between a bank account compromise and having your financial records safe.

Still confused? Want to learn more about passphrase protection? Or just about cyber security in general? Contact a risk advisor today at 914-357-8444 or visit our website here.

COVID-19 on NYS Workers Compensation

The COVID-19 outbreak has spread all throughout America, but most notably in New York. Considering America’s largest metropolitan hub is New York City, when the disease hit it was bound to be catastrophic. Due to the heavy outbreak in New York, Governor Cuomo ordered a stay-at-home rule for nearly three months. This resulted in higher unemployment and less in-person work happening.

Increase in COVID-19-Related Workers Comp Claims

What exactly does this mean for Workers Compensation claims? It depends on what types of workers comp claims. Considering health care workers and essential first responders are eligible for workers comp, the workers comp claims due to the contraction of coronavirus have been large in quantity and amounts paid out. Coronavirus claims have been costly for insurance carriers per claim for two reasons.

First, the medical bills related to treatment of the virus are hefty: 6 days of hospitalization can cost $40,000. Second, insurance carriers set a high standard for respiratory Workers Comp claims after the 9/11 attacks. Respiratory diseases lime coronavirus can have permanent or long-term impacts, meaning more money out of insurance carriers. And because the coronavirus is a temporary pandemic and is no fault of the employer, premiums can not necessarily increase, meaning greater losses for carriers due to the costly COVID-19 workers comp claims.

Decrease in Non-COVID-19 Related Workers Comp Claims

However, the COVID-19 impact on NYS workers comp does not end there. Because of the lock down, the number of non-COVID-19 workers comp claims has significantly shrunk these past 3 months. So, financially, while the COVID-19 claims are more expensive than regular workers comp claims, the number of COVID-19 claims is still not as large as the average amount of workers comp claims, meaning that both of these effects of the outbreak have offset each other financially.

The question is now whether insureds will protest that due to there being less workers on payroll and claims being filed, WC premiums should decrease, meaning insurance carriers charge less on premiums to pay out almost the same amount of money. It is important to know the outbreak is not over and these figures may change when the pandemic finishes. Keeping up to date with the official NYCIRB and NY officials is the best way to keep track of insurance on workers comp effects from the pandemic.

Still confused? Still have questions? Call a risk advisor today at 914-357-8444 or visit us here at our website.

Note

*All of these statistics and findings were found in a June 2020 report on COVID-19 and Workers Comp claims written by the NYCIRB. The link is mentioned in the article, and can be found here.

Work Injuries – Main Types and Causes

Work injuries are all too common in the workplace. Just this year alone, workplace injuries will cost businesses over $59 billion, and that number continues to increase every year. Among the list of top workplace injuries, the “usual suspects” always rank near the top. These being accidents caused by falling, mishandling of objects, and auto incidents always rank near the top. Improper machine use, slip and trip, and awkward posture also cause thousands of injuries a year. The other injury type that has come on of late is overexertion. Overexertion injuries cost $1 billion every week in treatment alone, and ergonomics, the study of how to improve workplace efficiency, is dedicated to stopping these injuries.

Many define work injuries as specific physical damage to a worker while on-site or completing a task at work. This is an important definition as it can be very unclear whether a worker deserves workers comp. or not based on his injury.

While we list the top-10 types of work injuries, there is a root cause for all work accidents. The number one reason for work injuries is negligence from a worker or employer. Many injuries can be avoidable if the worker pays more attention to certain surroundings in the work environment. Or, if employers paid attention to their worksites and their worker’s health and safety. Another way injuries can be avoided is more employee training. With more safety training and knowledge on how to use machinery/handle objects, employees’ jobs are a whole lot safer. Employers should invest the money into this training. While it may not be a profitable payment, they save hundreds of thousands on fewer workers comp claims and lower insurance premiums. Additionally, employees have more job training and can work more efficiently with greater output. This is an obvious win-win.

View our Work Injury Infographic

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For more information, contact a Risk Advisor at 914-357-8444.

Cognizant Gets $400 Million Payout After Cyber Attacks

Technology consultant firm Cognizant fell victim to cyber-attacks caused by a ransomware attack last April. The hack disrupted thousands of employees from accessing networks from their home during quarantine. Clients also disallowed Cognizant to use their networks in case of further breach, causing major revenue and clientele loss.

Cognizant losses total $50-$70 million in lost sales, higher premiums, and defense/legal costs. Without cyber insurance however, the losses would be catastrophic.

Cognizant had out extensive money into cyber insurance premiums with multiple carriers. Insurance insider reports this investment turned out to be a good decision as they earned $400 million in cash reserves from their carriers, another huge loss for carriers in the cyber market. Carriers have been hard with higher loss ratios and claims frequency in the cyber market recently.

What is the overarching message? Right now, allocating resources towards cyber protection is no longer recommended but required. Cyber insurance of some form is necessary to protect against ransomware attacks and saving your company millions. However, insurance is not the only resource that needs investment. There is no way to fully protect yourself against cyber attacks with just insurance. We recommend proper employee training, duel-factor password authentication, and data encryption software.

Stay ahead of the curve and protect your company’s invaluable data. Invest properly and do not be afraid to spend a little extra for full protection. The premiums upfront may prove cheaper in the long run.

Still have questions? Contact a risk advisor today at 914-357-8444 or visit our website here.

National Safety Stand-Down Week Announced ( With INFOGRAPHIC)

OSHA recently announced that the National Safety Stand-Down Week will take place September 14-18, 2020. This week is to recognize fall dangers, and, in general, work-site safety. Fall-related injuries continue to be the number one leader in deaths and injuries in the construction industry. Over ⅓ of workplace deaths in construction were due to falls in 2018. Here are a few ways to “celebrate” the tradition.

If you’d still like more information on job site safety or need help with risk management, contact one of our Risk Advisors today or call 914-357-8444.

Heat Injury and Illness in the Workplace

An Under looked problem

Heat injury and illness is a serious work-related danger that affects millions of American workers each year. Not only do heat injuries directly cause injuries/illness, but at times they are the underlying reason for mishandling of equipment, and lack of focus that leads to other work-related injuries. While federal agencies such as OSHA publish articles on measures to prevent heat-related injuries/illness, at times these cautions do little. It is on the management to provide resources, knowledge, and safety measures for workers in constant risk of heat injuries and illness. Here are some ways to prevent heat injuries and illness.

How to Avoid Heat Injury and Illness

Provide Rest Breaks:

Management should provide several work breaks other than lunch every day. These breaks should include free water and a shaded location. This well help workers stay out of the heat, cool down body temperature, and replenish fluids.

Provide Information:

Your workers need to understand the dangers of working in constant heat. Manual labor in heat will cause a slower release of body heat and less sweat. This traps more heat in the body, raising the body temperature. This is a dangerous result, as 2 degrees fahrenheit higher than normal body temperature can cause dizziness, lack of focus, and dehydration. Once you hit 5 degrees past normal body temperature you are flirting with possible fatal illnesses. The more your workers know, the safer your workers will work under intense heat.

Training:

Training workers on how to avoid what prevention is nearly impossibly. However, training project supervisors on proper safety plans and measures is beneficial to all. Having set heat prevention measures in place for your supervisors to execute can save you money in claims and injuries.

Sometimes, these precautions still are not enough. Workers may still suffer from the effects of high heat and humidity. Here are a few steps to deal with a worker with a heat injury or illness.

How to Treat Heat Injury and Illness

Immediately Bring the Worker to Shade:

Give the worker tons of water to hydrate them. Ice packs to cool down their body temperature is also recommended. The best spot to cool down a worker is the back of the neck, as it helps control your entire body’s temperature.

Bring the Worker Medical Assistance:

If their symptoms continue to worsen or remain stagnant, calling an ambulance is the best option. Make sure to call the ambulance within the hour the worker first felt symptoms.

Loosen Clothing:

Loosening the worker’s clothing can help free entrapped heat between the skin and clothing. This will help cool the workers’ internal body temperature. It will also help with quicker blood flow, which will help the worker recover quicker.

Heat injuries and illnesses are not small cast-offs when talking about workers’ injuries and workers comp. These are critical parts of worker safety and health, especially in construction and work done primarily outside. Hopefully, this article will help bring important information to project supervisors and management about proper steps and safety precautions regarding heat injuries and illnesses.

Still confused and want advice? Call a risk advisor today at 914-357-8444 or visit our website here for more information.