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The advice of an attorney should not supplant the specific and unique
questions as to your specific worker's compensation questions. The following
should be deemed as a general advice. Disability law benefits should be
distinguished from worker's compensation.
The privilege of receiving compensation for a work related injury arises
where the injury occurred "on the job" and not anywhere else. On the job
means that the activity that the employee was carrying out at the time of the
injury was work related or occurred during employment.
1. What are the Benefits Available in Worker's Compensation Cases?
Temporary Disability:
The Compensation law of the State of New Jersey, as of 1985, for
example, permitted the maximum of temporary disability that an employee could
receive as $269.00 dollars. This is calculated by taking 70% of the gross
average weekly wages of the employee. Thus, if 70% of the gross wages of the
employee is less than $269.00 then the 70% figure was the temporary
disability amount. If the 70% figure was over the $269.00 figure, then the
maximum amount that the employee would receive was the $269.00. The law would
permit the receipt of these funds, in order to permit a more humane treatment
of employees during the period of disfunction and recuperation, as long as
he/she is under active medical care and attention concomitant with the
disability being authorized.
Reasonable and necessary medical care and attention:
Medical care will be given to the employee pursuant to statute, by the
insurance company of the employer but only through the employer's authorized
physician. The treating physician is paid by the employer and he/she works
for the employer, in essence. Nevertheless, the obligation is between the
physician and the patient/employee. Of course, the employee may obtain an
additional physician but this would be at an additional expense not covered
by the employer's worker's compensation insurance benefits.
Permanent Functional Disability Benefits - Partial Basis:
Permanent functional disability is that which the Court assigns to the
employee after reviewing all the documents, medical reports and treatment
notes regarding the injuries and after hearing testimony concerning the
employees condition.
2. Can the Employee Go to His Own Family Doctor or a Physician of His own
Choice?
Under the New Jersey Worker's Compensation Act, the Employer has the sole
right to select on who becomes the treating physician for the employee. The
employee must go to that particular physician designated by the Employer
unless otherwise clearly informed. If the injured employee opts to also see
another doctor or treating facility then he/she is personally responsible for
any additional bills incurred with the other physician. The Court will
generally not enforce or otherwise compel the employer's insurance company to
pay for the outside physician's bills incurred.
3. Can a Second Opinion Help in Determining the Seriousness of the
Injuries?
Not usually. The reason for this is that these secondary reports are
usually from physician's who are unwilling to testify or will be too
expensive to compel their appearance in court and testify. They may, however,
aid the employee in determining whether surgery is necessary in serious
cases.
4. If The Employee Wins an Award/Settlement, What Occurs?
Compensation does not involve a jury trial. The employee only receives
the statutory benefits for the percentage of disability of a whole person
impairment ratings or by the limb that the court determines to be disabled.
The entire matter depends upon the particular judge's experience, expertise,
the physician's reports, the length of treatment, the employees testimony and
other related factors. The schedule of benefits begins at 0 and ends at the
100% range. Generally, it is divided by the hand, arm, leg, fingers, ears
(deafness), eye and leg injuries and the whole person impairment.
If the employee has an injury to any other portion of his body other
than the specific pritions listed, than it is determined by whole impairment.
When the judge determines a percentage of disability, then this rating
is translated under the statute for the year of the injury into a number of
weeks. Each week is then paid at the rate permitted by the statute for the
year of the accident. If the accident on the job occurred in 1985, the rate
per week began at $68.00 per week and after 180 weeks the same increases
upwards. The lump sum, if any, will be the number of weeks that the Court
awards from the last period of temporary disability to the date of the
judgment, less whatever assessments the court decides.
5. Is the Employee/Injured Person Entitled to a Jury Trial?
No.
6. Is the Employee Guaranteed to Receive Temporary Disability,
Medical Benefits and/or Permanent Functional Disability?
No. The employee must be temporarily totally disabled in order to
qualify for temporary disability benefits. This decision is determined by
the treating physician. In order to receive medical attention, the medical
treatment must be curative in nature so as to be designed to cure the
underlying disability or problem, as opposed to simply being palliative in
nature. For example, in simple back injury cases, the insurance company will
not approve a chiropractor, in many cases, because such treatment is viewed
as aimed to relieve the pain and not actually cure the underlying condition.
The employee only receives permanent functional partial disability if the
court finds that he/seh meets the standards and criteria for permanent
functional partial disability.
7. If the Authorized (employer's) Treating Physician Releases the
Employee to go back to Work and the Employee can not do the work, or the
Employer will Not allow the Employee to return with restrictions,
What occurs?
If the authorized physician informs the injured employee to return to
employment then the employee must make the attempt of returning to work. If
the employment then aggravates the employees' condition, the injured person
has a right to apply for continued additional medical care from the employer
or, alternatively, to file a new claim for the aggravation of the underlying
condition.
In any event, unless the injured person can demonstrate that he/she
is temporarily totally disabled, he/seh can not continue with the temporary
disability. The injured person must then report back to work and advise the
supervisor or foreman of the continuing injured status condition and inform
that the condition does not permit him/her to work.
8. If the employee is compelled to return to work by the authorized
treating physician, can the employee find another credible physician who
will determine the injured person temporarily totally disabled?
The injured employee or his attorney can file a Motion for a
continuation of disability. The motion must have an affidavit attached
explaining the subjective disabilities as well as a doctor's report stating
the need for continued medical care and that the employee is temporarily
totally disabled.
The effect is that even after the authorized treating doctor returns the
employee to work, and the employee attempts to work, the employee is behooved
to be evaluated again by his own private physician. This second consultation
and report may take weeks to receive. Afterwards, a motion is filed
immediately so as to get on the Worker's Compensation list of pending cases
(about 4-6 weeks) while the employee is not receiving any income.
The other alternative to this waiting stage is to file for a State
Temporary Disability Lien ( a different application ) for certain matters,
under State law. This other process generally takes 4-5 weeks to process and
the moneys from this source will be paid for a maximum of 26 weeeks,
depending upon the medical reports that are submitted.
Nevertheless, this other lien will have to be repaid at the conclusion
of the compensation claim, and will be deducted form the additional or
accumulated temporary disability. All that this additional funds do is
permit the employee to receive some State moneys while his/her primary
case is pending and then the temporary disability petition is determined
at the conclusion of the case.
9. What can occur to the employee's petition after returning
to work?
As soon as the employee returns to work, it is advisable that the
attorney be contacted. At that point, a permanency evaluation will be
scheduled wherein a doctor will examine the employee and submit a written
report as to the degree of permanent partial functional disability sustained.
The costs of this report varies. This physician must be paid at the time of
the consultation.
10. What are the lawyer's fees?
The worker's compensation statute permits an attorney(s) to only receive
the amount of up to 20% of all those benefits which the lawyer's efforts
has obtained for the injured employee. If the judge finds that the case is
not compensable, then the attorney earns no fees. Costs are deducted from the
award or settlement.
11. Once the Judge determines the value of the injuries, does this
conclude the matter once and for all?
No. If the court determines that the injured employees disabilities are
a direct result of an injury that occurred out of and during the course of
employment, then the employee has two years from the date in which the last
payment under the Judge's decision by which to "reopen" the matter. The
employee may only reopen the case if the permanent disability has
substantially increased within those two years or if he is in need of
additional curative medical treatment directly related to the work injury.
The insurance carrier must be timely notified.
a. Temporary disability (see below)
b. Reasonable and Necessary Medical care and attention (see below)
c. Permanent Functional Disability Benefits on a partial basis.
(see below).
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