Sunday, January 27, 2013

Technology kills jobs for middle class | TribLIVE


By The Associated Press

Published: Saturday, January 26, 2013, 12:01?a.m.
Updated 2 hours ago

NEW YORK ? Five years after the start of the Great Recession, the toll is terrifyingly clear: Millions of middle-class jobs have been lost in developed countries the world over.

And the situation is even worse than it appears.

Most of the jobs will never return, and millions more are likely to vanish as well, say experts who study the labor market. What?s more, these jobs aren?t just being lost to China and other developing countries, and they aren?t just factory work. Increasingly, jobs are disappearing in the service sector, home to two-thirds of all workers.

They?re being obliterated by technology.

Year after year, the software that runs computers and an array of other machines and devices becomes more sophisticated and powerful and capable of doing more efficiently tasks that humans have always done. For decades, science fiction warned of a future when we would be architects of our own obsolescence, replaced by our machines; an Associated Press analysis finds that the future has arrived.

?The jobs that are going away aren?t coming back,? says Andrew McAfee, principal research scientist at the Center for Digital Business at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and co-author of ?Race Against the Machine.? ??I have never seen a period where computers demonstrated as many skills and abilities as they have over the past seven years.?

The global economy is being reshaped by machines that generate and analyze vast amounts of data; by devices such as smartphones and tablet computers that let people work just about anywhere; by smarter, nimbler robots; and by services that let businesses rent computing power when they need it, instead of installing expensive equipment and hiring IT staffs to run it. Whole employment categories, from secretaries to travel agents, are starting to disappear.

?There?s no sector of the economy that?s going to get a pass,? says Martin Ford, who runs a software company and wrote ?The Lights in the Tunnel,? a book predicting widespread job losses. ?It?s everywhere.?

The numbers startle labor economists. In the United States, half the 7.5 million jobs lost during the Great Recession were in industries that pay middle-class wages, ranging from $38,000 to $68,000. But only 2 percent of the 3.5 million jobs gained since the recession ended in June 2009 are in midpay industries. Nearly 70 percent are in low-pay industries, 29 percent in industries that pay well.

In the 17 European countries that use the euro as their currency, the numbers are worse. Almost 4.3 million low-pay jobs have been gained since mid-2009, but the loss of midpay jobs has never stopped. A total of 7.6 million disappeared from January 2008 through last June.

Experts warn that this ?hollowing out? of the middle-class workforce is far from over. They predict the loss of millions more jobs as technology becomes even more sophisticated and reaches deeper into our lives. Maarten Goos, an economist at the University of Leuven in Belgium, says Europe could double its middle-class job losses.

Some occupations are beneficiaries of the march of technology, such as software engineers and app designers for smartphones and tablet computers. Overall, though, technology is eliminating far more jobs than it is creating.

To understand the impact technology is having on middle-class jobs in developed countries, the AP analyzed employment data from 20 countries; tracked changes in hiring by industry, pay and task; compared job losses and gains during recessions and expansions over the past four decades; and interviewed economists, technology experts, robot manufacturers, software developers, entrepreneurs and people in the labor force who ranged from CEOs to the unemployed.

The AP?s key findings:

? For more than three decades, technology has reduced the number of jobs in manufacturing. Robots and other machines controlled by computer programs work faster and make fewer mistakes than humans. Now, that same efficiency is being unleashed in the service economy, which employs more than two-thirds of the workforce in developed countries. Technology is eliminating jobs in office buildings, retail establishments and other businesses consumers deal with every day.

? Technology is being adopted by every kind of organization that employs people. It?s replacing workers in large corporations and small businesses, established companies and start-ups. It?s being used by schools, colleges and universities; hospitals and other medical facilities; nonprofit organizations and the military.

? The most vulnerable workers are doing repetitive tasks that programmers can write software for ? an accountant checking a list of numbers, an office manager filing forms, a paralegal reviewing documents for key words to help in a case. As software becomes even more sophisticated, victims are expected to include those who juggle tasks, such as supervisors and managers ? workers who thought they were protected by a college degree.

? Thanks to technology, companies in the Standard & Poor?s 500 stock index reported one-third more profit the past year than they earned the year before the Great Recession. They?ve also expanded their businesses, but total employment, at 21.1 million, has declined by a half-million.

? Start-ups account for much of the job growth in developed economies, but software is allowing entrepreneurs to launch businesses with a third fewer employees than in the 1990s. There is less need for administrative support and back-office jobs that handle accounting, payroll and benefits.

? It?s becoming a self-serve world. Instead of relying on someone else in the workplace or our personal lives, we use technology to do tasks ourselves. Some find this frustrating; others like the feeling of control. Either way, this trend will only grow as software permeates our lives.

? Technology is replacing workers in developed countries regardless of their politics, policies and laws. Union rules and labor laws may slow the dismissal of employees, but no country is attempting to prohibit organizations from using technology that allows them to operate more efficiently ? and with fewer employees.

Technological innovations have been throwing people out of jobs for centuries. But they eventually created more work, and greater wealth, than they destroyed. Ford, the author and software engineer, thinks there is reason to believe that this time will be different. He sees virtually no end to the inroads of computers into the workplace. Eventually, he says, software will threaten the livelihoods of doctors, lawyers and other highly skilled professionals.

Many economists are encouraged by history and think the gains eventually will outweigh the losses. But even they have doubts.

?What?s different this time is that digital technologies show up in every corner of the economy,? McAfee says.

Peter Lindert, an economist at the University of California, Davis, says the computer is more destructive than innovations in the Industrial Revolution because the pace at which it is upending industries makes it hard for people to adapt.

Occupations that provided middle-class lifestyles for generations can disappear in a few years. Utility meter readers are just one example. As power companies began installing so-called smart readers outside homes, the number of meter readers in the United States plunged from 56,000 in 2001 to 36,000 in 2010, according to the Labor Department.

In 10 years? That number is expected to be zero.

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Source: http://triblive.com/business/headlines/3351101-74/jobs-technology-software

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Syrian forces escalate offensive in Homs

BEIRUT (AP) ? Syria's army unleashed a barrage of rocket and artillery fire on rebel-held areas in a central province Friday as part of a widening offensive against fighters seeking to oust President Bashar Assad. At least 140 people were killed in fighting nationwide, according to activist groups.

The United Nations said a record number of Syrians streamed into Jordan this month, doubling the population of the kingdom's already-cramped refugee camp to 65,000. Over 30,000 people arrived in Zaatari in January ? 6,000 in the past two days alone, the U.N. said.

The newcomers are mostly families, women, children and elderly who fled from southern Syria, said Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. She said the UNHCR was working with the Jordanian government to open a second major camp nearby by the end of this month.

Many of the new arrivals at Zaatari are from the southern town of Daraa, where the uprising against Assad first erupted nearly two years ago, the Britain-based Save the Children said Friday.

Five buses, crammed with "frightened and exhausted people who fled with what little they could carry," pull up every hour at the camp, said Saba al-Mobasat, an aid worker with Save the Children.

The exodus reflected the latest spike in violence in Syria's civil war. The conflict began in March 2011 after a peaceful uprising against Assad, inspired by the Arab Spring wave of revolutions that toppled leaders in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen, turned violent.

Despite significant rebel advances on the battlefield, the opposition remains outgunned by government forces and has been unable to break a stalemate on the ground.

In Lebanon, the leader of the Syria-backed Lebanese Hezbollah group, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, said Friday in a speech that those who dream about "dramatic changes" taking place in Syria should let go of their fantasies.

"Particularly those who were expecting the fall of Damascus," he told supporters, adding that military, political and international developments point to the futility of such dreams.

Activists said the army recently brought in military reinforcements to the central province of Homs and launched a renewed offensive aimed at retaking patches of territory that have been held by rebels for months.

An amateur video posted online by activists showed rockets slamming into buildings in the rebel-held town of Rastan, just north of the provincial capital, Homs. Heavy gunfire could be heard in the background.

Another video showed thick black and gray smoke rising from a building in the besieged city. "The city of Homs is burning ... day and night, the shelling of Homs doesn't stop," the narrator is heard saying.

Troops also battled rebels around Damascus in an effort to dislodge opposition fighters who have set up enclaves in surrounding towns and villages. The troops fired artillery shells Friday at several districts, including Zabadani and Daraya, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Another activist group, the Local Coordination Committees, said regime warplanes carried out airstrikes on the suburb of Douma, the largest patch of rebel-held ground near Damascus.

Other video showed devastation in the Damascus neighborhood of Arbeen, following what activists said were two airstrikes there. A bleeding, wounded man can be seen being helped out of the rubble of the destroyed building. The videos appeared consistent with Associated Press reporting on the fighting.

Last month, the UNHCR said it needed $1 billion to aid Syrians in the Mideast, and that half of that money was required to help refugees in Jordan.

The agency says 597,240 refugees have registered or are awaiting registration with the UNHCR in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt. Some countries have higher estimates, noting many Syrians have found accommodations without registering, relying on their own resources and savings.

In Turkey, U.S. officials announced that the United States was providing an additional $10 million in assistance to help supply flour to bakeries in the Aleppo region.

Nancy Lindborg, assistant administrator for the U.S. Agency for International Development, said the aid would help provide daily bread for about 210,000 people for the next five months.

She said that with the new assistance, the United States was providing a total of $220 million to help Syrians.

"Too many people ? an unconscionable number of Syrians ? are not able to get daily bread, in addition to other supplies," Lindborg told journalists after a visit to a Syrian refugee camp near Turkey's border with Syria.

In a rare gesture, Syria's Interior Ministry called on those who fled the country during the civil war to return, including regime opponents. It said the government will help hundreds of thousands of citizens return whether they left "legally or illegally."

Syrian opposition figures abroad who want to take part in reconciliation talks will also be allowed back, according to a ministry statement carried late Thursday by the state SANA news agency.

If they "have the desire to participate in the national dialogue, they would be allowed to enter Syria," it said.

The proposed talks are part of Assad's initiative to end the conflict that started as peaceful protests in March 2011 but turned into a civil war. Tens of thousands of activists, their family members and opposition supporters remain jailed by the regime, according to international activist groups.

Opposition leaders repeatedly have rejected any talks that include Assad, insisting he must step down. The international community backs that demand, but Assad has clung to power, vowing to crush the armed opposition.

More than 60,000 people have been killed since the conflict began, according to the U.N.

Activists also said two cars packed with explosives blew up near a military intelligence building in the Syrian-controlled part of the Golan Heights, killing eight. Most of the dead were members of the Syrian military, the Observatory said.

The Syrian government had no comment on the attacks, which occurred Thursday night in the town of Quneitra, and nobody claimed responsibility for them.

Car bombs and suicide attacks targeting Syrian troops and government institutions have been the hallmark of Islamic militants fighting in Syria alongside rebels trying to topple Assad.

Quneitra is on the cease-fire line between Syria and Israel, which controls most of the Golan Heights after capturing the strategic territory from Syria in the 1967 war.

___

Associated Press writers Albert Aji in Damascus, Syria, Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey and Zeina Karam in Beirut contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-forces-escalate-offensive-homs-184013373.html

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Kris Humphries Rejects $10 Million Settlement From Kim Kardashian

Kris Humphries Rejects $10 Million Settlement From Kim Kardashian

Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries in happier timesKris Humphries is so dead set on getting an annulment that the basketball star turned up his nose at a $10 million divorce settlement from reality star Kim Kardashian. Kim, who is expecting her first child with rapper Kanye West, is ready to put her short marriage behind her. Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries, who ...

Kris Humphries Rejects $10 Million Settlement From Kim Kardashian Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/01/kris-humphries-rejects-10-million-settlement-from-kim-kardashian/

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Yamaha CD Player Pulls Double Duty with Web Access - CE Pro ...

Yamaha's latest product, the new CD-N500 plays CDs and digital files stored on a network, tablet, smart phone, portable hard drive or NAS. The player is also capable of streaming Internet radio to provide homeowners with an all-in-one music solution.

Recent data from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) indicates that sales of CDs have fallen, but sales of downloadable music have increased over the past several years.

Yamaha?s new CD-N500 Network CD player is a solution that electronics professionals can use to bridge the evolution from physical media to downloadable and streaming media without sacrificing sound quality. This all-in-one component is engineered to allow music lovers the ability to play their existing CD collections, as well as music stored on their computers, NAS units, portable hard drives, tablets, smart phones and other devices. The player also includes the ability to stream Internet radio.

?While most consumers have moved to accessing music via iTunes, music streaming and Internet radio there are still many passionate digital music fans who also have large CD libraries that remain an important part of their entertainment experience,? explains Tom Sumner, senior vice president, Yamaha Corporation of America. ?The CD-N500 is a perfect transition piece for this audience, since it enables them to better integrate all desired music sources. They can listen to what they want when they want as our network CD player eliminates the barriers to identifying and enjoying their favorite artists and songs.?

The CD and network music player features a front panel USB input that provides hard drive, computer, smart phone connectivity, and Yamaha says the unit also incorporates support for the vTuner radio station database. Yamaha adds the CD-N500 can playback a variety of digital files, including high-resolution 24-bit/192kHz FLAC files and files encoded in Apple?s popular Apple Lossless format.

Yamaha points out that it engineered the CD-N500 with its left-right symmetrical audio circuitry to utilize the shortest possible circuit path to maintain the best signal integrity, and the player also incorporates 32-bit/192kHz Burr-Brown digital-to-analog converters (DACs).

To further support its adoption by homeowners, Yamaha also offers Apple iOS, Android and Kindle control apps, and it says that audiophiles can operate the CD-N500?s Pure Direct mode to ensure the highest quality output signal.


Robert Archer, Senior Editor, CE Pro

Bob is an audio enthusiast who has written about consumer electronics for various publications within Massachusetts before joining the staff of CE Pro in 2000. Bob is THX Level I certified, and he's also taken classes from the Imaging Science Foundation (ISF) and Home Acoustics Alliance (HAA). In addition, he's studied guitar and music theory at Sarrin Music Studios in Wakefield, Mass.

Source: http://www.cepro.com/article/yamaha_cd_player_pulls_double_duty_with_web_access/

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Friday, January 25, 2013

In wrongful-death lawsuit, Catholic hospital argues fetus is not a ...

CWN - January 24, 2013

A Catholic hospital in Colorado has argued in court that an unborn child should not be considered a ?person? for purposes of a wrongful-death lawsuit.

In the case of a woman who died of a heart attack while pregnant with twins, a lawyer for St. Thomas More hospital called the court?s attention to ?the long-standing rule in Colorado that the term ?person,? as it is used the Wrongful Death Act, encompasses only individuals born alive.? In the wrongful-death case, the plaintiff had argued that while the mother?s life could not have been saved, doctors should have intervened to save the unborn baby twins.

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5 books that explore medical treatment, from conventional to ...

Whether you?re curious about alternative medicine, or looking for ways to lessen your dependence on prescriptions and conventional medical interventions, the following five books will provide ample food for thought. Is there a rational middle ground between a completely ?natural? approach to health and the techno-medical model of care? How can we improve communication with our doctors and become partners in our care, rather than passive recipients? What kind of medicinal cures are growing right in our own backyards, or available literally at our fingertips? These are just some of the questions explored and answered by the thought-provoking books that follow.

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Why, even as technological medicine advances, are we becoming less healthy? Why are more American women dying in childbirth? Why do we grow fatter the more we diet? Why have so many attempts to save the environment backfired? How can humans be a functional, helpful part of nature rather than destroying it? These are some of the riddles that journalist Nathanael Johnson strives to solve in ?All Natural.? Raised by parents dedicated to a "natural" lifestyle, and now grappling with the best way to raise his baby daughter, he lovingly and rigorously scrutinizes his parents? all-natural mindset, a quest that brings him into the worlds of an outlaw midwife, radical doctors, renegade farmers and one hermit forester. In ?All Natural,? Johnson teases apart the complicated tangle of feelings and assumptions surrounding nature, technology and control. With an open-minded, nonideological approach, he explores various perspectives on movements both for organic practices and technological advancement in diet, childbirth, healing and the environment. Readers grappling with the flood of conflicting information about how to live a healthy, nondestructive life will appreciate this book?s nuanced attitude and its often-surprising conclusions. Thought-provoking and timely, ?All Natural? is a blend of reportage and memoir that offers a rousing and original vision for a rational middle ground between the natural and the technological. A great read for those alienated by the extreme, polarizing views on both sides and seeking a research-led middle ground.

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Benjamin Franklin?s famous saying ?An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure? was actually firefighting advice, but the maxim rings true for health too. With health problems such as obesity, diabetes?and heart disease continuing to plague America, looking for alternatives to mainstream diet and healthcare options makes good sense. Integrative wellness is an approach to health that acknowledges and utilizes the natural healing capacity of human beings and emphasizes prevention above treatment. Dr. Jim Nicolai, author of ?Integrative Wellness Rules: A Simple Guide to Healthy Living,? is the medical director of the Andrew Weil, M.D. Integrative Wellness Program at Miraval. A board-certified family practitioner and a graduate of the Integrative Medicine Fellowship at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Nicolai has a special interest in whole-person medicine. He works with both conventional medicine and complementary and alternative therapies, including herbs and other botanicals, vitamins and supplements, lifestyle management and stress reduction when treating his patients, whom he regards holistically. With ?Integrative Wellness Rules,? Nicolai offers simple, useful keys to healthier living that will guide readers in eating better, choosing the vitamins and supplements that are best for them, managing stress more effectively, and getting in touch with their spiritual sides. His quick and easy health tips are presented in a relatable, conversational style, perfect for those looking for healthy, natural, balanced strategies to better manage their fast-paced lives. Easy to follow, practical to implement, and effective when put into practice, the tips in ?Integrative Wellness? can help readers begin to select a set of strategies and action steps that will take them toward their ideal selves, the health they seek, and the lives they truly want to live. In learning and implementing these integrative wellness rules, readers can take charge of their well-being and enjoy increases in energy, motivation, life resilience and, ultimately, longevity.

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Trying to navigate, stay healthy, or heal within the contemporary mainstream, Western model of medical care can be frustrating. For some it?s so frustrating that they opt out of the system altogether, choosing to work with naturopaths and other alternative practitioners. But for those who choose to use the techno-medical model of care, taking an active role is essential. ?Most of us have spent so long thinking of medical care as a passive process that it takes time to change our mindset to put ourselves in the driver?s seat,? write Drs. Leana Wen and Josh Kosowsky in their new book, ?When Doctor?s Don?t Listen.? The two emergency physicians examine the doctor-patient relationship, arguing that diagnosis, once the cornerstone of medicine, is fast becoming a lost art, with grave consequences. Together, they provide a raft of anecdotal stories that double as scenarios many patients encounter: being rushed, doctors downplaying concerns, having close-ended "cookbook medicine" questions determine the course of the interaction, and other situations leading to reductive diagnoses. The doctors offer actionable steps readers can take toward being "better patients" as well as working to pressure doctors into providing better care ? steering the conversation away from close-ended questions, insisting on both explanations for recommended tests and exploring alternatives, and making yourself an active partner in reaching a differential diagnosis. In addition to detailed guidance on how to avoid misdiagnosis, the doctors condense their suggestions into what they call the ?8 Pillars to Better Diagnosis,? a list that they recommend patients study and practice working from before they visit the doctor?s office, emergency room or hospital. Finally, the appendices include exercises, worksheets and a glossary of key terms to further empower patients. By encouraging patients to engage with their doctors as partners in their diagnosis and giving them the tools to do so, this essential guide enables patients to speak up and regain control of their health care.

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Since ancient times, people have used plants to heal themselves, and using plants to treat disease continues to be widespread in most cultures to this day. Many herbal remedies can be found growing near your home ? maybe even in your own garden. "Backyard medicines" are not only cheap, they are free, and using local plants for herbal remedies saves on imports and air miles. Learning to make your own herbal remedies can be both pleasurable and practical ? especially if you have the right guide. Originally published under the title ?Hedgerow Medicine? in Great Britain, this popular book has been rewritten for North Americans and updated to reflect the North American distribution of the featured plants. "Hedgerows" in Britain are an integral part of the landscape, and the word conveys a sense of countryside and the often-forgotten traditional harvesting and use of plants ? there are miles of public footpaths with rights of access. For the North American version, wife-and-husband authors Julie Bruton-Seal and Matthew Seal wanted to suggest the same sense of self-sufficiency in using the plants that grow "on your doorstep." All of the plants featured are found on both sides of the Atlantic, some being native in the New World and others brought over from Europe by settlers. Trained in herbal medicine, iridology and energy medicine, Bruton-Seal runs a natural health practice in Norfolk, England, where she grows and collects many of her own herbs and makes her own essences. Together with her husband, she also teaches workshops on herbal medicine making, and leads herb walks. This book provides the couple?s clear instructions about which plants to harvest to make over 120 recipes for teas, vinegars, oils, creams, pillows, poultices and alcohol-based tinctures. An excellent and beautiful guide for the budding herbalist.

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By Nick Ortner

Nick Ortner, creator and executive producer of the documentary ?The Tapping Solution,? has written a practical reference for harnessing the healing benefits of EFT (emotional freedom technique). Slated to be published by Hay House in April, ?The Tapping Solution: A Revolutionary System for Stress-Free Living? describes not only the history and science of tapping but also its hands-on applications. Ortner lays out easy-to-use practices, diagrams and worksheets that will teach readers, step-by-step, how to tap on a variety of issues. With chapters covering everything from the alleviation of pain to the encouragement of weight loss to fostering better relationships, Ortner opens readers? eyes to just how powerful this practice can be. Throughout the book, readers will see real-life stories of healing ranging from easing the pain of fibromyalgia to overcoming a fear of flying. Tapping has been shown to provide relief from chronic pain, emotional problems, disorders, addictions, phobias, post-traumatic stress disorder, and physical diseases. While tapping is still a new technique, the healing concepts that it's based upon have been in practice in Eastern medicine for over 5,000 years. Like acupuncture and acupressure, Tapping utilizes the body's energy meridian points. You can stimulate these meridian points by tapping on them with your fingertips ? literally tapping into your body's own energy and healing power. The simple strategies Ortner outlines in this book will help readers release their fears and clear the limiting beliefs that hold them back from creating the life they want.

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Related stories on MNN:

Source: http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/stories/5-books-that-explore-medical-treatment-from-conventional-to

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Seeking `Higher' Ground: The Dangers of Designer Drugs

Since ancient times, humans have been fascinated with ways to alter consciousness, and have gone to great lengths to reach a "higher" ground. From naturally occurring substances such as opium and betel nuts, to synthetic drugs like LSD, people have long experimented with mind-altering substances. This long history of experimentation with psychoactive substances even pre-dates the existence of the word "drug."

For example, Native Americans' use of mescaline, extracted from peyote cacti, began as long as 5,700 years ago. Use of the Betel nut - the seed of a palm tree fruit - to alter consciousness may not be well-known in the U.S., but this practice has existed for thousands of years. In fact, it is estimated that among intoxicants, only nicotine, alcohol and caffeine are more popular globally than chewing Betel nut extract.

But the latest wave of man-made drugs, or "designer drugs," carries new and very real dangers. For both the individuals using them and the general public, so-called designer drugs like "bath salts," "K2" or "spice" quickly have become a public health crisis, and their use is on the rise. Their danger is related to the potent effect these drugs can have on the human nervous system. For example, "bath salts" (chemically known as synthetic cathinones) combine the dangerous properties of both a potent stimulant and a hallucinogen. "K2" is a type of synthetic marijuana (the active compound is THC) and is dangerous because it can be more potent than the naturally occurring plant.

These new designer drugs are proliferating because in many states they are sold "legally." This is possible because they are deliberately designed with an alteration to the molecular structure of an existing drug -- to avoid classification as an illicit drug.

Despite their recent proliferation, "designer drugs" are not really new - the term was coined by law enforcement in the 1980s, and widely recognized drugs like LSD, ecstasy and methamphetamines fall into this category. The latest generation of designer drugs includes synthetic cathinones (commonly labeled with harmless-sounding monikers like "bath salts" or "plant food"), which are structurally and pharmacologically similar to cocaine, methamphetamines and ecstasy (MDMA). Synthetic cannabinoids, often branded as "Spice" or "K2," are chemically engineered to mimic marijuana. There are many other potent designer drugs with names like Europa and Smiles that are increasing in use. Many of these designer drugs are available legally in drug paraphernalia stores, convenience stores or even via the Internet. That's right, legally. Like many cyber sales, delivered to your door with free shipping.

Law enforcement officials are increasing efforts to monitor for and curtail the use of these dangerous drugs. For example, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) now includes three synthetic cathinones on its Schedule 1 list of controlled substances and several of the chemicals found in synthetic cannabinoids are banned under the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act of 2012. But many similar compounds are not yet classified as illegal and in some cases they have not even been identified. This is because the "chemists" who produce designer drugs make incremental alterations to the drugs' chemical make-up, dodging Schedule 1 or illegal classification on a technicality, and thereby claiming to provide a "legal" high.

For law enforcement officials and regulators, keeping up with these chemists is a game of cat-and-mouse, with potentially deadly consequences. Bath salts carry a high risk of overdose and addiction, chest pains, increased blood pressure, increased heart rate, agitation, hallucinations, extreme paranoia, and delusions1. Reported side effects of K2 and Spice include paranoia, panic attacks, giddiness and psychotic episodes.2 Despite these risks, their use is on the rise at an alarming rate. In 2011, the National Poison Control Centers received more than 6,000 calls about synthetic cathinones (including bath salts), compared to only 300 in 20103. The American Association of Poison Control Calls reported a 58 percent increase in the number of calls related to synthetic marijuana and/or K2/Spice in just one year - from 2,906 calls in 2010 to 6,959 calls in 2011.4 To make matters worse, the popularity of these drugs is fueled by the frequent claim that standard urine drug screens will not detect their presence. Luckily, there is a new solution that can detect these substances. Sophisticated laboratory technologies using mass spectrometry assays of urine specimens can identify the vast majority of legal and illegal drugs ingested, since most small molecules have metabolites (i.e., break down products) that are excreted by the kidneys and into the urine. Mass spectrometry assays currently used to detect and monitor use of powerful pain medications (e.g. opioids) can be mobilized to help physicians and regulators, such as the DEA, detect these new designer drugs. Specialty laboratories are using these advanced technologies to anticipate new chemical formulations and launch new tests to detect dangerous substances. For example, long before bath salts were a problem in the U.S., the United Kingdom was struggling with increasing rates of overdose and death due to synthetic cathinones. Reports from British physicians, and the laboratory scientists, prompted U.S.-based scientists to develop new tests that would detect multiple synthetic cathinones - even variations that were not yet classified by DEA as Schedule 1 substances. Because physicians are on the front lines - typically seeing the effects of designer drugs in the emergency room, office examination room, or hospital - drug monitoring using mass spectrometry is a critical tool to identify and prevent the use of designer drugs. Consequently, physicians are increasingly relying on specialty laboratories to help identify the compounds present in patients who are taking controlled medications who are at risk for drug misuse or abuse. Tackling the threat to public health posed by the proliferation of designer drugs will require efforts from multiple stakeholders. Policymakers are beginning to take important action. In addition to the national ban on several types of synthetic drugs signed this summer by President Obama, both New Jersey and Washington, D.C., have enacted similar bans in recent weeks.5,6 But the new laws will not save lives without additional action and support. Regulators and the DEA could make better use of advanced drug detection technologies to more quickly classify new designer drugs as illegal. Insurance companies must be encouraged to support these efforts by ensuring reimbursement for specialty labs, so that doctors have access to the best technology available to detect and identify designer drug compounds. Data about drug use trends must be provided to the DEA and physicians to educate clinicians on any new dangerous drugs - and physicians must be vigilant in testing patients who are at risk for drug abuse and misuse. Finally, the public must be educated about this dangerous category of drugs - especially because users commonly assume that if a drug is not technically "illegal," it is safe to use. In summary, we have a new major public health threat that represents just the latest step in man's creative pursuit of new ways to get high. History tells us that we can't completely eliminate this threat, but by pooling our knowledge and streamlining legal and regulatory processes, we can succeed in reducing the threat of designer drugs and enhancing public safety. It is the collective responsibility of public agencies, specialty labs, physicians, regulators, and health insurers to pool their knowledge and resources to help improve individuals' safety and the safety of the communities they live in. ~~~ 1http://www.drugabuse.gov/about-nida/directors-page/messages-director/2011/02/bath-salts-emerging-dangerous-products 2 FLASHCARD: National Institute of Health, National Institute of Drug Abuse (2012, May). DrugFacts: Spice (Synthetic Marijuana). 3 American Association of Poison Control Centers, Synthetic Drugs Data and Fact Sheets, Bath Salts and Synthetic Marijuana (September 2012). 4 SLIDE DECK: http://www.aapcc.org/dnn/Portals/0/Synthetic%20Marijuana%20Data%20for%20Website%208.2012.pdf 5 Howell T. D.C. joins states on synthetic drug ban. Washington Times. Nov 29, 2012. http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/nov/29/dc-joins-states-on-synthetic-drug-ban-first-appear/#ixzz2DjTy5B3k 6 Queally J. N.J. permanently bans synthetic marijuana. The Star-Ledger. Nov 26, 2012. http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2012/11/nj_permanently_bans_synthetic.html Images: Ameritox Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/seeking-higher-ground-dangers-designer-drugs-121500822.html

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Obama joins inaugural parade as he begins 2nd term (The Arizona Republic)

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

House, Senate bills ignite debate on health insurance abortion ...

Two bills introduced early in this legislative session would require any health-insurance plan in Washington state that covers maternal care to also cover abortions.

House Bill 1044 and Senate Bill 5009, collectively known as the Reproductive Parity Act, would reinforce existing state law that requires insurance companies to cover abortion except in cases in which the insurance provider is explicitly religious.

Rep. Eileen Cody (D-34th District, Seattle), one of the House bill's primary sponsors, claims the legislation would help women maintain their current coverage once state health insurance exchanges open in October.

"The main reason is to insure that Washington women can continue to make their choices with their family and their doctor," said Cody, speaking for her 41 co-sponsors.

The Senate version is sponsored by Sen. Steve Hobbs (D-44th District, Lake Stevens) with 22 co-signers, including Sen. Christine Rolfes (D-23rd District, Bainbridge Island).

"It?s imperative that we create this protection for women in order to ensure their constitutional right of choice and more importantly, for their health," Hobbs said.

?We have seen in some states an erosion of women?s health and choice and what we want to ensure is that there?s a firewall against that erosion,? he added.

Health-insurance exchanges, which are intended to help individuals and businesses compare and buy insurance policies, are part of the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, signed into law by President Barack Obama in March 2010. The exchanges would offer subsidized health insurance plans to those who are eligible.

Federal funds, Cody said, cannot by law be used for abortions. Women who buy subsidized health insurance under the new federal health care law would need to pay their insurers separately for abortion coverage, and women's-health advocates such as Cody are unsure how health-insurance companies may react to the increased bureaucracy and overhead from such a requirement.

"As we implement the federal health care reform law, we need to ensure that we have no erosion of our existing laws in Washington that protect women's reproductive rights," Cody said.

The RPA, according to supporters, would prevent the need for a separate abortion health-insurance payment that could make access to the procedure more difficult, particularly for low-income women.

Opponents of the bill, such as Joseph Backholm, director of the Family Policy Institute of Washington, say the bill is unnecessary at best and at worst forces abortion opponents to pay for coverage they find objectionable.

"It addresses a problem that doesn't exist, in that any woman who wants abortion insurance in Washington can get it," Backholm said.

"It denies the rights of individuals," he said, referring to those who object to funding abortions.

Governor Jay Inslee expressed his support for the Reproductive Parity Act Wednesday afternoon during his inaugural address: "Washington women need the freedom and privacy to make the health care decisions that are best for themselves and their families. That's why I look forward to the Legislature sending the Reproductive Parity Act to my desk, which I will sign."

Reactions from legislators were sharply divided.

Inslee's fellow Democrats applauded the governor's declaration while Republicans expressed concerns that it may jeopardize federal health-care funding many say the state desperately needs, and that it distracts from more pressing issues such as job creation.

"We have to look at that economic issue as well, not just the emotional issue," said Sen. Mark Schoesler (R-9th District, Ritzville).

An earlier version of the bill passed the state House of Representatives last year but was held up in the Senate.

Zoey Palmer is a reporter with the WNPA Olympia News Bureau.

Source: http://www.bainbridgereview.com/news/187589661.html

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Losing Your Hair? Eat These Foods! - Hive Health Media

According to the American Hair Loss Association, most men will suffer some amount of hair loss by the age of 35. By the age of 50, 85% of men can expect to kiss at least some of their locks goodbye. Women aren?t safe from hair loss, either. Some statistics state that up to 40% of women will see some amount of hair thinning by the age of 40. While some cases of hair loss cannot be reversed due to genetics or illness, some suffers can affect their condition with diet. Certain foods can improve the look and feel of hair, prevent hair loss, or even help grow new hair.

celebrity hair loss women Losing Your Hair? Eat These Foods!

Here are some foods for healthy hair:

1) Foods rich in protein

Protein is the building-blocks of hair, so if you?re watching your precious locks circle the drain during your morning shower, your diet might be protein-deficient.

Eat This: Meat contains lots of protein, of course. But if you?re a vegetarian or simply don?t like to eat a meat-heavy diet, try other foods rich in protein, like eggs, beans, and legumes. Nuts and seeds like pistachios and pumpkin seeds are high in protein, as are dairy foods like cheese and yogurt.

2) Foods rich in zinc

Sudden hair loss is one of the surest signs of a zinc deficiency. Why? Because zinc is present in hair, but if other vital organs are missing the important mineral, the body will draw it out of hair, which will cause hair to stop growing or fall out completely. Keeping your diet high in zinc will not only help your hair, but boost your immune system.

Eat This: While you can take zinc in a supplement form, the human body is designed to draw nutrients primarily from food. Foods high in zinc are oysters, poultry, beef, pumpkin seeds, and dark chocolate.

3) Foods rich in biotin

Biotin, otherwise known as water-soluble B7, is a vitamin that is essential for cell growth and metabolic functions. Alopecia (hair-loss) is a side-effect of biotin deficiency, and a 1999 study published in Pediatric Dermotology showed that biotin can help reverse the effects of alopecia areata in children. Biotin can be found in shampoos and supplements, but there are a variety of foods that are biotin-rich, as well.

Eat This: Organ meats, such as liver, are high in biotin. If consuming organ meats is a bit too much for your stomach, try eggs, leafy green vegetables like Swiss chard, almonds, berries, and halibut.

4) Foods rich in omega-3 fatty acids

Eschewing omega-3 fatty acids can result in an itchy, dry scalp, which can leave your hair looking and feeling lackluster. And even worse, dry scalp can lead to hair loss.

Eat This: Salmon and other fish are high in heart- and hair-healthy omega-3s. Fish not your bag? Walnuts, flax (both the seed and the oil), and soybeans are excellent sources. Omega-3s don?t just benefit the skin on the outside of your head; the fatty acids can also help with brain function, too.

5) Foods rich in B-vitamins

When it comes to hair loss amongst women, a B-vitamin deficiency may be a likely culprit. Birth control pills and consuming large amounts of alcohol cause B6 depletion, which can cause a host of problems from pink eye to neurological disorders, not to mention alopecia. Since the body doesn?t make B6 on its own, it has to be consumed either in food or as a supplement.

Furthermore, a diet lacking in B12 vitamins can lead to hair loss. Vegetarians, those who suffer from anemia, and those with digestion issues can suffer from a B12 deficiency.

Eat This: For B6, eat raw garlic, sunflower seeds, liver, Brussels sprouts, and wheat bran. For B12, consume more animal proteins and cheese. If you don?t eat animal proteins, a decent B-complex supplement will give you all the B12 you need.

BONUS: Take Your Vitamin-C!

You could be eating all of these foods for healthy hair, but if you?re skipping a daily dose of vitamin C, you might not be absorbing all of the nutrients you need to halt or reverse hair loss. Vitamin C aids in nutrient absorbtion, and men need at least 90 mg. Women need less, around 75 mg. If you choose to eat your vitamin C instead of taking a supplement, make sure you get plenty of citrus fruit, cruciferous vegetables (cauliflower, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts), and leafy greens. Great news if you like your food spicy: Green and red chili peppers are both excellent sources of vitamin C, even better than oranges.

?

About the Author: Adam works with Great Hair OKC, Oklahoma City hair restoration specialists. Adam enjoys writing about fitness and health.

Source: http://www.hivehealthmedia.com/losing-hair-eat-foods/

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Land For Sale Prescott AZ 1-Acres $39000 Prescott AZ ...

MLS# 959357 P# 928-776-1166 http://9760_959357.ClickForListingInfo.com
Welcome to another Prescott, AZ property for sale brought to you by SAM DUMAS of Windermere Real Estate Northern Arizona ? The Leader in Prescott, AZ Real Estate Services.
This video contains information on one of our Prescott, AZ Homes for sale.
Listing Address: 2115 Burlwood Dr Prescott, AZ 86305
Property Type: Land
Price: 39,000
Agent Name: SAM DUMAS
Agent Email: samdumas@windermere.com
Agent Phone: 928 710 4800
Agent Website: www.SamDumas.com

Agency: Windermere Real Estate Northern Arizona
Agency Phone: 928-776-1166
Agency Website: http://www.WindermereNAZ.com

Property Information:
Building Square Feet: 0
Bedrooms:
Bathrooms:
Property Size: 1-Acres

Description: Prescott Lot Land For Sale. Custom Home Sites Prescott Land priced from $37,851 ? $176,000. .71 ? 2.1 Acre lots with underground city utilites. Come enjoy the Prescott lifestyle from this custom home subdivision comprised of 31 lots on 38 acres. 5? sidewalks, benches, driveways. North Forty invites you to become part of this custom home community, Prescott Building Lots available. Prescott Lots for Sale, Prescott Lots still available.

If you are looking to purchase a home in Prescott, AZ you can visit our website at http://9760_959357.ClickForListingInfo.com to view all listed homes and real estate for sale in Prescott, AZ

If you are thinking about buying or selling a home or property in Prescott, AZ give SAM DUMAS a call at 928 710 4800 for a free no obligation consultation.

Our Real Estate brokers offer years of experience helping home buyers and sellers in Prescott, AZ and our market area.

Thank you for viewing our real estate listings and remember you can search all listed homes, property and real estate at our website: http://9760_959357.ClickForListingInfo.com

To view more listings for SAM DUMAS please click here
http://homes-for-sale-real-estate.com/prescott-az/windermere_real_estate_northern_arizona-9760/sam_dumas-3840/

Property details have not been verified, lot size, square footage and other details are approximate.
Buyer must investigate property details to their own satisfaction.

Source: http://www.windermerenaz.com/2013/01/18/land-for-sale-prescott-az-1-acres-39000-prescott-az/

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

SHFL, Coral, Tipp24, Galaxy Gaming hires; legendary punter ...

Steven Stradbrooke
January 18, 2013
No Comments

barney-curleyGaming device maker and online gaming provider SHFL Entertainment has hired Michael Daly as its VP of online gaming. Daly is a former SHFL alum, having served as both product manager and project manager at SHFL?s former incarnation Shuffle Master from 2003 to 2006. Daly was most recently senior director of interactive operations at SHFL rival Bally Technologies. Daly?s new post will see him oversee worldwide execution of SHFL?s online B2B strategy, including real-money gambling, social gaming and mobile initiatives.

UK betting outfit Coral has appointed former England, Chelsea and Man U footballer Ray Wilkins as their director of football. Coral retail marketing director Olly Raeburn said the company was ?extremely pleased? to have nabbed ?The Crab? for its own. ?It made sense for us to get a top man on the job of signing new customers for us as the transfer window draws to a close.?

German online gambling firm Tipp24 SE has appointed Sebastian Blohm as the new global head of external and legal affairs. Blohm comes over from Reemtsma, a subsidiary of the UK?s Imperial Tobacco Group. Tipp24 says Blohm?s focus will be on ?political level? relationships in order to help the company spread its wings beyond Germany?s borders.

Nevada-headquartered Galaxy Gaming Inc., which develops, manufactures and distributes casino table games and enhanced casino systems, has added Dan Lubin as table games project manager. Lubin comes over from Station Casinos, where he served in various capacities since 2006. Lubin is also the inventor of the EZ Pai Gow Poker table game released by DEQ Systems Corp. Galaxy CEO Robert Saucier said Lubin would be the ?perfect complement to our team? as it plans ?a number of strategic decisions to stimulate further growth of the company.?

Finally, legendary Irish horse trainer and bookie scourge Barney Curley (pictured above) has reportedly made his last wager. The 72-year-old Curley was behind the infamous ?Yellow Sam? betting incident in 1975, in which a Curley accomplice tied up the only phone line then available at Bellewstown while other accomplices across the country placed wagers at off-course bookies on Curley?s behalf. But Curley told the Belfast Telegraph ?the buzz has gone out of the game ? I haven?t had a bet since my last coup in 2010 as I would have to put in as much effort to make only half of 1% of the money we made at that time.? That ?coup? earned Curley ?4m, the last ?823k of which he received after a lengthy court fight with UK bookie Betfred, which was only resolved in Feb. 2012. Curley plans to spend his remaining days focused on his AIDS orphan charity in Zambia, Direct Aid for Africa, which he founded in the mid-1990s.

If you have any further information related to this story that you would like to share with us privately please click here.

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Views and opinions expressed are those of the Author and do not necessarily reflect those of CalvinAyre.com

Source: http://calvinayre.com/2013/01/18/business/legendary-punter-barney-curley-retires/

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Workers Compensation - Evans Ewan & Brady Insurance Agency, Inc

THE TOPIC

DECEMBER 2012

Workers compensation insurance covers the cost of medical care and rehabilitation for workers injured on the job. It also compensates them for lost wages and provides death benefits for their dependents if they are killed in work-related accidents, including terrorist attacks. The workers compensation system is the ?exclusive remedy? for on-the-job injuries suffered by employees. As part of the social contract embedded in each state?s law, in all states except Texas, where employers may opt out of the state?s workers compensation system, the employee gives up the right to sue the employer for injuries caused by the employer?s negligence and in return receives workers compensation benefits regardless of who or what caused the accident, as long as it happened in the workplace as a result of and in the course of workplace activities. There were 114,000 employers in Texas that did not participate in the workers compensation program, according to Best?s News Service, April 10, 2012, see also Background section of this report.?

Workers compensation systems vary from state to state. State statutes and court decisions control many aspects, including the handling of claims, the evaluation of impairment and settlement of disputes, the amount of benefits injured workers receive and the strategies used to control costs. From 2010 to 2011 maximum income benefits for total disability increased an average 3.09 percent. The average maximum weekly benefit in 2011 was $806.62 according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce 2011 Analysis of Workers Compensation Laws.?

Workers compensation costs are one of the many factors that influence businesses to expand or relocate in a state, generating jobs. When premiums rise sharply, legislators often call for reforms. The last round of widespread reform legislation started in the late 1980s. In general, the reforms enabled employers and insurers to better control medical care costs through coordination and oversight of the treatment plan and return-to-work process and to improve workplace safety. Some states are now approaching a crisis once again as new problems arise.

RECENT DEVELOPMENTS

  • National:?According to NCCI?s State of the Line analysis, in 2011 workers compensation premiums for private carriers and state funds increased to $36.3 billion in 2011, a 7.4 percent jump from 2010 and the first since 2005. (For private carriers alone, premiums were $32.2 billion, compared with $29.9 billion in 2010.) Because its premiums are directly linked to employment levels and wages, workers compensation insurance is the line most significantly affected by the economic slowdown and nascent recovery. Premiums dropped 27 percent from 2006 to 2010.
  • The combined ratio, the percentage of each premium dollar spent on claims and expenses, was unsustainably high at 115, NCCI says, the same as in 2010, and the highest combined ratio for any of the major lines of commercial insurance for the third straight year. A combined ratio of 100 or higher means that the industry is paying out more in claims than it is collecting in premiums.
  • Faced with the worst results in the past 10 years, according to Fitch Ratings, insurers are raising rates. Industry observers attribute the poor financial results largely to rising medical expenses and recession-related conditions: sluggish premium growth and injured workers? inability to find work or return to their former workplace, which can increase the duration of claims.
  • Obesity has an impact on the cost of claims, according to a study by the NCCI. The duration of lost income claims was five times greater for the most severely obese workers than for workers who were not obese but filed comparable claims. The data came for insurers operating in 40 states. The study?s findings are similar to those of a 2007 Duke University Medical School report on its own employees.
  • Prescription drug costs now represent about 19 percent of workers compensation medical costs nationwide, according to the NCCI. One cost driver is doctor-dispensed repackaged drugs. The Illinois Workers Compensation Commission has been studying the issue in order to address the significant mark-ups on doctor-dispensed repackaged drugs over pharmacy-dispensed drugs. The commission found that drug repackaging firms often obtain a new National Drug Code number with a much higher unit price. One workers compensation group found that the average repackaged drug costs $115, a 236 percent increase over the average price of $48.65 for the same drugs not repackaged. The commission proposed that drugs dispensed outside of a licensed pharmacy be billed at the average wholesale price plus a dispensing fee of $4.18. The change was adopted by the state?s Joint Committee on Administrative Rules in November 2012. Currently, three states, Massachusetts, New York and Texas, do not allow physicians to dispense repackaged drugs and other states are considering such a move.
  • The Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI) recently published a study of the impact of a change in the law in California in 2007. Critics of proposed regulations on doctor-dispensed repackaged drugs feared that injured workers would not receive needed medications if doctors stopped dispensing them when it was less profitable to do so. Data from California show very few doctors stopped prescribing (55 percent before the law passed as compared with 53 percent three years later) so injured workers had similar access to medications but at a lower cost.
  • Another cost driver is the growing long-term use of narcotic painkillers. A new study by WCRI, Longer-Term Use of Opioids, found that nearly one in 12 injured workers who were prescribed opioids were still on the drugs three to six months later, highlighting a problem that contributes to overuse: failure of doctors to implement recommendations for drug testing and psychological evaluation, two steps that might help reduce the abuse of such drugs. A report from the insurance broker Lockton notes that opioids account for about 25 percent of workers compensation prescription costs and 35 percent for claims over three years old. Indirect costs to society include workers? failure to return to work because they are addicted to the drugs. The Lockton study says there should be an evaluation of the validity of continuing to prescribe opioids when medical reports do not indicate progress in work and life skill functions and a reduction in pain.
  • California:?At the end of August on the last day of the 2012 session, legislators passed SB 863, a bill developed by labor groups and some large self-insured employers that have been meeting since last fall to put together a legislative plan. Supporters claim that the measure will produce savings of $880 million, more than enough to offset the $610 million in increased payments to workers receiving permanent disability benefits. However, while praising the reforms, industry observers said it is too early to say whether the savings projected will actually occur. In the past, reform legislation has sometimes produced unintended results such the reduction in benefits for permanently injured workers that came about as a result of the 2004 reforms pushed by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. The California Workers Compensation Bureau said in October that it expected savings of 4.4 percent on 2013 policies, somewhat less than its earlier estimate of 4.9 percent.
  • At the end of November, State Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones approved a 2013 advisory rate increase of $2.56 per $100 of payroll for policies renewing or starting on or after January1, 20132. The commissioner explained his action by acknowledging the ?steady and dramatic? increase in the cost of the state?s workers compensation system. He noted that insurers are currently paying out more in claims than they are collecting in premium and that the state cannot afford to overestimate the potential savings the new law will produce.
  • New York:?Data from the Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI) shows that the reforms enacted in 2007 are beginning to achieve some of their goals, particularly bringing maximum disability benefit levels for injured workers more in line with national averages. The 2007 law also reduced the time injured workers receive permanent partial benefits, established medical treatment guidelines and required limits on prices for pharmaceutical products. The WCRI notes that the cost of pills covered by the pharmaceutical fee schedule has decreased by 10 to 20 percent.
  • Oklahoma:?Business groups and regulators are again pressing lawmakers to consider ways of lowering the cost of workers compensation, which in some cases is as much as five times higher than in neighboring states, according to the state?s Chamber of Commerce. Insurance Commissioner John Doak has said that the high costs are pushing employers to think about relocating. The high costs are attributed by some legislators to the adversarial nature of the system, which provides lawyers with incentives to drive a workers disability rating higher to increase lost income benefits. Oklahoma?s level of attorney involvement is 50 percent higher than the national average.
  • In 2012, a bill that would have allowed employers with more than 50 workers that met certain criteria to opt out of the state?s workers compensation system failed because small businesses feared that the thresholds would exclude them, see also State Funds, below.
  • Insurance industry observers said that under the earlier opt-out plan, employee benefits would have been reduced substantially. Disputed claims would have been subject to mandatory arbitration or mediation and employers would have been able to avoid the Workers Compensation Court and state insurance and workers compensation regulation.
  • Oklahoma is one of a handful of states where the courts run the workers compensation system. Legislation modifying the court system and instituting other cost saving measures was passed in 2010 and 2011 but critics, including those promoting the current opt-out plan, say the system is still too expensive. Among the options being considered for the 2013 legislative session are an opt-out system with essentially no thresholds and an administrative system with a three-member Workers Compensation Commission to replace the current court-based system. The commission would be made up of a doctor, an attorney and an insurance professional with five years of experience in dealing with workers compensation issues. Gov. Fallin has called the system?s high costs an obstacle to job creation.
  • Under the 2012 proposal, employers that opted out would have had to provide an alternative benefits plan that included medical, disability and death benefits for injured workers and that would comply with ERISA, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, the federal law that sets minimum standards for most pension, welfare and health plans offered by private industry. The legislation would have made the ERISA-compliant plans the exclusive remedy for opt-out companies, preventing workers from suing their employers in state court. The exclusive remedy is at the heart of the workers compensation social compact, see the introduction to this report. In Texas, the only state to allow employers to opt out of the workers compensation system, nonsubscribers, employers that elect not to participate, are fully liable under the tort system for workplace accidents and can be sued for negligence.
  • Texas:?Major reforms were enacted in 2005 that transferred responsibility for workers compensation from a commission to the Texas Insurance Department, improved access to healthcare and advice for injured workers, promoted return-to-work programs, created medical treatment guidelines and raised injured workers? benefits.
  • The department publishes a biennial report on system improvements. Highlights of the 2012 report indicate that since 2003 to the end of 2011 rates have decreased almost 50 percent; the number of days lost from work due to work-related injuries fell from an average 97 days (median 26 days) in 2004 to 6.0 weeks (median 21 days); and the amount of time needed in 2011 to resolve medical disputes dropped significantly, with fee disputes taking 197 days instead of 335 days as they did in 2005, pre-authorization disputes 20 days instead of 59 and retrospective medical necessity disputes 31 days instead of123. The percentage of employers that participate in the program (i.e., became subscribers, see Background section) rose from 62 percent in 2004 to 67 percent in 2012. Only an estimated 19 percent of Texas employees (about 1.7 million workers) were employed by non-subscribing employers.
  • State Funds, Competitive Funds:?Following the successful change over in West Virginia from a state-controlled workers compensation system to a private competitive market, several states, including Arizona, Colorado and Oklahoma, all of which have workers compensation entities with some degree of state oversight that compete with the private market, have been looking into some form of privatization. Some impetus for the sale of these entities is the poor local economy and the resulting budget deficits.
  • Other states, such as Maryland, have been raiding the policyholder surplus of their state workers compensation funds to add to their states? general funds. In May 2012, to end this practice, Maryland lawmakers agreed to privatize the State Fund, the largest workers compensation insurer in the state, converting it into a private company, Chesapeake Employers? Insurance Co., effective October 2013.
  • In Arizona, the legislature has agreed to privatize the State Compensation Fund, requiring the transaction to be completed by 2013. The fund had a market share of 31.5 percent in 2009, according to the state?s department of insurance.
  • In Colorado, Pinnacol Assurance, a quasi-mutual company with almost 60 percent of the market, is also exempt from premiums taxes. A proposal to turn it into a mutual insurer that would also be the insurer of last resort was submitted to the governor in November 2011. The governor set up a task force composed of various stakeholders to review the proposal and make recommendations. Negotiations are continuing. An earlier recommendation from a legislative committee failed to gain support.
  • In Oklahoma CompSource, which insures about 35 percent of the market, has a 5 percent advantage over private insurers because it does not pay premium taxes. A legislative task force studying the options voted 5 to 4 in favor of creating a mutual company, but the idea was dropped when opponents said that it would result in higher premiums for small businesses. Most of the businesses in the state are small, with 98 percent having fewer than 100 workers and 75 percent having fewer than 10, according to the State Chamber of Oklahoma.
  • In Washington State, which has a monopolistic state fund, a ballot initiative that would have led to opening the market to private competition was defeated in the November 2010 elections. Voters rejected the initiative, I-1082, by a wide margin. The initiative was spearheaded by the Building Industry Association of Washington and endorsed by the National Federal of Independent Business. It would have created a task force on private competition to draw up legislation and make recommendations.
  • In Ohio, which also has a monopolistic state fund, there has also been interest in allowing some form of competition from private insurers. In November 2009 the Senate voted to create a task force to evaluate the current system, compare it with competitive systems in other states and review the options. At a hearing held in August 2010, the president of the Insurance Information Institute, Robert Hartwig, suggested that the state?s monopolistic system is out of keeping with economic reality. There is no other type of liability insurance in the United States where the state is the sole provider of coverage although states have had ample opportunity to create such a system. Ohio voters rejected a ballot initiative on privatization in 1981. Ohio has the largest monopolistic state fund in the nation. It would require a constitutional amendment to totally privatize Ohio?s system.
  • Meanwhile, in November 2011, the state introduced a new rating plan under which employers who adopt ?best practices? aimed at reducing workplace injuries and getting workers back on the job faster can save money. Studies show that injured workers in Ohio take longer to get back to work than in other states, with the percentage who return within a year dropping from 75 percent to less than 69 percent over the past four years.
  • The move to privatize comes at a time when state funds are growing. According to a new Conning Research & Consulting study, Workers Compensation State Funds: Evolution of a Competitive Force, state-backed workers compensation funds operate in 25 states and account for one-quarter ($11.3 billion in premiums) of the workers compensation market. While they generally have higher losses than private insurers (they are often the market of last resort, insuring high risk businesses that cannot find coverage in the private marketplace) these are offset by higher investment income and operating results comparable to private insurers, the study found. State funds also work closely with other government agencies, such as state occupational and health and safety associations, to reduce injuries.
  • The Residual Market:?Market share of the residual market pools serviced by NCCI, which had been dropping, increased from 4.6 percent in 2010 to 5 percent in 2011. Premiums grew by 13 percent, reversing a trend of declining residual market premiums that began in 2005, according to NCCI. However, the pools remain small.
  • Workplace Deaths and Injuries:?Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) preliminary data show that 4,609 workers were killed on the job in 2011, slightly fewer than in 2010 (4,690) but far fewer than in 2008, when there were 5,071 workplace fatalities. The death rate for 2011 per 100,000 workers was 3.5, the same as in 2010 and 2009. Many experts attribute the significant drop over the last few years to the poor economy. Fewer people were working last year in jobs where many of the fatalities typically occur such as construction. Fatal accidents declined to 770, the lowest level since 2003. Fatal injuries for this group declined 48 percent from the high reported in 2006.
  • Workplace injuries requiring days off work have declined significantly each year since 2002 when the BLS first started using current reporting requirements. BLS data show the rate per 10,000 full time employees was 117 in 2011, statistically unchanged from 2010. The median number of days off work was eight, the same as last year.?

?

STATES WITH A STATE-RUN WORKERS COMPENSATION FUND

Arizona* Maine Oklahoma North Dakota
California Maryland Oregon Ohio
Colorado Minnesota Pennsylvania Washington
Hawaii Missouri Rhode Island Wyoming**
Idaho Montana Texas ?
Kentucky New Mexico Utah ?
Louisiana New York ? ?

*Scheduled to be privatized by 2013.?
**Compulsory for extra hazardous operations only. Employers with nonhazardous operations may insure with the state fund or opt to go without coverage.

?

?

WORKERS COMPENSATION LAWS FOR DOMESTIC WORKERS BY STATE (A)

As of September 2012

State Excluded (b) Voluntary (c) Compulsory Time Worked Earnings Other
AL ? X ? ? ? ?
AK ? ? (d) ? ? ?
AZ ? X ? ? ? ?
AR ? X ? ? ? ?
CA ? ? X 52 hours during 90 days prior to injury or exposure to disease Or $100 during 90 days prior to injury or exposure to disease Excludes a household worker employed by the worker's parent, spouse or child
CO ? ? X 40 hours per week or 5 days per week ? ?
CT ? ? X 26 hours per week ? ?
DE ? ? X ? $750 per 3 months ?
DC ? ? X 240 hours during quarter ? ?
FL ? X ? ? ? ?
GA ? X ? ? ? ?
HI ? ? X ? $225 per every quarter during preceding 12 months ?
ID ? X ? ? ? ?
IL ? ? X 40 hours per every week for 13 weeks during year ? ?
IN ? X ? ? ? ?
IO ? ? X ? $1,500 during 12 weeks prior to injury ?
KS ? ? X ? ? Employer payroll over $20,000 in prior year for all workers
KY ? ? X ? ? 2 employees, 40 hours per week
LA X ? ? ? ? ?
ME ? X ? ? ? ?
MD ? ? X ? $750 per quarter ?
MA ? ? X 16 hours per week ? ?
MI ? ? X 35 hours per every week for 13 weeks during preceding 52 weeks ? ?
MN ? ? X ? $1,000 in any 3 month period of current or previous year ?
MS ? X ? ? ? ?
MO ? X(e) ? ? ? ?
MT ? X ? ? ? ?
NE ? X ? ? ? ?
NV ? X ? ? ? ?
NH ? ? X ? ? ?
NJ ? ? X(f) ? ? ?
NM ? X ? ? ? ?
NY ? ? X 40 hours per week, non-farm ? ?
NC ? X ? ? ? ?
ND ? X ? ? ? ?
OH ? ? X ? $160 per quarter ?
OK ? ? X ? ? Employer payroll in preceding year of $10,000 per worker
OR ? X ? ? ? ?
PA ? X ? ? ? ?
RI ? X ? ? ? ?
SC ? ? X ? ? 4 employees per employer; payroll more than $3,000 in previous year
SD ? ? X 20 hours per week for more than 6 weeks in 13 weeks ? ?
TN ? X ? ? ? ?
TX ? X(e) ? ? ? ?
UT ? ? X 40 hours per week ? ?
VT ? X ? ? ? ?
VA X ? ? ? ? ?
WA ? ? X ? ? 2 employees; 40 hours per week each
WV ? X ? ? ? ?
WI ? X ? ? ? ?
WY X ? ? ? ? ?

(a) Domestic workers include household workers such as babysitters, housecleaners, gardeners, etc.; in some states excludes family members.
(b) Domestic workers are specifically excluded from the workers compensation system.
(c) Employers are permitted to provide workers compensation coverage voluntarily.
(d) Except for part-time babysitters and noncommercial cleaning persons.
(e)?Elective or optional.
(f) Coverage is voluntary for domestic workers but on an elective basis, i.e., an employer may elect, in writing, prior to an accident, not to be subject to the law.? However, this requirement renders the law compulsory in practice.? In New Jersey, homeowners insurance policies must contain provisions covering domestic workers.

Source: "Workers Compensation: Exposure, Coverages, Claims,"
ISBN #0-923240-12-8. Standard Publishing Corp., Boston, MA. All rights reserved; PCI.

?

BACKGROUND

The Workers Compensation Social Contract:?The industrial expansion that took place in the United States during the 19th century was accompanied by a significant increase in workplace accidents. At that time, the only way injured workers could obtain compensation was to sue their employers for negligence. Proving negligence was a costly, time-consuming effort, and often the court ruled in favor of the employer. But by the early 1900s, a state-by-state pattern of legislative proposals designed to compensate injured workers had begun to emerge.

Wisconsin enacted the first permanent workers compensation insurance law in 1911 (New York had enacted a law a year earlier but it was found unconstitutional), and by 1920 all but eight states had enacted similar laws. By 1949 all states had a workers compensation system that provided compensation to workers hurt on the job, regardless of who was at fault. The costs of medical treatment and wage loss benefits were the responsibility of the employer which were paid through the workers compensation system. As part of the compromise that made the employer liable for work-related injury and disease costs regardless of fault, the employee gave up the right to sue the employer for injuries caused by the employer's negligence.

The scope of workers compensation coverage has broadened considerably since its early beginnings. In 1972, states amended their laws to meet performance standards recommended by the National Commission on State Workmen's Compensation Laws. Many states took action not only to expand benefits but also to make the coverage applicable to classifications of employees not previously covered.

However, compensation levels are not uniform. In some states benefits are still inadequate, while in others, they are overly generous. Some states were slow in adopting the National Commission's guidelines and have still not embraced the entire package of 19 recommendations published in 1972. Many states exempt employers with only a few workers (fewer than five, four or three, depending on the state) from mandatory coverage laws. A major benefits issue still to be resolved in some states is the imbalance between levels of compensation for various degrees of impairment; permanent partial disabilities tend to be overcompensated and permanent total disability undercompensated.

Some coverage is provided by federal programs. For example, the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers Compensation Act, passed in 1927 and substantially amended in 1984, provides coverage for certain maritime employees and the Federal Employees' Compensation Act protects workers hired by the U.S. government.

Employers can purchase workers compensation coverage from private insurance companies or state-run workers agencies, known as state funds. In 20 states, according to a Conning study, ?Workers Compensation State funds, Evolution of a Competitive Force,? state funds compete with private insurers and in four states, the state is the sole provider of workers compensation insurance. (See list at the end of Recent Development section of this report.) Along with residual market pools, many state funds also function as the insurer of last resort for businesses that have difficulty getting coverage in the open market.

The only state in which workers compensation coverage is truly optional is Texas, where about one-third of the state?s employers are so-called nonsubscribers. In the event of a serious accident, those that opt out of the system can be sued by employees for failure to provide a safe workplace. The nonsubscribers tend to be smaller companies, but the percentage of larger companies opting out is growing. Some 25 percent of the state?s workers were employed by nonsubscribers in 2008, compared with 23 percent in 2006.

Some businesses finance their own workplace injury benefits through a system known as self-insurance. Large organizations with many employees can often estimate the cost of routine types of injuries. Self-insurance, along with large deductibles, which are in effect self-insurance, now account for more than one-third of traditional market premium. Put another way, workers compensation accounts for more than 40 percent of the alternative market, see also Captives report. Businesses that self-insure their workers compensation losses must prove that they are financially able to do so. They usually protect their assets by purchasing insurance coverage for catastrophic losses or losses in excess of a specific threshold.

About nine out of 10 people in the nation?s workforce are protected by workers compensation insurance. Laws vary by state for domestic workers, see chart, and at least 15 states do not require employers to provide workers compensation coverage to migrant and seasonal farm workers.?

How the System Works:?Workers compensation systems are administered by the individual states, generally by commissions or boards whose responsibility it is to ensure compliance with the laws, investigate and decide disputed cases, and collect data. In most states employers are required to keep records of accidents. Accidents must be reported to the workers compensation board and to the company?s insurer within a specified number of days.

Workers compensation covers an injured worker?s medical care and attempts to cover his or her economic loss. This includes loss of earnings and the extra expenses associated with the injury. Injured workers receive all medically necessary and appropriate treatment from the first day of injury or illness and rehabilitation when the disability is severe.

To rein in expenditures and improve cost effectiveness, many states have adopted cost control measures, including treatment guidelines that spell out acceptable treatments and diagnostic tests for specific injuries such as lower back injuries and fee schedules that set maximum payment amounts to doctors for certain types of care.

Most claims are medical only, but lost-time claims, those with both medical and lost income payments, though few, consume most resources. Claims are categorized according to the degree of impairment?partial or total disability?and whether the impairment is permanent or temporary. Cash benefits can include impairment benefits and, when the impairment causes a loss of income, disability or wage loss benefits.

Impairment can be defined in several ways. Payments may be based on a schedule or list of body parts covered and the benefits paid for a loss of that part. For injuries not on the schedule, benefit payments may be calculated according to the degree of impairment or the loss of future or current earnings capacity, often using the American Medical Association?s definitions.

Most states pay benefits for the duration of the injury. But some specify a maximum number of weeks, particularly for temporary disabilities. For workers with a total disability, the benefit amount is some percentage of the worker?s weekly wage (actual or state average). Cash benefits may not be paid until after a waiting period of several days.

Costs to Employers:?Costs to employers include premiums, payments made under deductibles and the benefits and administrative costs incurred by employers that self-insure or fund their own benefit program. The percentage of total compensation costs that workers compensation premiums represent fluctuates.? In the mid-1950s, private sector employers paid an average 0.5 percent of payroll for workers compensation. By 1970 this figure was 1 percent, escalating steeply in the 1980s and 1990s to a record high in 1994 of 2.99 percent.? However, there is a wide variation in costs among states and industries, so that the highest rated (the inherently riskiest) groups could pay several hundred times that of the lowest rated (safest) groups, as a percentage of payroll. Also taken into account is the firm?s own safety record.

Insurance, particularly commercial insurance, is a cyclical industry marked by hard and soft markets.? In 2000 as the economy expanded, premiums started rising, ushering in the hard market, when demand outstrips supply.? In 2007, with a generally soft market for most types of commercial insurance and a weakening economy, premiums began dropping again.? From December 2007 to mid-2009, as the recession caused payroll, the basis for computing workers compensation premiums, to drop significantly (3.6 percent) workers compensation insurers saw premiums contract. In fact, the recent recession had the most serious impact on workers compensation in terms of payroll in 60 years. In the recessions of the 1970s and 1980s, the impact was less severe because of continuous wage inflation. Inflation was not a factor in the 2007-2009 recession.

Claim Costs:?As mentioned earlier, there are two components to workers compensation claims costs: payments for lost income, which are usually linked to a state?s average weekly wage, known as indemnity costs, and payments for medical care. Two decades ago, indemnity costs made up the greater part of total losses. In 1986 indemnity costs represented 55 percent of the total. By 1996 indemnity and medical had changed places, with indemnity at only 48 percent of losses. In 2008, as medical care costs continued to rise, indemnity accounted for 42 percent.

Growth in workers compensation medical costs for the most part has been much steeper than in the healthcare industry as a whole. The annual average rate of increase in workers compensation medical care costs was 3.9 percent from 1991 to 1995. Since then the rate of increase has more than doubled and, in most years, was more than twice the rate of increase in the medical Consumer Price Index (CPI). Between 2002 and 2007, the medical cost per lost-time claim -- where the employee was forced to take time off work because of the injury as opposed to just seeking treatment for the injury?increased by 6.7 percent compared with an increase of 4.0 percent in the medical CPI.? However, in 2009 workers compensation medical care costs increased by only 2 percent, compared with a rise in the medical care CPI of 3.4 percent.

NCCI Holdings suggests that much of the difference between the cost of a healthcare claim and a workers compensation claim is due to the volume, duration and mix of services used by injured workers and group health claimants.

But while the size of claims (dollar amount) has been climbing due to the increasing cost of medical treatment, the number of claims filed (frequency) has been dropping steadily as insurers and their policyholders focus on safety. The frequency of lost-time claims dropped by 54.9 percent from 1991 to 2008. NCCI also attributes recent declines in the frequency of accidents to the use of robots, which reduce workers' exposure to hazardous activities; power-assisted devices that reduce physical stress, lighter and stronger materials; ergonomic designs that reduce strains; and cordless tools, which reduce the incidence of tripping over cords. Frequency declines, which first showed up among small employers are now evident also in large firms.

Insurance company financial results often report profitability in terms the combined ratio (the percentage of each premium dollar spent on claims and expenses). The combined ratio for workers compensation is reported in two different ways: by calendar year and by accident year. In 2008 the calendar year combined ratio started to deteriorate, moving from 99 in 2007 to 100 in 2008. The accident year combined ratio deteriorated more sharply going from 92 in 2007 to 101 in 2008, according to the NCCI. The accident year combined ratio hit a peak of 140 in 1999.

Calendar year results reflect claim payments and changes in reserves for accidents that happened that year or earlier. Insurance companies have to set aside reserves for accidents that have happened but where claims have not been settled. Workers compensation claims may not be settled for many years, if the accident victim needs increasingly more treatment, for example. Accident year results, in that they include only losses from a specific single year, may present a better picture of the industry's performance at a given point in time.

Reducing Costs:?Workers compensation system costs are rarely static. Reforms are implemented and then, over time, one or more element in these multifaceted systems get out of balance. Soon employers and legislators complain that the cost of coverage is hurting the state?s economy by reducing its ability to compete with other states for new job-producing opportunities.

In the 1980s, with a view to increasing competition within the insurance industry in order to bring down rates, legislation was introduced in more than a dozen states to change the method of establishing rates from administered pricing, where rating organizations recommended rates that included expenses and a margin for profit, to open competition. Now insurers base their rate filings on more of their own company's specific data, rather than using industrywide figures in such areas as expenses and profit and contingency allowances. Rating organizations still provide industrywide data on "losses"?the costs associated with work-related accidents, which help small companies that lack access to large amounts of data.

More recently, states have begun to disband Second Injury Funds. Set up mostly after World War II, these funds were designed to protect employers that hire disabled workers from having to bear the full cost of the first disability when an injury that further disabled the worker occurred in their workplace. Many believe that these funds are now unnecessary in that passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act has made the protection they afford to disabled workers redundant. The Act protects injured workers from discrimination by employers. At least 10 states have repealed laws covering Second Injury Funds.

The aim of the workers compensation system is to help workers recover from work-related accidents and illnesses and to return to the workplace. A fast return to work is desirable from the employer and insurer?s viewpoint, lowering claim costs for the insurer but benefiting the worker too.

Research shows that the faster the insurer receives notice of an injury and can initiate medical treatment, the faster the injured worker recuperates and returns to work and the less likely he or she is to seek out an attorney for help in dealing with a claim. Studies also suggest that most people want to return to productive employment as soon as possible. Electronic communication has enhanced procedures to speed up the "first notice of claim" filing process to the workers compensation administrative office.

There are two important aspects to facilitating the return-to-work process. One involves getting the most effective medical care as soon as possible and reducing the emotional stress that may follow an accident. To help get medical treatment to the injured worker faster, some insurers help employers file promptly a "first notice of injury" with the state agency responsible for overseeing the workers compensation system, a step which triggers the claim process.

The other is to encourage employers to improve communications, first about the workers compensation system in advance of accidents?people who know what to expect and who receive medical attention promptly will recuperate faster and are less likely to turn to an attorney for help?and second when injured workers are off work, so that they feel that they are still part of the workplace team and are anxious to return. Insurers have also strengthened communications among all the parties involved in the case so that each knows how treatment is progressing.

Another aspect of the return-to-work process is successful reintegration into the workplace. Insurers help employers assess the injured workers? needs and capabilities and encourage them to let workers know, in advance of any injury, that they will try to modify work activities to accommodate those who are permanently disabled.

Long absences from work can have a lasting negative impact on workers? future employment opportunities and thus on their economic well-being. A study of injured workers in Wisconsin by the Workers Compensation Research Institute found that the duration of time off work and periods of subsequent unemployment are lower for injured workers who return to their pre-injury employer than for those who change employers.

Another factor pushing up costs in some states is the amount of attorney involvement. Workers compensation programs were originally intended to be "no-fault" systems and therefore litigation-free. Attorney fees are either set by law or subject to approval of the courts or regulator. Computations may be based on an hourly rate, a percentage of the total award, a specific percentage according to the level of the hearing on the case, or a sliding scale with percentages decreasing with the size of the award. Many states have caps on attorney fees.

Although attorney involvement boosts claim costs by 12 to 15 percent, because claimants must pay attorneys' fees there is generally no net gain in the actual benefits received. Overall, attorneys are involved in 5 to 10 percent of all workers compensation claims in most states?but in as much as 20 percent in systems where the number of disputes is high and in roughly a third of claims where the worker was injured seriously.

The involvement of an attorney does not necessarily indicate formal litigation proceedings. Sometimes, injured workers turn to attorneys to help them negotiate what they believe is a confusing and complex system. Increasingly, states are trying to make the system easier to understand and to use.

The workers compensation system plays a major role in improving workplace safety. An employer's workers compensation premium reflects the relative hazards to which workers are exposed and the employer's claim record. About one-half of states allow what is known as "schedule rating," a discount or rate credit for superior workplace safety programs.

In addition, a majority of states now provide for optional medical deductibles in workers compensation insurance policies as a cost-saving measure and, in some states, allowable deductible amounts were raised. (Deductibles reduce premiums because they lower an insurer's administrative expenses, which, for small claims, make up a disproportionately large portion of the cost of settlement.) Deductibles also encourage greater safety-consciousness on the part of the employer who must pay the deductible amount.

In some states, insurers must provide accident prevention services to employers. In others, employers are required by law to set up safety committees and other programs to deal with unsafe conditions in the workplace and assign specific responsibility for creating, monitoring or overseeing workplace safety to a governmental agency.

Some businesses are taking a more radical approach to bringing costs under control through coordination of workers compensation, healthcare and disability benefit plans. The integration of workers compensation and other employee benefit programs is a broad concept that ranges from a simple marketing approach that promises savings from using the same insurer for both coverages to programs that offer a managed care approach to the management of all types of disability, regardless of whether they are work-related.

Besides limiting overlapping programs and streamlining administration, proponents say such a change addresses the increasing difficulty of distinguishing between work- and nonwork-related injuries and illnesses, such as injuries due to repetitive motion and stress claims.

It also improves productivity since nonwork-related disabilities are managed with the same focus of getting the employees back to work as work-related cases, and at the same time addresses the potential for reporting injuries that occur outside the workplace as work-related to reduce the employee's out-of-pocket costs. Workers compensation pays for all reasonable medical treatment without deductibles and co-payments, as opposed to healthcare, where the policyholder incurs some out-of-pocket costs.

Residual Markets:?Residual markets, traditionally the market of last resort, are administered by the NCCI in 29 jurisdictions. In some states, particularly where rates in the voluntary market are inadequate, the residual market provides coverage for a large portion of policyholders. In 1993 they represented about 26.5 percent of the total workers compensation market (excluding employers who are self-insured). Since that time, the NCCI has taken steps to reduce the size of the residual market by creating financial disincentives to obtain coverage from it.

Terrorism Coverage:?Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, workers compensation insurers have been taking a closer look at their exposures to catastrophes, both natural and man-made. According to a report by Risk Management Solutions, if the earthquake that shook San Francisco in 1906 were to happen today, it could cause as many as 78,000 injuries, 5,000 deaths and over $7 billion in workers compensation losses.

Workers compensation claims for terrorism could cost an insurer anywhere from $300,000 to $1 million per employee, depending on the state. As a result, firms with a concentration of employees in a single building in major metropolitan areas, such as New York, or near a ?trophy building? are now considered high risk, a classification that used to apply only to people in dangerous jobs such as roofing. Faced with the possibility of a huge death toll costing millions of dollars and the threat of insolvency as a result, all but the largest insurers are limiting coverage. This is forcing some employers to raise their deductibles, in effect self-insuring part of the risk, and to deal with several insurers to reduce the potential maximum loss for each.

KEY SOURCES OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Issues Report, a yearly overview of the workers compensation system, National Council on Compensation Insurance.

"Property/Casualty Insurance Facts," Insurance Information Institute, annual publication.

"Analysis of Workers' Compensation Laws," U.S. Chamber of Commerce, annual publication.

Publications from the Workers Compensation Research Institute, Cambridge, MA.?http://www.wcrinet.org

? Insurance Information Institute, Inc. - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Posted Friday, January 18 2013 1:15 PM
Tags : Workers Compensation, Business, Insurance

Source: http://www.eebins.com/blog/workers_compensation.aspx

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