Health and disability insurance.
Public Domain
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2000/10/01
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By Park RM
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Personal Author:
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Description:Employers with modern data systems and employee benefits programs can perform surveillance for occupational health problems. Although work-related health problems involving medical treatment for lost time should be handled by workers' compensation, experience suggests a large burden of work-related illness is actually processed through medical insurance and disability insurance systems. This results from failure to identify work-related problems. In addition, there are financial incentives such as delays in payments for both the affected worker and medical providers that occur with workers' compensation. Several projects undertaken by the United Auto Workers Union (UAW) with cooperation from the Chrysler Corporation (now DaimlerChrysler) and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan shed light on the role of medical insurance in work-related illness and reveal possibilities and limitations for occupational disease surveillance. Likewise, the UAW and General Motors (GM) Corporation jointly investigated the utility of the GM Sickness and Accident benefit system by examining the experience over a 4-year period at a large automotive stamping and assembly complex in Lordstown, Ohio. [Description provided by NIOSH]
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ISBN:0195128885
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Pages in Document:195-206
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NIOSHTIC Number:nn:20021033
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Citation:Workplace health surveillance: an action-oriented approach. N. A. Naizlish, ed., New York: Oxford University Press, Inc., 2000 Oct; :195-206
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Editor(s):
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Federal Fiscal Year:2001
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Peer Reviewed:False
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Source Full Name:Workplace health surveillance: an action-oriented approach
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Main Document Checksum:urn:sha-512:7dc847c09aedf140bc731323e8446b4703641ae07d6ad9e7b7238120dab30b8f7dcaa9b938d34d035f87873a0fe7fec262d5d13dcaf290925445e82b6de3b57d
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