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A Service of the CompAdvocate...
Workers Compensation Glossary
Accident Report
Workers' Compensation Commission form entitled
"EMPLOYER'S FIRST REPORT OF OCCUPATIONAL INJURY OR ILLNESS" (for
non-State employees) or State of Connecticut Form PER WC-207 (for State
employees) required to be filed by an employer in cases of an employee's
occupational injury or disease that results in incapacity from work of
one day or more.
Administrative Regulations
Regulations adopted in accordance with statutory
authority to prescribe procedures and requirements within the workers'
compensation system.
Agreement
Written agreement between an employer's workers'
compensation insurance carrier or a self-insured employer and an
employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease
specifying the type and amount of workers' compensation benefit paid to
the employee. An agreement must be made using the Workers' Compensation
Commission's "Voluntary Agreement", Form WCC-1.
Appeal
Request by one of the parties in a workers'
compensation case to have the Workers' Compensation Commission's
Compensation Review Board (CRB) hear the case, which has already been
heard in some lower level Informal or Formal Hearing(s). The appealing
party requests an overturning of some earlier decision(s) by the
Workers' Compensation Commissioner(s) who heard the case at the earlier
hearing(s).
Approved List of Medical
Practitioners
The Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman (in
consultation with the Workers' Compensation Advisory Board) may
establish a list of approved physicians and other practitioners who may
render medical services to employees with compensable work- related
injuries or occupational diseases. Administrative Regulation 31-280-1
specifies standards for approval of medical practitioners to treat
employees in workers' compensation cases, as well as criteria for
removal of practitioners from the list.
Arising Out Of and In The
Course of Employment
An employee's accidental injury or occupational
disease originating while he or she was engaged in the line of duty in
the business or affairs of the employer, upon the employer's premises or
elsewhere by the direction, express or implied, of the employer.
Attending Physician
Medical practitioner who is the primary medical
caregiver of an employee with a compensable work-related injury or
occupational disease. An attending physician must be on the Workers'
Compensation Commission Chairman's "Approved List of Medical
Practitioners" to treat employees in workers' compensation cases.
Attending Physician's First
Report of Injury
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 48 used by an
attending physician to report initial medical findings related to an
employee's compensable work-related injury or occupational disease or
the State of Connecticut's Form PER WC-208 used by an attending
physician to report initial medical findings for State employees with
compensable work-related injuries or occupational diseases.
Attending Physician's
Supplemental Report
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 49 used by an
attending physician to report medical findings related to an employee's
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease during the
course of treatment.
Attorney Fee Schedule
The Workers' Compensation Act requires the Workers'
Compensation Commission Chairman to annually publish the maximum fees
claimants are required to pay attorneys for legal services rendered in
workers' compensation cases.
Average Weekly Wage
Average weekly earnings of an employee with a
compensable work- related injury or occupational disease, used to
determine the employee's weekly workers' compensation benefit rate.
Award
Grant of workers' compensation benefits or other fees
in a workers' compensation case.
AWW
Average Weekly Wage
Basic Compensation Rate
Weekly workers' compensation benefit rate of an
employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease,
without cost-of-living adjustments or dependency allowances. * For
injuries/illnesses before October 1, 1991, the basic rate is two-thirds
(2/3) of an employee's gross average weekly wage. * For
injuries/illnesses from October 1, 1991 through June 30, 1993, the basic
rate is 80% of an employee's average weekly wage, after federal income
taxes and FICA deductions. * For injuries/illnesses on or after July 1,
1993, the basic rate is 75% of an employee's average weekly wage, after
federal and state income taxes and FICA deductions.
Benefit Rate Table
The Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman (in
consultation with the Workers' Compensation Advisory Board) is required
to annually publish tables which specify weekly workers' compensation
benefit rates, based upon the gross average weekly wage, the federal tax
filing status, and the number of claimed exemptions of an employee with
a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease. These tables
must be consulted for the determination of weekly benefit rates ONLY for
compensable work- related injuries and occupational diseases on or after
October 1, 1991.
Benefits
Workers' compensation benefits or other payments
mandated by the Workers' Compensation Act including, but not limited to,
indemnity; medical and surgical aid or hospital and nursing service
under Section 31-294d of the Act; and any type of payment for
disability, whether for total or partial disability of a permanent or
temporary nature, death benefit, funeral expense, payments made under
Sections 31-284b, 31-293a, or 31-310 of the Act, or any adjustment in
benefits or payments required by the Act.
Certificate of Self
Insurance
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 27-62 used by
the Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman authorizing an employer to
self-insure its workers' compensation insurance coverage liability.
Certificate of Self
Insurance Application
Workers' Compensation Commission Form WC18-76 used by
an employer to apply for a Certificate of Self Insurance from the
Commission.
Chairman
Workers' Compensation Commissioner appointed by the
Governor to head the Workers' Compensation Commission and administer the
state workers' compensation system according to the provisions of the
Workers' Compensation Act.
Chapter 568
The Workers' Compensation Act, comprised of Sections
31-275 through 31-355a of the Connecticut General Statutes. This chapter
establishes the Connecticut workers' compensation system of wage
replacement benefits for and medical treatment of compensable
work-related injuries and occupational diseases, as well as the State
agency, the Workers' Compensation Commission, which administers the
Connecticut workers' compensation system.
Claimant
Any person who makes a claim for workers' compensation
benefits for an alleged work-related injury or occupational disease.
Claimants are either employees claiming a compensable work- related
injury or occupational disease or surviving dependents of an employee
killed by a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease.
COLA
Annual cost-of-living adjustment in a claimant's basic
compensation rate. This adjustment applies ONLY to Temporary Total
Disability and Dependent Survivors' benefits, and is paid ONLY for
injuries/illnesses on or before June 30, 1993. There are NO COLAs for
other types of workers' compensation benefits or for injuries/illnesses
on or after July 1, 1993.
Commission
Workers' Compensation Commission, the State agency
established by the Workers' Compensation Act to administer the
Connecticut workers' compensation system.
Commissioner
Workers' Compensation Commissioner, an administrative
official authorized by the Workers' Compensation Act to have
jurisdiction in whatever matter referred to in a given section of the
Act.
Commutation
Payment of workers' compensation benefits in a
monthly, quarterly, or single lump sum payment, rather than in weekly or
biweekly payments.
Commutation and What It
Means
Workers' Compensation Commission form signed by a
claimant to signify understanding of and agreement to payment of
workers' compensation benefits by commutation.
Compensation
Workers' compensation benefits or other payments
mandated by the Workers' Compensation Act including, but not limited to,
indemnity; medical and surgical aid or hospital and nursing service
under Section 31-294d of the Act; and any type of payment for
disability, whether for total or partial disability of a permanent or
temporary nature, death benefit, funeral expense, payments made under
Sections 31-284b, 31-293a, or 31-310 of the Act, or any adjustment in
benefits or payments required by the Act.
Compensation Rate
Weekly workers' compensation benefit rate of an
employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease.
Compensation Review Board
Workers' Compensation Commission board comprised of
two Workers' Compensation Commissioners and the Workers' Compensation
Commission Chairman to hear appeals of decisions from lower level
Informal and Formal Hearings.
Concurrent Employment
Simultaneous employment by more than one employer.
When an employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational
disease is concurrently employed, the basic compensation rate is based
upon the average weekly wages from ALL jobs the employee is unable to
work as a result of the injury or disease.
Continuance
Adjournment or postponement of a hearing or other
proceeding to a subsequent day or time.
Cost-of-Living Adjustment
Annual cost-of-living adjustment in a claimant's basic
compensation rate. This adjustment applies ONLY to Temporary Total
Disability and Dependent Survivors' benefits and is paid ONLY for
injuries/illnesses on or before June 30, 1993. There are NO COLAs for
other types of workers' compensation benefits or for injuries/illnesses
on or after July 1, 1993.
CRB
The Workers' Compensation Commission's Compensation
Review Board comprised of two Workers' Compensation Commissioners and
the Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman to hear appeals of
decisions from lower level Informal and Formal Hearings.
CRD
The Workers' Compensation Commission's Compensation
Review Division, now the Compensation Review Board (CRB).
Date of Injury
Date a work-related injury occurs or, for occupational
disease, the date of total or partial incapacity to work due to the
disease. (The Compensation Review Board has held the date of injury for
repetitive trauma to be the last day of exposure to the incidents of
repetitive trauma, i.e. the last day worked.)
Day of Injury
Day a work-related injury occurs. An employee with a
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease is entitled to
full wages for the entire day an injury occurs and, for purposes of
determining workers' compensation benefits, that day is not counted as a
day of incapacity from work.
Dependency Allowance
Extra payment (in addition to a claimant's basic
compensation rate) for each of a claimant's dependents. This allowance
is paid ONLY to claimants whose compensable work-related injuries or
occupational diseases occurred PRIOR to October 1, 1991.
Dependent
Employee's family member (for employees with
compensable work- related injuries or occupational diseases) or next of
kin who was wholly or partly dependent upon the employee's earnings at
the time of the employee's injury or disease, including any presumptive
dependent or dependent in fact.
Dependent in Fact
Person determined to be an employee's dependent (for
employees with compensable work-related injuries or occupational
diseases) in a workers' compensation case in which there is no
presumptive dependent, in accordance with the facts existing on the date
of the injury or disease.
Dependent Survivor
Presumptive dependent or dependent in fact surviving
an employee who dies from a compensable work-related injury or
occupational disease.
Dependent Survivors'
Benefits
Burial expenses for an employee who dies from a
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease and wage
replacement benefits to surviving dependents of such a deceased
employee. Such benefits are also known as "Death Benefits", "Fatality
Benefits" or "Survivors' Benefits".
Disability Evaluation
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 42 used by an
attending physician to report the existence and extent of a Permanent
Partial Disability of an employee with a compensable work- related
injury or occupational disease.
Disclaimer
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 43 used by an
employer or its workers' compensation insurance carrier to deny or
contest liability for a claim for workers' compensation benefits.
Discontinuation Notice
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 36 used by an
employer or its workers' compensation insurance carrier to discontinue
or reduce a claimant's workers' compensation benefit payments.
Disfigurement
Impairment of or injury to the beauty, symmetry, or
appearance of a person that renders the person unsightly, misshapen,
imperfect, or deforms in some manner or otherwise causes a detrimental
change in the external form of the person.
Disfigurement and Scarring
Permanent, significant disfigurement of, or permanent,
significant scarring on the face, head, neck, or any other part of the
body which handicaps an employee with a compensable work- related injury
or occupational disease in obtaining or continuing to work.
Disfigurement and Scarring
Benefits
Benefits paid to an employee with a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease for a compensable
disfigurement or scar.
District
Jurisdiction established by the Workers' Compensation
Commission Chairman to administer matters of the workers' compensation
system within a given geographical area.
District Office
Workers' Compensation Commission office which
administers matters of the workers' compensation system within the
jurisdiction of the Workers' Compensation District in which it is
located. Informal and Formal Hearings are held in District Offices,
which also maintain records pertinent to their jurisdictions, such as
workers' compensation case files.
DOI
Date of Injury. The date a work-related injury occurs
or, for occupational disease, the date of total or partial incapacity to
work due to the disease. (The Compensation Review Board has held the
date of injury for repetitive trauma to be the last day of exposure to
the incidents of repetitive trauma, i.e. the last day worked.)
Education Services
Workers' Compensation Commission unit that provides
education and information regarding the Connecticut workers'
compensation system.
Emergency Hearing
Special type of Informal Hearing to provide for the
administration of "emergency" situations which require especially quick
action to provide appropriate medical treatment and workers'
compensation benefits to employees with compensable work-related
injuries or occupational diseases.
Employee
Any person who: (1) has entered into or works under
any contract of service or apprenticeship with an employer, whether the
contract contemplated the performance of duties within or without
Connecticut; (2) is a sole proprietor or business partner who accepts
the provisions of the Workers' Compensation Act; (3) is elected to the
Connecticut General Assembly; (4) is a salaried officer or paid member
of any police or fire department; (5) is a volunteer police officer,
whether designated as special or auxiliary; or (6) is an elected or
appointed official or agent of any town, city, or borough in the state.
Employer
Any person, corporation, firm, partnership, voluntary
association, joint stock association, the State of Connecticut, or any
public corporation within the state using the services of one or more
employees for pay, or such an employer's legal representative.
Employer Mutual Association
Employer association formed to insure the employers'
liabilities pursuant to the Workers' Compensation Act. Such an
association may only include employers who are in the same or similar
trades or businesses and who have substantially similar degrees of
hazard of injury to their employees.
Exclusion Form
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 6B (for
corporate officers) or Form 6B-1 (for partnerships) used to elect
exclusion from workers' compensation insurance coverage or to revoke a
previous election of exclusion.
Filing Status and Exemption
Form
Workers' Compensation Commission Form WCC-1A used by
an employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational
disease ON OR AFTER October 1, 1991 to report federal tax filing status
and number of claimed exemptions for determining workers' compensation
benefits.
First Report of Injury
Workers' Compensation Commission Form WCC-15 (for
non-State employees) or State of Connecticut Form PER WC-207 (for State
employees) required to be filed by an employer in cases of an employee's
occupational injury or disease that results in incapacity from work of
one day or more.
Form 27-62
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by the
Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman authorizing an employer to
self-insure its workers' compensation insurance coverage liability.
Form 30C
Workers' Compensation Commission form serving as a
proper written notice of claim for workers' compensation benefits.
Form 36
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by an
employer or its workers' compensation insurance carrier to discontinue
or reduce a claimant's workers' compensation benefit payments.
Form 42
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by an
attending physician to report the existence and extent of a Permanent
Partial Disability of an employee with a compensable work- related
injury or occupational disease.
Form 43
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by an
employer or its workers' compensation insurance carrier to deny or
contest liability for a claim for workers' compensation benefits.
Form 44
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by a
Workers' Compensation Commissioner to order payment by the State's
Second Injury Fund of workers' compensation benefits to a claimant or as
reimbursement to an employer or its workers' compensation insurance
carrier for benefits already paid to a claimant.
Form 47
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by a
Workers' Compensation Commissioner to award disfigurement or scarring
benefits to an employee with a compensable work-related injury or
occupational disease.
Form 48
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by an
attending physician to report initial medical findings related to an
employee's compensable work-related injury or occupational disease.
Form 49
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by an
attending physician to report medical findings related to an employee's
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease during the
course of treatment.
Form 6B-1
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by a
partnership to elect exclusion from workers' compensation insurance
coverage or to revoke a previous election of exclusion.
Form 6B
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by a
corporate officer to elect exclusion from workers' compensation
insurance coverage or to revoke a previous election of exclusion.
Form 75
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by a sole
proprietor of a business to elect inclusion for workers' compensation
insurance coverage or to revoke a previous election of inclusion.
Form PER WC-207
State of Connecticut form required to be filed by the
State of Connecticut in cases of a State employee's occupational injury
or disease that results in incapacity from work of one day or more.
Form PER WC-208
State of Connecticut form used by an attending
physician to report initial medical findings related to a State
employee's compensable work-related injury or occupational disease.
Form WC18-76
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by an
employer to apply for a Certificate of Solvency from the Commission.
Form WCC-15
Workers' Compensation Commission form required to be
filed by an employer (other than the State of Connecticut) in cases of
an employee's occupational injury or disease that results in incapacity
from work of one day or more.
Form WCC-1
Workers' Compensation Commission form serving as an
agreement between an employer's workers' compensation insurance carrier
or a self-insured employer and an employee with a compensable work-
related injury or occupational disease specifying the type and amount of
workers' compensation benefit to be paid to the employee.
Form WCC-1A
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by an
employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease
ON OR AFTER October 1, 1991 to report federal tax filing status and
number of claimed exemptions for determining workers' compensation
benefits.
Form WCR-1
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by an
employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease
to request vocational rehabilitation services from the Commission's
Division of Workers' Rehabilitation or by any other party referring such
an employee to the Division for such services.
Form: Commutation and What
It Means
Workers' Compensation Commission form signed by a
claimant to signify understanding of and agreement to payment of
workers' compensation benefits by commutation.
Form: Informal Hearing
Request
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by any
party requesting an Informal Hearing before a Workers' Compensation
Commissioner.
Form: Notice to Employees
Workers' Compensation Commission notice required in
each employer's workplace to notify its employees of its workers'
compensation insurance coverage.
Form: Petition for Review
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by any
party requesting an appeal before the Commission's Compensation Review
Board.
Form: Stipulation and What
It Means
Workers' Compensation Commission form signed by a
claimant signifying understanding of and agreement to a final settlement
of a workers' compensation case by stipulation.
Formal Hearing
Formal meeting between the parties in a workers'
compensation case and presided over by a Workers' Compensation
Commissioner for the purpose of resolving differences, disagreements,
and the like to provide appropriate workers' compensation benefits to a
claimant. Witnesses in Formal Hearings are sworn and testify and
evidence is introduced, resulting in a binding written decision by the
presiding Commissioner. Usually held in a Workers' Compensation
Commission District Office, a Formal Hearing is the second level hearing
available to adverse parties in a workers' compensation case and is
scheduled when disputes cannot be resolved in any earlier Informal
Hearing(s). There may be one or, more infrequently, two Formal Hearings
in a workers' compensation case. Written decisions from Formal Hearings
may be appealed to the Compensation Review Board.
Fraud Unit
The Workers' Compensation Fraud Unit within the Chief
State's Attorney's Office, Division of Criminal Justice, which
investigates complaints of workers' compensation fraud and takes
appropriate action to enforce Connecticut law.
Healing Arts
The practices of Chiropractic, Medicine, Natureopathy,
Osteopathy, and Podiatry, pursuant to Section 20-1 of the Connecticut
General Statutes.
Hearing
Informal or formal meeting between the parties in a
workers' compensation case presided over by one or more Workers'
Compensation Commissioner(s) for the purpose of resolving differences,
disagreements, and the like in order to provide appropriate workers'
compensation benefits to a claimant.
IME
Independent Medical Examination.
Inclusion Form
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 75 used by a
sole proprietor of a business to elect inclusion for workers'
compensation insurance coverage or to revoke a previous election of
inclusion.
Independent Medical
Examination
Medical examination of a claimant usually requested by
another party (i.e., the respondent in the case or a Workers'
Compensation Commissioner) and conducted by a physician other than the
claimant's attending physician.
Informal Disfigurement
Evaluation
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 47 used by a
Workers' Compensation Commissioner to award disfigurement or scarring
benefits to an employee with a compensable work-related injury or
occupational disease.
Informal Hearing
Short informal meeting between the parties in a
workers' compensation case and presided over by a Workers' Compensation
Commissioner for the purpose of resolving differences, disagreements,
and the like in order to provide appropriate workers' compensation
benefits to a claimant. Held in a Workers' Compensation Commission
District Office, an Informal Hearing is the first level of hearing
available to adverse parties in a workers' compensation case and
involves discussion of any disputed issue(s) and production of
appropriate supporting documents and other evidence. A workers'
compensation case may include one or more Informal Hearing(s); cases in
which no resolution of disputed issues occurs are recommended for Formal
Hearings. However, nearly all cases involving disputed issues are
resolved in Informal Hearings.
Informal Hearing Request
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by any
party requesting an Informal Hearing before a Workers' Compensation
Commissioner.
Job Search
When an employee with a compensable work-related
injury or occupational disease is not able to do regular work, but can
perform light duty work (as defined by the attending physician) and no
light duty work is available at the regular employer, that employee may
still be eligible for Temporary Partial Disability benefits, subject to
performing a job search. A job search is the process by which such an
employee looks for ANY type of work which falls within the attending
physician's physical restrictions and submits a weekly report of the
results of the search to the employer's workers' compensation insurance
carrier or self-insured employer, taking a suitable job if it is
offered, until healing from the injury or disease to the extent that the
attending physician returns the employee to his or her regular job.
Light Duty
Work prescribed by an employee's attending physician
to fall within certain physical restrictions while the employee
continues to heal from a compensable work-related injury or occupational
disease.
List of Approved Medical
Practitioners
The Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman (in
consultation with the Workers' Compensation Advisory Board) may
establish a list of approved physicians and other practitioners who may
render medical services to employees with compensable work- related
injuries or occupational diseases. Administrative Regulation 31-280-1
specifies standards for approval of medical practitioners to treat
employees in workers' compensation cases, as well as criteria for the
removal of practitioners from the list.
Lump Sum Payment
Payment of a workers' compensation award of benefits
or other sum(s) as one or more partial or total payment(s), instead of
the more common weekly or biweekly payments which equally distribute
such sum(s). A lump sum payment may result from a Commutation or a
Stipulation.
Maximum Compensation Rate
Highest weekly workers' compensation benefit rate
provided for by the Workers' Compensation Act. The maximum rate may vary
from employee to employee, depending on the date of an employee's injury
(and in turn the law which applies to that injury) and the type of
benefit for which an employee is eligible.
Maximum Medical Improvement
Time at which a claimant's attending physician
determines that the claimant has healed from a compensable work-related
injury or occupational disease to the fullest extent he or she is
expected to heal. At this time the attending physician determines
whether or not the claimant has sustained a Permanent Partial Disability
to any body part(s) and the degree of such impairment(s).
Medical Care Plan
An employer's plan to provide its employees with
medical care for their compensable work-related injuries and
occupational diseases. Such a plan is also known as a "Preferred
Provider Organization", or "PPO".
Medical Fee Schedule
The Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman (in
consultation with employers, their insurance carriers, union
representatives, physicians, and third-party reimbursement
organizations) is required to develop and annually publish maximum fees
payable to medical practitioners for medical services rendered in
workers' compensation cases (except for medical treatment of employees
covered by approved workers' compensation medical care plans and those
employed by the State of Connecticut, who are covered by a separate
Medical Fee Schedule for State Employees).
Medical Fee Schedule for
State Employees
The State of Connecticut Commissioner of
Administrative Services is required to set, by regulation, maximum fees
payable to medical practitioners for medical services rendered in
workers' compensation cases of employees of the State of Connecticut
(except those covered by the State of Connecticut's approved workers'
compensation medical care plan).
Medical Practice Protocols
The Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman (in
consultation with insurers and medical practitioners) is required to
develop and annually publish medical practice protocols for the medical
treatment rendered in workers' compensation cases. The protocols must be
used by medical practitioners, employers, workers' compensation
insurance carriers, and Workers' Compensation Commissioners in
evaluating the necessity and appropriateness of medical care in workers'
compensation cases.
Medical Practitioner
Billing Guidelines
The Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman (in
consultation with insurers and medical practitioners) is required to
develop and annually publish billing guidelines for medical services
rendered in workers' compensation cases. The guidelines must be used by
employers, workers' compensation insurance carriers, and medical
practitioners.
Minimum Compensation Rate
Lowest weekly workers' compensation benefit rate
provided for by the Workers' Compensation Act. The minimum rate may vary
from employee to employee, depending on the date of an employee's injury
(and in turn the law which applies to that injury) and the type of
benefit for which an employee is eligible.
MMI
Maximum Medical Improvement.
Motion To Preclude
Motion filed to stop from consideration ( or preclude)
any defense to a claim's compensability other than a jurisdictional
defense (e.g., whether there was an employer/employee relationship) or a
defense asserted by the respondent(s) in a proper and valid notice of
contest.
Notice of Claim
Claimant's written notice alleging a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease and claiming workers'
compensation benefits for such. The Workers' Compensation Commission
Form 30C serves as a proper written notice of claim.
Notice to Employees
Workers' Compensation Commission notice required in
each employer's workplace to notify its employees of its workers'
compensation insurance coverage.
Occupational Disease
Disease peculiar to an employee's occupation and due
to causes in excess of the ordinary hazards of employment as such.
Occupational Disease
Surveillance Program
Joint program between the State Departments of Health
and Labor and the Workers' Compensation Commission designed to track and
prevent occupational diseases.
Occupational Health Clinics
Medical clinics specializing in the diagnosis and
treatment of occupationally-related illnesses and diseases and the
evaluation of workplaces for health-related hazards.
Occupational Injury
Accidental injury which may be definitely located as
to the time when and the place where the accident occurred, and is
causally connected with the injured person's employment, or is the
direct result of repetitive trauma or repetitive acts incident to such
employment, as well as occupational disease.
Order to Custodian of
Second Injury Fund
Workers' Compensation Commission Form 44 used by a
Workers' Compensation Commissioner to order payment by the State's
Second Injury Fund of workers' compensation benefits to a claimant or as
reimbursement to an employer or its workers' compensation insurance
carrier for benefits already paid to a claimant.
OSHA
Occupational Safety and Health Administration. In
Connecticut, there are Federal OSHA and ConnOSHA: Federal OSHA inspects
private sector workplaces for health and safety violations and provides
information and ConnOSHA is a unit in the State Labor Department that
inspects public sector workplaces and performs
Payments "Without
Prejudice"
Payment of workers' compensation benefits to a
claimant while the compensability of an alleged work-related injury or
occupational disease is in question. Payments made "without prejudice"
must begin on or before the 28th day after an employer receives a
claimant's written notice of claim for compensation.
Permanent Partial
Permanent Partial Disability or an award of Permanent
Partial Disability benefits.
Permanent Partial Award
Award of workers' compensation benefits paid to an
employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease
for a Permanent Partial Disability of one or more part(s) of the
employee's body.
Permanent Partial
Disability
Permanent loss of, or loss of use of, one or more body
part(s) of an employee with a compensable work-related injury or
occupational disease. If it is determined by the attending physician at
the time of the employee's maximum medical improvement that a Permanent
Partial Disability exists, that employee is eligible to receive
Permanent Partial Disability benefits.
Permanent Partial
Disability Benefits
Workers' compensation benefits paid to an employee
with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease for a
Permanent Partial Disability of one or more part(s) of the employee's
body.
Personal Injury
Accidental injury which may be definitely located as
to the time when and the place where the accident occurred, and is
causally connected with the injured person's employment or the direct
result of repetitive trauma or repetitive acts incident to such
employment, as well as occupational disease.
Petition for Review
Workers' Compensation Commission form used by any
party requesting an appeal before the Commission's Compensation Review
Board.
Posting Notice
Workers' Compensation Commission notice required in
each employer's workplace to notify its employees of its workers'
compensation insurance coverage.
PPD
Permanent Partial Disability or Permanent Partial
Disability benefits.
PPO
Preferred Provider Organization.
Preferred Provider
Organization
An employer's medical care plan for the treatment of
its employee's compensable work-related injuries and occupational
diseases.
Presumptive Dependent
Any of the following persons, who are conclusively
presumed to be wholly dependent for support upon a deceased employee:
(1) a wife upon a husband with whom she lives at the time of his injury
or from whom she receives support regularly; (2) a husband upon a wife
with whom he lives at the time of her injury or from whom he receives
support regularly; (3) any child under the age of eighteen or over the
age of eighteen but who is physically or mentally incapacitated from
earning, upon the parent with whom he or she is living or from whom he
or she is receiving support regularly, at the time of the injury of the
parent; or (4) any unmarried child who has attained the age of eighteen
but has not attained the age of twenty-two and who is a full-time
student, upon the parent with whom he or she is living or from whom he
or she is receiving support regularly.
Previous Disability
An employee's preexisting condition due to the total
or partial loss of, or loss of use of, one hand, arm, foot, or eye
resulting from an accidental injury, a disease, or from congenital
causes, or any other permanent physical impairment.
Product Liability Suit
Suit brought by an employee with a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease against a party other than
the employee's employer who is alleged to be responsible in some way or
to some degree for the injury or disease.
Rehabilitation Request Form
Workers' Compensation Commission Form WCR-1 used by an
employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease
to request vocational rehabilitation services from the Commission's
Division of Workers' Rehabilitation or by any other party referring such
an employee to the Division for such services.
Rehabilitation Services
Workers' Compensation Commission unit that provides
vocational rehabilitation services to eligible employees with
compensable work-related injuries or occupational diseases who cannot
return to the types of work which caused their injuries or diseases.
Relapse or Recurrence
Situation in which an employee with a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease who has improved and
returned to work has a return of some medical problem(s) caused by the
injury or disease, resulting in another period of incapacity from work
and/or necessitating further medical treatment. An employee is eligible
for wage replacement benefits for a relapse or recurrence.
Relapse or Recurrence
Benefits
Wage replacement benefits paid to an employee with a
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease during that
employee's period of Relapse or Recurrence of the previous injury or
disease.
Respondent
Employer or its workers' compensation insurance
carrier in a workers' compensation case.
Safety & Health Services
Workers' Compensation Commission unit that provides
information and assistance regarding Connecticut's employer health and
safety committee requirement.
Scar
Mark left on the skin after the healing of a wound or
sore, or any mark, damage, or lasting effect resulting from a past
injury.
Schedule of Injuries
List in the Workers' Compensation Act providing the
maximum number of weeks of Permanent Partial Disability benefits for
each body part. Only injuries (body parts) in this statutory schedule
are eligible for Permanent Partial Disability benefits.
Second Disability
Disability arising out of a second injury.
Second Injury
Injury (incurred by accident, repetitive trauma,
repetitive acts, or disease arising out of and in the course employment)
to an employee with a previous disability.
Second Injury Fund
State of Connecticut fund used to provide payment of
workers' compensation benefits and/or other payments in certain workers'
compensation cases. The Fund is provided by assessments on all
Connecticut employers and is in the custody of the State Treasurer.
Self Insurance
Manner in which an employer provides workers'
compensation insurance coverage for its employees by insuring itself
rather than by purchasing workers' compensation insurance coverage from
a private insurance carrier.
Settlement
Term used for Permanent Partial Disability benefits or
to refer to a Stipulation, which is a final close-out of a workers'
compensation case.
SIF
The State of Connecticut's Second Injury Fund.
Specific
Award of Permanent Partial Disability benefits for one
or more of an employee's specific body part(s) due to that employee's
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease.
State Average Production
Wage
Average weekly earnings of production and related
workers in manufacturing in Connecticut, determined annually by the
State Labor Commissioner. This is lower than the State Average Weekly
Wage of all Connecticut workers, because it does not include salaries of
supervisory personnel.
State Average Weekly Wage
Average weekly earnings of all workers in Connecticut,
determined annually by the State Labor Commissioner. This is higher than
the State Average Production Wage, because it includes salaries of
supervisory personnel.
Statistical Division
Workers' Compensation Commission division which
compiles and maintains statistics on occupational injuries and diseases,
voluntary agreements, claims status, and Workers' Compensation
Commissioners' dockets, among others.
Stip
Stipulation or stipulated agreement.
Stipulated Agreement
Agreement to stipulate a workers' compensation case
(close a case, finally, by stipulation).
Stipulation
Process whereby an employee with a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease and the employer (and/or its
workers' compensation insurance carrier) close a workers' compensation
case finally. This happens when an employee is paid a sum of money
and/or provided certain medical treatment(s) and, in return, signs away
any future right to benefits for the stipulated injury or disease. Some
stipulations close out all aspects of a case (i.e., benefits AND medical
treatment) while other stipulations close out portions of available
benefits (i.e., benefit payments OR medical treatment), leaving the
remaining benefits "open."
Stipulation and What It
Means
Workers' Compensation Commission form signed by a
claimant signifying understanding of and agreement to a final settlement
of a workers' compensation case by stipulation.
Substitute System of
Insurance
An employer's agreement with its employees to provide
a system of compensation, benefit, and insurance in lieu of the
compensation and insurance provided by the Workers' Compensation Act.
Such a system must provide benefits to its employees which are at least
equivalent to the benefits provided by the Act and must adhere to
requirements for such systems as are prescribed in the Act.
Survivors' Benefits
Burial expenses for an employee who dies as a result
of a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease and wage
replacement benefits to surviving dependents of such a deceased
employee. Such benefits are also known as "Death Benefits", "Dependent
Survivors' Benefits", or "Fatality Benefits".
Temporary Partial
Temporary Partial Disability or Temporary Partial
Disability benefits.
Temporary Partial
Disability
Temporary, but only partial, incapacity from work of
an employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational
disease. During a period of partial incapacity, an employee can perform
SOME types of work and may be eligible for Temporary Partial Disability
benefits.
Temporary Partial
Disability Benefits
Wage replacement benefits paid to an employee with a
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease during that
employee's period of Temporary Partial Disability.
Temporary Total
Temporary Total Disability or Temporary Total
Disability benefits.
Temporary Total Disability
Temporary, but total, incapacity from work of an
employee with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease.
During a period of total incapacity, an employee is unable to perform
ANY type of work and is eligible for Temporary Total Disability
benefits.
Temporary Total Disability
Benefits
Wage replacement benefits paid to an employee with a
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease during that
employee's period of Temporary Total Disablity.
Third Party
Party other than an employer or employee who is or may
be responsible in some way or to some degree for an employee's
compensable work-related injury or occupational disease.
Third Party Claim
Claim for workers' compensation and/or other benefits
made by an employee with a compensable work-related injury or
occupational disease against a third party (party other than employee or
employer).
TP
Temporary Partial Disability or Temporary Partial
Disability benefits.
TT
Temporary Total Disability or Temporary Total
Disability benefits.
Utilization Review
Procedures
The Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman (in
consultation with insurers and medical practitioners) is required to
develop and annually publish utilization review procedures for medical
treatment in workers' compensation cases. The procedures must be used by
medical practitioners, employers, workers' compensation insurance
carriers, and Workers' Compensation Commissioners in evaluating the
necessity and appropriateness of medical care in workers' compensation
cases.
VA
Workers' Compensation Commission "Voluntary
Agreement", Form WCC-1.
Vocational Rehabilition
Services provided to an employee with a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease to return that employee to
the workforce in a new occupation, the performance of which is within
that employee's physical limitations resulting from the injury or
disease. The Workers' Compensation Commission's Rehabilitation Services
unit provides a full range of vocational rehabilitation services,
without charge, to eligible employees who cannot return to their initial
occupations. Employees may apply to Rehabilitation Services themselves
or may be referred to Rehabilitation Services by an employer, an
insurance representative, a medical practitioner, a Workers'
Compensation Commissioner, or another party.
Voluntary Agreement
Workers' Compensation Commission Form WCC-1 serving as
an agreement between an employer's workers' compensation insurance
carrier or a self-insured employer and an employee with a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease specifying the type and
amount of workers' compensation benefit to be paid to the employee.
Waiting Period
The first three calendar days of a work-related
incapacity from work, during which an employee with a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease is ineligible to receive
workers' compensation benefits, other than appropriate and necessary
medical care. For employees incapacitated from work for seven or more
calendar days due to the injury or disease, the waiting period is waived
and they are eligible to receive workers' compensation wage replacement
benefits for the entire period of incapacity from work.
Weekly Wage Differential
Weekly difference between the earnings of an employee
with a compensable work-related injury or occupational disease before
the occurrence of the injury or disease and the earnings of that same
employee after the occurrence of the injury or disease. If the employee
is no longer able to work in the job, this is the weekly difference
between the earnings of the employee before the occurrence of the injury
or disease and the earnings presently being paid in the job in which the
employee worked at the time of the occurrence of the injury or disease.
Workers' Compensation Act
Chapter 568 of the Connecticut General Statutes,
comprised of Sections 31-275 through 31-355a, which establishes the
Connecticut workers' compensation system of wage replacement benefits
for and medical treatment of compensable work-related injuries and
occupational diseases, as well as the State agency, the Workers'
Compensation Commission, which administers the Connecticut workers'
compensation system.
Workers' Compensation
Administrative Regulations
Regulations adopted in accordance with statutory
authority to prescribe procedures and requirements regarding activities
within the workers' compensation system.
Workers' Compensation
Advisory Board
Board provided for by the Workers' Compensation Act to
assist the Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman in the performance
of his duties. The Board is comprised of four individuals representing
employee organizations, four individuals representing employer
organizations, and a ninth individual who is selected by the Board to
serve as an impartial chairman of the Board.
Workers' Compensation
Benefits
Compensation benefits or other payments mandated by
the provisions of the Workers' Compensation Act including, but not
limited to, indemnity; medical and surgical aid or hospital and nursing
service under Section 31-294d of the Act; and any type of payment for
disability, whether for total or partial disability of a permanent or
temporary nature, death benefit, funeral expense, payments made under
Sections 31-284b, 31-293a, or 31-310 of the Act, or any adjustment in
benefits or payments required by the Act.
Workers' Compensation
Commission
State agency established by the Workers' Compensation
Act to administer the Connecticut workers' compensation system.
Workers' Compensation
Commission Chairman
Workers' Compensation Commissioner appointed by the
Governor to head the Workers' Compensation Commission and administer the
state workers' compensation system according to the provisions of the
Workers' Compensation Act.
Workers' Compensation
Commissioner
Administrative offical authorized by the Workers'
Compensation Act to have jurisdiction in whatever matter referred to in
a given section of the Act.
Workers' Compensation
District
Jurisdiction established by the Workers' Compensation
Commission Chairman to administer matters of the workers' compensation
system within a given geographical area.
Workers' Compensation
District Office
Workers' Compensation Commission office which
administers matters of the workers' compensation system within the
jurisdiction of the Workers' Compensation District in which it is
located. Informal and Formal Hearings are held in District Offices,
which also maintain certain records pertinent to their jurisdictions,
such as workers' compensation case files.
Workers' Compensation Fraud
Unit
Unit within the Office of the Chief State's Attorney,
Division of Criminal Justice, which investigates complaints of workers'
compensation fraud and takes appropriate action to enforce Connecticut
law.
Workers' Compensation
Jurisdiction
Workers' compensation system by which an employee with
a work- related injury or occupational disease is provided medical
treatment for the injury or disease and wage replacement benefits while
incapacitated from regular work. The Connecticut workers' compensation
system covers most private and public sector employees in the state.
However, some employees may be eligible to receive workers' compensation
benefits from the Connecticut system and another system simultaneously
or, in some cases, eligible only to receive workers' compensation
benefits from another system. Other systems include the Jones Act, the
Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, and the Federal
Employees' Workers' Compensation System.
Workers' Compensation Legal
Advisory Panel
Panel provided for by the Workers' Compensation Act to
assist the Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman in the performance
of his duties by providing him with guidance in legal matters pertaining
to the workers' compensation system.
Workers' Compensation
Medical Advisory Panel
Panel provided for by the Workers' Compensation Act to
assist the Workers' Compensation Commission Chairman in the performance
of his duties by providing him with guidance in medical matters
pertaining to the workers' compensation system.
Written Notice of Claim
Claimant's written notice alleging a compensable
work-related injury or occupational disease and claiming workers'
compensation benefits for such. The Workers' Compensation Commission
Form 30C serves as a proper written notice of claim.
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