Workers’ comp medical benefits are designed so that injured workers do not pay for authorized treatment out of their own pocket. In practice, this is one of the most commonly misunderstood parts of the system and a source of unnecessary expense for workers who do not understand their rights.
No deductibles, copays, or worker out-of-pocket costs. Authorized workers’ comp medical treatment should be paid directly by the insurer to the medical provider. There are no deductibles, copays, or coinsurance payments like there are with private health insurance. If treatment is authorized and related to the work injury, the worker should not be responsible for paying part of the bill.
What to do when a bill arrives. Bills sometimes arrive at the worker’s home because of billing errors, missing claim information, treatment that was not pre-authorized, treatment the insurer is disputing, or administrative confusion. Do not ignore the bill, but do not assume you are personally responsible either. Contact the medical provider and the claims adjuster to confirm whether the bill was submitted to the correct workers’ comp carrier and whether authorization is being disputed.
When health insurance gets involved. If a workers’ comp claim is initially denied, the worker’s health insurance may pay for treatment in the meantime. This can help the worker get care, but it may create reimbursement issues later. If the workers’ comp claim is eventually approved or settled, the health insurer may assert a subrogation or reimbursement claim for what it paid. Medical bills paid by health insurance during a disputed workers’ comp claim do not always disappear. They may become part of the settlement math later.
Mileage reimbursement. Travel to and from medical appointments connected to the work injury is reimbursable at the applicable mileage rate. This may include visits to treating physicians, physical therapy appointments, specialist consultations, diagnostic testing, IME appointments ordered by the insurer, and other appointments connected to the injury. Workers should keep a log of every appointment with the date, provider, destination, round-trip mileage, and purpose of the visit.
Other reimbursable expenses. Beyond mileage, workers may be entitled to reimbursement for parking fees at medical facilities, tolls when applicable, prescription costs paid out of pocket, and certain other treatment-related expenses. Meals or lodging may be reimbursable in limited situations when treatment requires significant travel. Most insurers require a mileage or expense form with documentation supporting each request.
The pattern that costs workers money. The most common way workers lose money on out-of-pocket costs is failing to track and submit them. A worker who drives to 20 physical therapy appointments and never submits mileage may give up hundreds of dollars in reimbursement. A worker who pays for injury-related prescriptions and never requests reimbursement may lose money the insurer should have paid. Tracking these expenses from the beginning and submitting reimbursement requests regularly is one of the most practical things an injured worker can do.