Return to Work April 12, 2011 Louise Caicco Tett, RN, BScN, CRSP © 2011 Learning Objectives • The participants will: • Discuss WSIB’s New Service Delivery Model • Describe the theory and legal requirements associated with Return to Work (RTW). © 2011 Some food for thought….. • Rates of return to work in Ontario have declined over the past 10 years © 2011 Some guiding principles • If an injured worker is off for six months, there is a 50% chance of that worker returning to work • Chances drop to 20% if worker is off one year • Time is of the essence! WSIB 2008, based on NIDMAR research © 2011 More guiding principles • RTW is a process and must be managed in a systematic way • Injured workers want to get better and be productive members of society • Workers need to be treated with dignity and respect © 2011 More guiding principles • RTW is based on objective medical information • We need to treat all employees in the same manner – i.e. consistency • Focus on abilities, not disabilities i.e. what can the worker do? • Think outside the box © 2011 New Service Delivery Model Primary Adjudicator (for straight forward decisions) Eligibility Adjudicator (entitlement not obvious) Short Term Case Manager (30 days) Focus is on RTW and recovery - At 12 weeks, use RTW specialist Long Term Case Manager (6 months) © 2011 Why RTW? The law: o the employer shall contact the worker ASAP after injury and maintain communication throughout recovery o the employer shall provide suitable employment that is available and consistent with the worker’s functional abilities © 2011 Why ESRTW? The law: o the worker shall contact the employer ASAP after injury and maintain communication throughout recovery o the worker shall assist the employer to identify suitable employment that is available and consistent with the worker’s functional abilities © 2011 Physical Demands Analyses o systematic procedure to quantify, and evaluate all of the physical and environmental demand components of all essential and nonessential tasks of a job. © 2011 Independent Medicals o Employer can request an independent medical; pays for it o Worker may appeal decision for IM o Board hears appeal, and makes a final decision © 2011 Health Care Practitioners o Required to promptly give the Board such information relating to the worker as the Board may require o This includes Functional Abilities Forms © 2011 WSIB Forms Form 6 Form 7 Form 8 • Worker’s Report of Injury/Disease • Employer’s Report of Injury/Disease • Health Professional’s Report • Functional Abilities Form FAF © 2011 Worker and Employer © 2011 The RTW Team o Injured Worker o Immediate Supervisor o Union Representative o Claims Manager o WSIB o Health Care Professional © 2011 Injured Worker • • • • Seeks health care Cooperates with medical and employer Maintains contact with employer Plans for RTW Employer • • • • Has PDAs done ahead of time Maintains contact with IW Plans for RTW Pays for IM if necessary WSIB • Makes timely decisions • Facilitates medical information • Offers RTW specialist (12 weeks) Health Care • Completes FAF • Provides assessment, treatment • Supports RTW © 2011 RTW Plans • Set Goals ex return to pre-injury employment • Actions – outline responsibilities of worker, supervisor, manager, coworkers • Time Frames – ex two hours first week, 4 hours second week, etc • Health Care Needs – ex. appointments during work hours © 2011 Communication is the key • Fill in the Blanks © 2011 Case Study-2004 to 2007 • Knee injury Sept 2004, no lost time • Dec 2006 – employer informed that worker needed knee surgery in Jan 2007 • Started working on RTW – worker missed one week of work © 2011 Case Study-2004 to 2007 • Received permission from WSIB to include a “road trip” with supervisor as part of RTW plan – was part of normal job; WSIB put some parameters in place to ensure safety; spoke to worker who was in agreement © 2011 Case Study-2004 to 2007 • RTW included • • • • • working from home, company driving worker to work (winter) company paying for taxi to physio physio as part of work day wife driving worker to work © 2011 Case Study-2004 to 2007 • RTW included • • • • exercise bike at work worker able to drive self to work physio appointments at end of work day back to full time hours, same job © 2011 Why did it work? • Planned in advance • Supervisor had support from corporate office • Worker and his wife were supportive of process • WSIB was very involved • Physio focused on improvements • It was progressive – there was a goal © 2011 © 2011 Learning Objectives • The participants will: • Discuss WSIB’s New Service Delivery Model • Describe the theory and legal requirements associated with Return to Work (RTW). © 2011