Posts Tagged ‘Gabrielle Giffords’

Health Wonk Review’s Spring Training edition & assorted news items

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

Health Wonk Review – What do baseball and healthcare have in common? Find out – Glenn Laffel of Pizaazz hosts a fresh helping of the best of the health policy blogosphere: Health Wonk Review: Spring Training Edition
Does an anti-immigrant climate affect workers comp costs? – At Comp Time, Roberto Ceniceros discusses a recent news story in which Tom Hensley, president of Fieldale Farms Corp, testifies before the Georgia General Assembly about the detrimental impact that anti-immigration measures are having on his business. The impact included higher turnover and higher workers comp costs. Roberto is interested in hearing if anybody else has witnessed a similar trend of Latinos fleeing a state because of anti-immigrant sentiment and then claims trending upward – drop him anot if you have something to add.
Can you hear me now? Musicians and other workers who are exposed to loud music in their workplace are typically given short shrift in the occupational safety and health literature. Recent studies at nightclubs show that all employees (waiters, bartenders, DJs, etc,) were exposed to noise levels above internationally recommended limits and were at a higher risk of early hearing loss and tinnitus. The NIOSH Science Blog discusses music-induced hearing loss.
Giffords covered by work comp – Stephanie Innes of the Arizona Daily Star reports that federal workers’ comp is footing the recovery bill for Gabrielle Giffords and two of her employees who were shot in January. Because they were working, it’s an on-the-job injury. The federal law has no cap on medical payments, which is fortunate since the story reports that, “The Brain Injury Association of America says inpatient rehabilitation costs can range from $600 to $8,000 a day depending on services, and outpatient rehabilitation can cost $600 to $1,000 a day.”
Shrinking employer appetite for RTW? – Joe Paduda looks at how the economy may impact workers comp in 2012. Is higher severity in the offing? Joe talks about why that might be the case.
What makes a good claims organization? – At PropertyCasualty360, Carl Van, president and CEO of the International Insurance Institute, Inc., has posted the first in a three-part series on The Five Standards of Great Claims Organizations. See how your organization or your vendor stacks up.
Complex care – the folks at TMS continue to demonstrate that in complex care cases, the devil is in the details – and those details may be impeding an injured worker’s recovery and costing you money. See Pressure mapping: The underwear case for another example of how a small problem can become a big one.
Cool tool – Calculate your injury and illness incidence rates for your organization and compare them with national, state-specific, or industry-specific averages: Incidence rate calculator and comparison tool
Jobs of yesteryearPtak Science Books features a series of photos of Pennsylvania Coal Boys on the job in 1895 excerpted from an issue of Scientific American.
JapanHR Web Cafe has posted various resources, including options for donations. The interactive before and after satellite images are very dramatic, giving some sense of scope.

In the Midst of Mayhem

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

A deranged man with a high-powered handgun in Tucson, Arizona, has killed six people and wounded many others. We will never really understand what drives an individual to plan and execute this kind of action, just as we cannot fathom why a man (or woman) would in the name of religion strap explosives to their bodies and kill themselves and as many innocent victims as possible. Belief systems are powerful motivators; demented beliefs can bring about appalling results. In these trying times, as the poet Yeats put it, “everywhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned.”
Today we limit our meditation to the role of workers compensation in this incidence of mayhem. Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) was holding an informal “Congress on the Corner” gathering outside an ironically named Safeway Supermarket, when Jared Loughner walked up behind her and shot her in the head at point blank range. Somehow, she has survived to this point. One of her aides, Gabe Zimmerman, was killed. For what it’s worth, both are covered by workers comp, as they were “in the course and scope of employment.” A number of Giffords’s volunteers were also injured: their medical bills will likely be covered by comp, but they probably will not receive any indemnity benefits. Innocent bystanders are on their own: whether employed or not, their jobs did not bring them to that fateful location.
Federal Judge John Roll, who was killed, is a special case. The justice department will try to prove that his attendance at the event was an official act: that rather than just casually dropping by to see his friend, Rep. Giffords, he was “in the course and scope of employment” when he left his nearby office to attend the meeting. Why? It is surely not workers comp that concerns the feds; they want to include the murder of Judge Roll in the federal charges against Loughner and can only do so if the judge was technically on the job at the time he was assassinated. (Ironically, the judge had received death threats due to recent rulings.)
The Politics of Mayhem
Some have drawn a direct link between Loughner’s actions and the inflammatory rhetoric of recent political campaigns. When politicians talk of “second amendment solutions” to ideological differences, they are referencing guns. By placing a cross-hair image over an opponent’s photo, they raise the specter of assassination. Based upon the limited evidence of Loughner’s web postings, his actions are likely the result of internal demons. His links to the real world were tenuous at best. He may have thought his actions were political, but like his brethren the suicide bombers, any intended political message is subsumed and ultimately obliterated by sheer madness.
This is by no means the first time that humanity has been confronted with such images of meaningless depravity. Yeats published “The Second Coming” in 1920, just a couple of years after the end of the first world war – the “war to end all wars.”

Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.

There was much anarchy then, much anarchy to follow in the dark days of the second world war and, alas, much anarchy in our time.