Texas Regulators Say Workers’ Comp Costs Down 63% Since 2005

December 15, 2017

More Texas businesses are providing workers’ compensation insurance as the cost of coverage continues to decline, according to the Texas Department of Insurance – Division of Workers’ Compensation (TDI-DWC).

Premiums have fallen by 63 percent since 2005 as department has worked to reduce costs and improve care through health care networks, a drug formulary, safer workplaces, and other reforms.

In Texas, the average premium for each $100 of payroll dropped from $2.32 in 2003 to 86 cents in 2015, according to the National Council on Compensation Insurance.

The fact that fewer employees are filing workers’ compensation claims — a 28 percent drop since 2004, has contributed to the decline in premium costs. Non-fatal injury rates are also down 36 percent since 2005, an indication that employers are making workplaces safer.

“With premium costs down more than 60 percent, more employers have opted to provide workers’ compensation insurance, which means financial resources are there for injured employees when they need help the most,” Texas Commissioner of Workers’ Compensation Ryan Brannan said in the agency’s announcement. “And in Texas, employees are also getting better care.”

More employees are getting treatment sooner. About 84 percent of injured employees receive non-emergency medical care within seven days of their injuries, compared to 76 percent in 2000. The average number of claims treated by physicians decreased over the last decade, from 21 claims per physician in 2000 to about 15 per physician in 2016.

In Texas, more injured employees are back at work within six months of their injury, and the average number of days off work has decreased by more than 30 percent since 2005.

Source: TDI-DWC