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Employees have no duty to cooperate with a nurse case manager sent by the insurance company.  
medical stuff

Employees have no duty to cooperate with a nurse case manager sent by the insurance company.  

Think of the nurse case manager as an insurance adjuster with a nursing degree because that is what she is. Her job is to minimize the medical benefits paid for an injured worker. She looks for evidence that the injury may not be work-related in an effort to defeat medical benefits.

Cozy Nurse-Doctor Relationship

In Freeman v ASRC, AWCB Decision No 15-0073 (6/26/15). the nurse case manager directed the injured worker from one physician to another with whom she had an established professional relationship - a relationship so cozy that the doctor signed letters that had been written by the nurse as if he had written them himself. The real reason the nurse sent the employee to that doctor was not because she was trying to secure good medical treatment from him but because she was hoping her favorite doctor would say the surgery wasn't needed or that it wasn't work related.

Under the Freeman case, the nurse case manager has a legal duty to inform the injured worker :

  • of her role, of the adversarial nature of workers compensation (i.e. she is working against him),
  • his right to decline her assistance
  • and the possibility and likelihood that the insurance company's and the worker's interest may someday diverge.

If the nurse case manager you're working with hasn't disclosed all this to you got to wonder what's going on.

Keenan Powell has practiced Workers Compensation law in the State of Alaska for over 30 years and has dedicated her practice to Workers Compensation representing injured Alaskans handling hundreds of cases.  A sample of verdicts she has obtained for Employees is found at  http://www.keenanpowell.com/past-verdicts-settlements.

All consultations are free.  To set up an appointment, use the contact form on this website or call:  907 258 7663.

I’m getting a lot of calls lately. Injured workers are worried. They have been sent to an"independent" medical evaluations. And, they have every reason to be concerned. If your insurance company is sending you to one of these doctors, then you should be worried too. The insurance company wants to cut off your benefits. And it hired Dr. Bauer or Dr. Youngblood to give them a reason. They don't care if you aren't finished treating. They don't care if you can't go back to work. They want to stop paying your disability and medical benefits.

Ain't Nothing "Independent" About Them.

Dr. David Bauer and Dr. Scot Youngblood are two insurance company darlings. They have been traveling up to Alaska frequently as of late. And they have been producing reports for years. But there ain’t nothing independent about them! These doctors are paid thousands of dollars for every report they write. And they keep writing these reports no matter how often the Alaska Workers Compensation Board shoots them down which is over and over again.

Dr. Bauer's Cases

To learn more about Dr. Bauer, check out my blog here: "Independent" Medical Evaluations: The Boys Are Back in Town - Keenan Powell, Attorney at Law

Dr. Youngblood's Cases

To learn more about typical Dr. Youngblood repots, check out my blog here: "Independent" Evaluations: Scot Youngblood, MD - Keenan Powell, Attorney at Law

What Happens Next?

Once the insurance company receives the “independent” medical evaluation report, they will cut off your benefits immediately. They should send you a Controversion Notice. But they don’t always. Not to worry, you don’t need a formal notice to start the claims process.

If you want to see what the notice should look like, the forms are available on the Alaska Workers Compensation Board's website: Workers' Compensation Forms (alaska.gov).

Short story: if your insurance company is sending you to see one of these doctors, its because they intend to cut off your benefits, you're in for a fight.

What to do? Start collecting all your medical records from your treating physicians and call an attorney.

Contact an Experience Workers Compensation Attorney

Keenan Powell has practiced Workers Compensation law in the State of Alaska for over 35 years and has dedicated her practice to Workers Compensation representing injured Alaskans handling hundreds of cases. www.keenanpowell.com

All consultations are free.  To make an appointment, email: keenan@keenanpowell.com or call:  907 258 7663.

In 2011, 3,550 employee injuries were controverted but only one-third of those, 1,224, filed claims with the Alaska Workers Compensation Board and employers paid their attorneys $9.4 million in 2011 to defeat employee's claims.   Source: Alaska Workers Compensation 2011 Annual Report.