In 2010, Wisconsin’s workers’ compensation system was the costliest for non-hospital services in a study of 25 study states. Prices in Wisconsin were more than twice that of the 25-state median, and nearly 50 percent higher than the median of the six states with no fee schedules, according to a new study by the Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI).
Over the nine years covered in the Medical Price Index for Workers’ Compensation, Third Edition (MPI-WC) – calendar year 2002 through June 2010 – prices in Wisconsin grew most rapidly. The prices in Wisconsin increased 42 percent, much faster compared to median growth rate of 11 percent of the states with fee schedules, also faster than the 28 percent typical growth rate of the states without fee schedules.
Topics Workers' Compensation
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