Re: Should I have to pay this bill???????
Since I have experience in employee benefits, including WC and that experience is in the state of Louisiana, where WIF lives, I'll offer my thoughts.
This will boil down to whether or not the injury is work related. A previous, nonwork related injury may factor in, but the WC insurance carrier is still on the hook, if the injury is work related in the immediate case.
The advice that you were given, above, claiming that WC covers only lost wages is incorrect. If the injury is work related, your regular health insurer will not cover the injury or anything related to it. Moreover, the employer's WC carrier is responsible and the employer better have WC insurance or an SIF, because it is legally required to cover all but the company owners.
What your supervisor said about covering costs isn't going to matter, if the injury is not work related. The WC carrier will simply refuse to pay. Even if it is work related, they will probably fight you. If so, be aware that you have a right to seek your own doctors and if they determine the injury to be work related, you can use that to fight back. That is not to say that the WC carrier will just give in, but you do not have to rely on their doctors only. As you might imagine, the WC carrier is not going to send you to someone that they think will side with you.
The state of Louisiana also has something called the Second Injury Fund. This is a state mandated fund that is used to lessen the claims that WC carriers have to cover, where there is a previous injury that is a factor in the current injury. There is a law in our state, which requires you to truthfully disclose any injury or illness that is directly related to the work related injury. If you fail to be truthful, you can be fined.
There is a huge problem with the law, however. First, some WC providers, particulalry those connected to trade associations, have completely misinterpreted the Second Injury Fund law. IMO, some have done this very much on purpose. What they have been doing, is to have the covered companies hand out a medical questionaire to new hires. The questionaire basically asks for complete medical history, while referencing the law on every page, suggesting that if you don't answer, you can be sanctioned.
In a nutshell, the problem with this, is that it is intended to reduce exposure to WC carriers and you have no real responsibility to answer any question on it, unless the specific question is directly related to an injury or illness that is work related and for which you have put in a claim. If you have ever filled one of these questionaires out, you can be pretty sure that the WC carrier will try to use it to reduce their exposure. If you have not and they hand you one, my recommendation is to not fill it out.
As a side note, you should know that WC insurers are exempt from certain provisions of the HIPAA law, which is another reason why you should reject attempts by them to get comprehensive medical information from you. In short, tell them nothing that they don't need to know to cover a claim.
Here's the good news on the Second Injury Fund situation - regardless, the WC must cover the entire claim. Even if there is a previous iinjury which affects the current injury, and even if the first one is not work related, the WC carrier must pay the whole claim and they recover a percantage from the Second Injury Fund. It is not your responsibility to do that. Once again, however, don't rely on them to fess up to that fact.
Again, this is about whether or not your injury was work related. If it is, my advice is not to pay the ambulance bill. Send a certified letter to both the ambulance company and your employer, informing them that the injury was work related and that you will not pay the invoice.
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