R612-200-1. Reporting and investigating injuries  


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  •   A. Employers' Duty to Report Work Injuries.

      1. An employer is not required to report an injury that requires only first aid treatment, as defined by Subsection R612-100-3.A.

      2. Except for injuries treated only by first aid, an employer shall report each employee work injury within 7 days after receiving initial notice of the injury, as follows:

      a. An employer that has obtained workers' compensation insurance shall report the injury to its insurance carrier.

      b. An employer that has received Division authorization to self-insure shall report the injury to its claims administrator.

      c. An employer that has failed to obtain worker's compensation coverage shall report the injury by contacting the Division directly.

      3. An employer has notice of a work injury upon the earliest of:

      a. Observation of the injury;

      b. Verbal or written notice of the injury from any source; or

      c. Receipt of any other information sufficient to warrant further inquiry by the employer.

      B. Submitting Reports of Injury to the Division.

      1. Except for injuries treated only by first aid as defined by Subsection R612-100-3.A, an insurance carrier, self-insured claim administrator, or uninsured employer shall submit a First Report of Injury to the Division within fourteen days after receiving initial notice of the injury.

      a. An insurance carrier or self-insured claim administrator has notice of a work injury upon receipt of verbal or written information that includes the name of the employer, the name of the employee and the date of injury.

      b. The insurance carrier or self-insured claim administrator shall submit the First Report of Injury to the Division electronically in compliance with the content and formatting requirements of the Industrial Accidents Division Claims EDI Implementation Guide ("EDI Guide" V2.2, 04-19-13) and the Utah Claims R3 EDI Tables ("EDI Tables"; 04-19-13) adopted and incorporated by this reference as part of these rules.

      c. An uninsured employer shall report the information required by this subsection as part of the employer's initial contact with the Division required by subsection A.2.c of this rule.

      C. Investigation of Claims; Notice to Division and Claimants; Commencement of Benefits.

      1. An insurance carrier, self-insured employer, or uninsured employer shall promptly investigate a reported work injury and either accept or deny workers' compensation liability for the claim within 21 days after receiving initial notice of the injury.

      a. If, with reasonable diligence, an insurance carrier, self-insured employer, or uninsured employer cannot complete its investigation within 21 days after initial notice, it may complete and submit Division Form 441, "Notice of Further Investigation of a Workers' Compensation Claim" notify the Division and claimant that the matter remains under investigation. The insurance carrier, self-insured employer, or uninsured employer is then allowed 24 days in addition to the initial 21-day period to complete its investigation and accept or deny liability of the claim.

      b. An insurance carrier or self-insured employer denying a claim for workers' compensation benefits shall report such denial through current EDI processes. An uninsured employer denying a claim for workers' compensation benefits shall complete and mail to the Division Form 089, "Employee Notification of Denial of Claim" and to the claimant.

      c. If the insurance carrier, self-insured employer, or uninsured employer accepts liability for the claim, payment of benefits shall commence within 7 days from the date of acceptance. The insurance carrier, self-insured employer, or uninsured employer shall use Division Form 141, "Statement of Insurance Carrier or Uninsured Employer with Respect to Payment of Benefits" to report the initial benefits paid to a claimant. Form 141 must accompany the first payment to the claimant and must be filed with or mailed to the Division on that same date.

      d. An insurance carrier, self-insured employer, or uninsured employer's payment of benefits during investigation of a claim does not prevent subsequent denial of the claim after the investigation is completed.

      D. Consequences of Failure to Comply.

      1. Pursuant to Subsection 34A-2-407(8) of the Utah Workers' Compensation Act, the Division may impose a civil assessment of up to $500 for an insurance carrier, insured employer, self-insured employer, or uninsured employer's failure, without good cause, to comply with the requirements of this rule.

      a. "Good cause" includes a claimant's unreasonable failure to sign requested medical releases or otherwise cooperate in the investigation of a claim.

      b. For improperly filed reports, the civil assessment shall be imposed for the report as a whole and not for each data element within a report.

      2. In addition to the civil assessment authorized by Subsection 34A-2-407(8), an insurance company or self-insured employer's failure, without good cause, to comply with the requirements of this rule may result in:

      a. referral of the insurance company to the Insurance Department for appropriate disciplinary action; or

      b. revocation of a self-insured employer's authorization to remain self-insured.

      3. The method of issuing the assessments shall be set by the division's policies and procedures.

      4. Assessments shall be issued in the form of an order signed by the division's presiding officer and pursuant to the requirements contained in Section 63G-4-203.

      5. An aggrieved party may seek agency review of any order pursuant to Section 63G-4-301.