The Employer Database System is a database of all Oregon employers and their history of workers’ compensation (WC) insurance coverage. The system produces a snapshot of current employers with active workers’ compensation insurance policies. The most current data are updated monthly during the first week of the month.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) publishes a quarterly report of employers with active Texas workers’ compensation insurance coverage. Employers with coverage are called “subscribers.” Texas does not require most private employers to have workers' compensation insurance coverage.
Insurance carriers report coverage data to DWC using the International Association of Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions’ (IAIABC) IAIABC Proof of Coverage (POC) Release 2.1 electronic data interchange (EDI) standard. The National Council on Workers’ Compensation Insurance (NCCI) collects the POC data for DWC. POC filings are the source of this data set.
Visit the DWC Employer Coverage Page for more information.
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Analysis of ‘Oregon Active Workers’ Compensation Employer Database’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/e55d8861-ba73-42ac-977d-ac4640014b69 on 13 February 2022.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
The Employer Database System is a database of all Oregon employers and their history of workers’ compensation (WC) insurance coverage. The system produces a snapshot of current employers with active workers’ compensation insurance policies.
The most current data are updated monthly during the first week of the month.
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
The Workers’ Compensation Board (WCB) administers and regulates workers’ compensation benefits, disability benefits, volunteer firefighters’ benefits, volunteer ambulance workers’ benefits, and volunteer civil defense workers’ benefits. The WCB processes and adjudicates claims for benefits; ensures employer compliance with the requirement to maintain appropriate insurance coverage; and regulates the various system stakeholders, including self-insured employers, medical providers, third party administrators, insurance carriers and legal representatives. Claim assembly occurs when the WCB learns of a workplace injury and assigns the claim a WCB claim number. The WCB “assembles” a claim in which an injured worker has lost more than one week of work, has a serious injury that may result in a permanent disability, is disputed by the carrier or employer, or receives a claim form from the injured worker (Form C-3). A reopened claim is one that has been reactivated to resolve new issues following a finding that no further action was necessary
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of health care providers with current maximum medical improvement (MMI) and designated doctor certifications in Texas. This list includes doctors’ certification periods, phone numbers, fax numbers, and addresses.
For more information about designated doctors, go to https://www.tdi.texas.gov/wc/dd/index.html.
For a list of health care providers’ MMI and designated doctors’ certifications only, go to Workers’ Compensation Maximum Medical Improvement Doctors and Designated Doctors List.
The Employer Database System is a database of all Oregon employers and their history of workers’ compensation (WC) insurance coverage. The system produces a snapshot of current employers with active workers’ compensation insurance policies.
The most current data are updated monthly during the first week of the month.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) publishes a monthly report of private employers that have opted out of Texas workers’ compensation insurance coverage (non-subscribers). Texas does not require most private employers to have workers' compensation insurance coverage.
Non-subscribers are required to file the https://www.tdi.texas.gov/forms/dwc/dwc005nocov.pdf">DWC Form-005, Employers' Notice of No Coverage or Termination of Coverage annually. The DWC Form-005 is the source of this data set.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of pharmacy medical billing services (SV4). It contains charges, payments, and prescriptions billed on a DWC Form-066, Statement of Pharmacy Services by pharmacies with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail information – historical.
The detail section contains information to identify insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill details are individual line items that are grouped in the header section of a single bill. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail data dictionary.
See pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header information for the corresponding header records related this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
The Employer Database System is a database of all Oregon employers and their history of workers’ compensation (WC) insurance coverage. The system produces a snapshot of current employers with active workers’ compensation insurance policies.
The most current data are updated monthly during the first week of the month.
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The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) collected work-related injury and illness data from employers within specific industry and employment size specifications from 2002 through 2011. This data collection is called the OSHA Data Initiative or ODI. The data provided is used by OSHA to calculate establishment specific injury and illness incidence rates. This searchable database contains a table with the name, address, industry, and associated Total Case Rate (TCR), Days Away, Restricted, and Transfer (DART) case rate, and the Days Away From Work (DAFWII) case rate for the establishments that provided OSHA with valid data for calendar years 2002 through 2011. This data has been sampled down from its original size to 4%. In addition, the original dataset only has data from a small portion of all private sector establishments in the United States (80,000 out of 7.5 million total establishments). Therefore, these data are not representative of all businesses and general conclusions pertaining to all US business should not be overdrawn. Data quality: While OSHA takes multiple steps to ensure the data collected is accurate, problems and errors invariably exist for a small percentage of establishments. OSHA does not believe the data for the establishments with the highest rates on this file are accurate in absolute terms. Efforts were made during the collection cycle to correct submission errors, however some remain unresolved. It would be a mistake to say establishments with the highest rates on this file are the ‘most dangerous’ or ‘worst’ establishments in the Nation. Rate Calculation: An incidence rate of injuries and illnesses is computed from the following formula: (Number of injuries and illnesses X 200,000) / Employee hours worked = Incidence rate. The Total Case Rate includes all cases recorded on the OSHA Form 300 (Column G + Column H + Column I + Column J). The Days Away/Restriced/Transfer includes cases recorded in Column H + Column I. The Days Away includes cases recorded in Column H. For further information on injury and illness incidence rates, please visit the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ webpage at http://www.bls.gov/iif/osheval.htm State Participation: Not all state plan states participate in the ODI. The following states did not participate in the 2010 ODI (collection of CY 2009 data), establishment data is not available for these states: Alaska; Oregon; Puerto Rico; South Carolina; Washington; Wyoming.
Key | List of... | Comment | Example Value |
---|---|---|---|
year | Integer | $MISSING_FIELD | 2002 |
address.city | String | $MISSING_FIELD | "Cherry Hill" |
address.state | String | $MISSING_FIELD | "NJ" |
address.street | String | $MISSING_FIELD | "100 Dobbs Ln Ste 102" |
address.zip | Integer | $MISSING_FIELD | 8034 |
business.name | String | $MISSING_FIELD | "United States Cold Storage" |
business.second name | String | $MISSING_FIELD | "US Cold" |
industry.division | String | $MISSING_FIELD | "Transportation, Communications, Electric, Gas, And Sanitary Services" |
industry.id | Integer | $MISSING_FIELD | 4222 |
industry.label | String | $MISSING_FIELD | "Refrigerated Warehousing and Storage" |
industry.major_group | String | $MISSING_FIELD | "Motor Freight Transportation And Warehousing" |
statistics.days away | Float | $MISSING_FIELD | 0.0 |
statistics.days away/restricted/transfer | Float | $MISSING_FIELD | 0.0 |
statistics.total case rate | Float | $MISSING_FIELD | 0.0 |
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Indonesia Compensation Workers: Jambi data was reported at 57,837.636 IDR mn in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 66,840.612 IDR mn for 2015. Indonesia Compensation Workers: Jambi data is updated yearly, averaging 56,079.948 IDR mn from Dec 2011 (Median) to 2017, with 6 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 68,445.450 IDR mn in 2014 and a record low of 37,702.570 IDR mn in 2011. Indonesia Compensation Workers: Jambi data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Central Bureau of Statistics. The data is categorized under Indonesia Premium Database’s Energy Sector – Table ID.RBI005: Electricity: Workers Compensation.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of pharmacy medical billing services (SV4). It contains charges, payments, and prescriptions billed on a DWC Form-066, Statement of Pharmacy Services by pharmacies with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header information – historical.
The header identifies insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill header information groups individual line items reported in the detail section. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header data dictionary.
See pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail information for the corresponding detail records related to this dataset.
Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
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A dataset showing the number of nonfatal workplace injuries and illnesses across various industry sectors in 2022.
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License information was derived automatically
Indonesia Compensation Workers: North Sumatera data was reported at 745,092.316 IDR mn in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 682,154.159 IDR mn for 2015. Indonesia Compensation Workers: North Sumatera data is updated yearly, averaging 476,391.204 IDR mn from Dec 2011 (Median) to 2017, with 6 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 745,092.316 IDR mn in 2017 and a record low of 377,624.079 IDR mn in 2011. Indonesia Compensation Workers: North Sumatera data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Central Bureau of Statistics. The data is categorized under Indonesia Premium Database’s Energy Sector – Table ID.RBI005: Electricity: Workers Compensation.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of pharmacy medical billing services (SV4). It contains charges, payments, and prescriptions billed on a DWC Form-066, Statement of Pharmacy Services by pharmacies with dates of service for the last five years. For datasets going back to 2010, see pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header information – historical. The header identifies insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill header information groups individual line items reported in the detail section. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header data dictionary. See pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail information for the corresponding detail records related to this dataset. Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
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Oregon Workers' Compensation record-level details for accepted disabling claims from 2013 through 2022. Personally identifying information has been removed or provided at a less granular level to maintain confidentiality.
The Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC), Workers’ Compensation Information System (WCIS) has been collecting First Reports of Injury (FROI) and Subsequent Reports of Injury (SROI) submitted electronically by claims administrators and their trading partners using the International Association of Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions (IAIABC) FROI/SROI Release 1.0 standard since 2000. The numbers reflect the WCIS database information as of the run date of the report.
The Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) maintains a database of pharmacy medical billing services (SV4). It contains charges, payments, and prescriptions billed on a DWC Form-066, Statement of Pharmacy Services by pharmacies with dates of service more than five years old going back to 2010. For datasets from the past five years, see pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail information. The detail section contains information to identify insurance carriers, injured employees, employers, place of service, and diagnostic information. The bill details are individual line items that are grouped in the header section of a single bill. The bill selection date and bill ID must be used to group individual line items into a single bill. Find more information in our pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) detail data dictionary. See pharmacy medical billing services (SV4) header information - historical for the corresponding header records related this dataset. Go to our page on DWC medical state reporting public use data file (PUDF) to learn more about using this information.
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United States NHE: TPPP: Workers' Compensation data was reported at 47.396 USD bn in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 48.556 USD bn for 2016. United States NHE: TPPP: Workers' Compensation data is updated yearly, averaging 14.668 USD bn from Dec 1960 (Median) to 2017, with 58 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 48.556 USD bn in 2016 and a record low of 615.000 USD mn in 1960. United States NHE: TPPP: Workers' Compensation data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services . The data is categorized under Global Database’s United States – Table US.G084: National Health Expenditures.
The Reforms Database is a database developed by the International Social Security Association (ISSA). Its website provides access to information, expert advice, business standards, practical guidelines and platforms for members to build and promote dynamic social security systems worldwide. Social Security Country Profiles is the database of ISSA which provides an overview of social security programmes in the Americas, Africa, Asia and the Pacific, and Europe.
The Employer Database System is a database of all Oregon employers and their history of workers’ compensation (WC) insurance coverage. The system produces a snapshot of current employers with active workers’ compensation insurance policies. The most current data are updated monthly during the first week of the month.