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
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Oregon workers' compensation claims counts. Where available, the data is provided since 1968, the year Oregon's modern workers' compensation system began. The data is presented in the Department of Consumer and Business Services report at https://www.oregon.gov/dcbs/reports/compensation/Pages/index.aspx. The attached pdf provides definitions of the data.
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.
This dataset has been published by the Human Resources Department of the City of Virginia Beach and data.virginiabeach.gov. The mission of data.virginiabeach.gov is to provide timely and accurate City information to increase government transparency and access to useful and well organized data by the general public, non-governmental organizations, and City of Virginia Beach employees.
This data set contains DOT employee workers compensation claim data for current and past DOT employees. Types of data include claim data consisting of PII data (SSN, Name, Date of Birth, Home Address, Financial Institution, medical, etc.) and claim data from the Department of Labor
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Total number and cost for Workers Comp Claims
This dataset is a subset of “Assembled Workers’ Compensation Claims: Beginning 2000” with two new fields: Part of Body Injured List and Part of Body Injured Decode. The first field is a list of Workers Compensation Insurance Organizations (WCIO) part of body codes, separated by commas, the second field is a list of WCIO Part of Body Descriptions, separated by commas. Each row is per claim.
Oregon workers' compensation data about insurers and self-insured employers. The data is presented in the Department of Consumer and Business Services report at https://www.oregon.gov/dcbs/reports/compensation/Pages/index.aspx. The attached pdf provides definitions of the data.
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Graph and download economic data for Producer Price Index by Industry: Premiums for Property and Casualty Insurance: Premiums for Worker's Compensation Insurance (PCU9241269241266) from Jun 1998 to Apr 2025 about property-casualty, premium, compensation, insurance, workers, PPI, industry, inflation, price index, indexes, price, and USA.
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.
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The Global Work-Injury Policy Database (GWIP) provides data on the introduction and development of work-injury policy in 186 independent nation states. As of version 2, the database includes generosity and inclusivity scores for all countries in the year 2020. These scores are harmonized to match with the Social Insurance Entitlements Dataset (SIED). Work-injury policies were historically known as “workmen’s compensation”, "workman's compensation" and sometimes “accident insurance” among policymakers and scholars. The data include year of introduction of first laws, the types of laws, coverage of blue-collar workers and steps on the path to social insurance laws.
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). The Assembled Claims filtered view contains information to answer commonly asked questions about claims assembled by the WCB, such as: How many claims filed with the WCB in a given year were the liability of a certain carrier? What is the average age of injured workers injured in a certain county? See the description for the tabular dataset this is based on or the attachments in the "About" section for additional 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 ---
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Oregon workers' compensation indemnity data. The data is presented in the Department of Consumer and Business Services report at https://www.oregon.gov/dcbs/reports/compensation/Pages/index.aspx. The attached pdf provides definitions of the data.
Claim resolutions: Most accepted disabling workers' compensation claims go through the claim closure process in which the insurer stops temporary disability payments and determines PPD. Accepted disabling claims may be resolved multiple times. Other claims are settled with claim disposition agreements (CDAs). In this table, claim closures and CDA settlements are called claim resolutions.
Average temporary disability days paid for claim resolutions: The figures are the average days of paid temporary disability, both temporary total disability and temporary partial disability, for the years’ resolutions. Missing data are estimated. Insurers do not report days for CDA resolutions; these are estimated.
Resolved claims In this set of data, claims with multiple closures
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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.
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Rates of accepted workers’ compensation claims by estimated race/ethnicity and NORA industry sectorsa.
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.
Leveraging unique administrative data and a sharp increase in benefit generosity in a difference-in-differences research design, we estimate the impact of workers' compensation wage replacement benefits on individual behavior and program costs. We find that increased benefit generosity leads to longer income benefit durations and increased medical spending. Responses along these two margins are equally important drivers of increased program costs, collectively increasing program costs 1.4 times the mechanical increase in costs. Using these estimates and an estimate of the consumption drop among injured workers, our welfare calibrations suggest that a marginal increase in benefit generosity would not improve welfare.
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Claim resolutions: Most accepted disabling workers' compensation claims go through the claim closure process in which the insurer stops temporary disability payments and determines PPD. Accepted disabling claims may be resolved multiple times. Other claims are settled with claim disposition agreements (CDAs). In this table, claim closures and CDA settlements are called claim resolutions.
Resolved claims In this set of data, claims with multiple closures are counted once. If a claim is reopened and reclosed, it is counted by the year of the latest resolution. Therefore, historical data will change.
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