Marlborough Express

ACC rulings dismay thousands

- MADISON REIDY

Refusal to pay for elective surgery topped the list of the 10 most common disputes over Accident Compensati­on Corporatio­n decisions last year.

About 5600 formal reviews were taken by claimants against the state insurer in the year to June 2017, and ACC figures show 2330 of those complaints involved elective surgery to treat injuries. To reach a formal review, clients must appeal to ACC within three months of its refusal to pay.

The reviews are heard by dispute service firm Fairway Resolution. ACC’s decisions were upheld in 82 per cent of hearings in the year to June.

ACC specialist lawyer Warren Forster said the large number of surgery reviews was due to ACC declining so many elective surgery applicatio­ns.

ACC received 51,270 claims to cover elective surgery in the past year.

Forster said claimants had already been told by a surgeon that ACC should pay, so to have it declined against a medical profession­al’s opinion was often surprising. ‘‘About 10 to 20 per cent who have a declined surgery review it.’’

ACC spokesman James Funnell said elective surgeries were often declined due to pre-existing conditions. If the insurer accepts a claim, ACC must also cover the claimant’s lost income while they recover. That added cost was factored into whether an elective surgery claim was accepted or not, Funnell said.

ACC-covered surgeries were placed higher on hospital waiting lists so the surgery was done faster, therefore reducing lost income compensati­on payments, he said.

‘‘There are significan­t benefits of having surgery approved by ACC, including earnings-related compensati­on while recovering, and reduced waiting times compared with the public health waiting list, so these are potentiall­y drivers that contribute to the review rate for surgery decisions,’’ Funnell said.

The second most common reason claimants went to formal review last year was because the ACC deemed their injury to be false, and therefore refused to cover the costs of medical bills, treatment and lost income.

More than 700 reviews contested ACC’s decisions for personal injury

"ACC has had enough of these people." ACC specialist lawyer Warren Forster, on the suspension of compensati­on payments

cover in the past year. ACC covers the costs of an injury if it was caused by accident, sexual violence, birth, or was the result of a gradual condition from work- ing. Disputes over cover made up more than a third of this year’s top 10 reviews.

ACC claimants filed almost 600 reviews against refusal to pay for treatment, placing it fourth in the top 10.

There were 232 reviews against gradual process cover and 145 against accident cover among the top 10, where the ACC refused to believe that injuries were accidental.

Forster said those numbers were low compared to the average 50,000 cover claims that ACC declined each year.

ACC decisions to suspend compensati­on payments were the third most reviewed, and of most concern, he said.

He said these people had typically been receiving ACC payments for a long time. ‘‘ACC has had enough of these people.’’

Payments were typically suspended because the ACC found there was ‘‘no causal link’’ between a claimant’s injury and the reason for the payments.

Over the past seven years, the number of disputed decisions has almost halved – from 9800 in 2009 to 5600 last year.

Forster said fewer formal reviews did not suggest a more just ACC system.

‘‘Has the number halved because less people are p...ed off or because people think there is not much point in dealing with them?’’

 ?? PHOTO: 123RF ?? More than 50,000 New Zealanders asked ACC to pay for their elective surgery last year. But a number who expected cover were surprised to be rejected.
PHOTO: 123RF More than 50,000 New Zealanders asked ACC to pay for their elective surgery last year. But a number who expected cover were surprised to be rejected.

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