Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
Laws of Minnesota 1990
CHAPTER 522-S.F.No. 2490
An act relating to workers' compensation; including
mentally retarded persons and those with related
conditions to the list of registrable conditions for
the subsequent disability special fund; regulating
medical data access; providing for preventative
treatment to employees exposed to rabies; regulating
notice of insurance coverage and cancellation;
amending Minnesota Statutes 1988, sections 176.131,
subdivisions 2 and 8; 176.138; 176.185, subdivision 1;
Minnesota Statutes 1989 Supplement, section 176.135,
subdivision 1.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 176.131,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. If the employee's personal injury results in
disability or death, and if the injury, death, or disability
would not have occurred except for the preexisting physical
impairment registered with the special compensation fund, the
employer shall pay all compensation provided by this chapter,
and shall be fully reimbursed from the special compensation fund
for the compensation except that this full reimbursement shall
not be made for cardiac disease or a condition registered
pursuant to subdivision 8, clause (t) (u) or (u) (v), unless the
commissioner by rule provides otherwise.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 176.131,
subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. As used in this section the following terms have
the meanings given them:
"Physical impairment" means any physical or mental
condition that is permanent in nature, whether congenital or due
to injury, disease or surgery and which is or is likely to be a
hindrance or obstacle to obtaining employment except that
physical impairment is limited to the following:
(a) Epilepsy,
(b) Diabetes,
(c) Hemophilia,
(d) Cardiac disease, provided that objective medical
evidence substantiates at least the minimum permanent partial
disability listed in the workers' compensation permanent partial
disability schedule,
(e) Partial or entire absence of thumb, finger, hand, foot,
arm or leg,
(f) Lack of sight in one or both eyes or vision in either
eye not correctable to 20/40,
(g) Residual disability from poliomyelitis,
(h) Cerebral Palsy,
(i) Multiple Sclerosis,
(j) Parkinson's disease,
(k) Cerebral vascular accident,
(l) Chronic Osteomyelitis,
(m) Muscular Dystrophy,
(n) Thrombophlebitis,
(o) Brain tumors,
(p) Pott's disease,
(q) Seizures,
(r) Cancer of the bone,
(s) Leukemia,
(t) Mental retardation or other related conditions,
(u) Any other physical impairment resulting in a disability
rating of at least ten percent of the whole body if the physical
impairment were evaluated according to standards used in
workers' compensation proceedings, and
(u) (v) Any other physical impairments of a permanent
nature which the commissioner may by rule prescribe;.
"Compensation" has the meaning defined in section 176.011;.
"Employer" includes insurer;.
"Disability" means, unless otherwise indicated, any
condition causing either temporary total, temporary partial,
permanent total, permanent partial, death, medical expense, or
rehabilitation.
"Mental retardation" means significantly subaverage
intellectual functioning existing concurrently with demonstrated
deficits in adaptive behavior that require supervision and
protection for the person's welfare or the public welfare.
"Other related conditions" means severe chronic
disabilities that are (i) attributable to cerebral palsy,
epilepsy, autism, or any other condition, other than mental
illness, found to be closely related to mental retardation
because the condition results in impairment of general
intellectual functioning or adaptive behavior similar to that of
persons with mental retardation or requires treatment or
services similar to those required for persons with mental
retardation; (ii) likely to continue indefinitely; and (iii)
result in substantial functional limitations in three or more of
the following areas of major life activity: self-care,
understanding and use of language, learning, mobility,
self-direction, or capacity for independent living.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 1989 Supplement, section
176.135, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [MEDICAL, PSYCHOLOGICAL, CHIROPRACTIC,
PODIATRIC, SURGICAL, HOSPITAL.] (a) The employer shall furnish
any medical, psychological, chiropractic, podiatric, surgical
and hospital treatment, including nursing, medicines, medical,
chiropractic, podiatric, and surgical supplies, crutches and
apparatus, including artificial members, or, at the option of
the employee, if the employer has not filed notice as
hereinafter provided, Christian Science treatment in lieu of
medical treatment, chiropractic medicine and medical supplies,
as may reasonably be required at the time of the injury and any
time thereafter to cure and relieve from the effects of the
injury. This treatment shall include treatments necessary to
physical rehabilitation. Exposure to rabies is an injury and an
employer shall furnish preventative treatment to employees
exposed to rabies. The employer shall furnish replacement or
repair for artificial members, glasses, or spectacles,
artificial eyes, podiatric orthotics, dental bridge work,
dentures or artificial teeth, hearing aids, canes, crutches, or
wheel chairs damaged by reason of an injury arising out of and
in the course of the employment. In case of the employer's
inability or refusal seasonably to do so the employer is liable
for the reasonable expense incurred by or on behalf of the
employee in providing the same, including costs of copies of any
medical records or medical reports that are in existence,
obtained from health care providers, and that directly relate to
the items for which payment is sought under this chapter,
limited to the charges allowed by subdivision 7, and attorney
fees incurred by the employee. No action to recover the cost of
copies may be brought until the commissioner adopts a schedule
of reasonable charges under subdivision 7. Attorney's fees
shall be determined on an hourly basis according to the criteria
in section 176.081, subdivision 5. The employer shall pay for
the reasonable value of nursing services by a member of the
employee's family in cases of permanent total disability.
(b) Both the commissioner and the compensation judges have
authority to make determinations under this section in
accordance with sections 176.106 and 176.305.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 176.138, is
amended to read:
176.138 [MEDICAL DATA; ACCESS.]
(a) Notwithstanding any other state laws related to the
privacy of medical data or any private agreements to the
contrary, the release in writing, by telephone discussion, or
otherwise of medical data related to a current claim for
compensation under this chapter to the employee, employer, or
insurer who are parties to the claim, or to the department of
labor and industry, shall not require prior approval of any
party to the claim. This section does not preclude the release
of medical data under section 175.10 or 176.231, subdivision 9.
Requests for pertinent data shall be made, and the date of
discussions with medical providers about medical data shall be
confirmed, in writing to the person or organization that
collected or currently possesses the data. The Written medical
data that exists at the time the request is made shall be
provided by the collector or possessor within seven working days
of receiving the request. Nonwritten medical data may be
provided, but is not required to be provided, by the collector
or possessor. In all cases of a request for the data or
discussion with a medical provider about the data, except when
it is the employee who is making the request, the employee shall
be sent written notification of the request by the party
requesting the data at the same time the request is made or a
written confirmation of the discussion. This data shall be
treated as private data by the party who requests or receives
the data and the party receiving the data shall provide the
employee or the employee's attorney with a copy of all data
requested by the requester.
(b) Medical data which is not directly related to a current
injury or disability shall not be released without prior
authorization of the employee.
(c) The commissioner may impose a penalty of up to $200
payable to the special compensation fund against a party who
does not timely release the data in a timely manner as required
in this section. A party who does not treat this data as
private pursuant to this section is guilty of a misdemeanor.
This section clause applies only to written medical data which
exists at the time the request is made.
(d) Workers' compensation insurers and self-insured
employers may, for the sole purpose of identifying duplicate
billings submitted to more than one insurer, disclose to health
insurers, including all insurers writing insurance described in
section 60A.06, subdivision 1, clause (5)(a), nonprofit health
service plan corporations subject to chapter 62C, health
maintenance organizations subject to chapter 62D, and joint
self-insurance employee health plans subject to chapter 62H,
computerized information about dates, coded items, and charges
for medical treatment of employees and other medical billing
information submitted to them by an employee, employer, health
care provider, or other insurer in connection with a current
claim for compensation under this chapter, without prior
approval of any party to the claim. The data may not be used by
the health insurer for any other purpose whatsoever and must be
destroyed after verification that there has been no duplicative
billing. Any person who is the subject of the data which is
used in a manner not allowed by this section has a cause of
action for actual damages and punitive damages for a minimum of
$5,000.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 176.185,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [NOTICE OF COVERAGE, TERMINATION,
CANCELLATION.] (a) Within ten days after the issuance of a
policy of insurance covering the liability to pay compensation
under this chapter written by an insurer licensed to insure such
liability in this state, the insurer shall file notice of
coverage with the commissioner under rules and on forms
prescribed by the commissioner. No policy shall be canceled by
the insurer within the policy period nor terminated upon its
expiration date until a notice in writing is delivered or mailed
to the insured and filed with the commissioner, fixing the date
on which it is proposed to cancel it, or declaring that the
insurer does not intend to renew the policy upon the expiration
date. A cancellation or termination is not effective until 30
days after written notice has been filed with the commissioner
in a manner prescribed by the commissioner unless prior to the
expiration of the 30-day period the employer obtains other
insurance coverage or an order exempting the employer from
carrying insurance as provided in section 176.181. Upon receipt
of the notice the commissioner shall notify the insured that the
insured must obtain coverage from some other licensed carrier
and that, if unable to do so, the insured shall request the
commissioner of commerce to require the issuance of a policy as
provided in section 79.251, subdivision 4. Upon a cancellation
or termination of a policy by the insurer the employer is
entitled to be assigned a policy in accordance with sections
79.251 and 79.252.
(b) Notice of cancellation or termination by the insured
shall be served upon the insurer by written statement mailed or
delivered to the insurer. Upon receipt of the notice the
insurer shall notify the commissioner of the cancellation or
termination and the commissioner shall ask the employer for the
reasons for the cancellation or termination and notify the
employer of the duty under this chapter to insure the employer's
employees.
(c) In addition to the requirements under paragraphs (a)
and (b), with respect to any trucker employer in classifications
7219, 7230, 7231, or 7360 pursuant to the classification plan
required to be filed under section 79.61, if the insurer or its
agent has delivered or mailed a written certificate of insurance
certifying that a policy in the name of a trucker employer under
this paragraph is in force, then the insurer or its agent shall
also deliver or mail written notice of any mid-term cancellation
to the trucker employer recipient of the certificate of
insurance at the address listed on the certificate. If an
insurer or its agent fails to mail or deliver notice of any
mid-term cancellation of the trucker employer's policy to the
trucker employer recipient of the certificate of insurance, then
the special compensation fund shall indemnify and hold harmless
the recipient from any award of benefits or other damages under
this chapter resulting from the failure to give notice.
Presented to the governor April 24, 1990
Signed by the governor April 26, 1990, 11:28 p.m.
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes