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The development of workmen's compensation legislation in the United StatesWeiss, Harry. January 1933 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1933. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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The Evolution and Present Status of Workmen's Compensation Insurance in TexasPickrell, Jesse F. 01 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study is to record the evolution and to determine the present status of workmen's compensation insurance in Texas.
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Workmen's Compensation Claims Administration in TexasKinnaird, Donald Lewis 08 1900 (has links)
This study is devoted to a detailed survey of the claims administrative machinery of the State of Texas workman's compensation program.
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Administrative and Judicial Evolution of the Occupational Disease Concept in Workmen's Compensation LegislationHyde, Peter D. 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to examine the theory of workmen's compensation, tracing its historical development and showing how the law evolved in the United States. Pertinent statutes and administrative and judicial decisions will be given to the evolution of the theory of compensable occupational diseases. Following an analysis of the occupational disease concept and the significance of this concept in modifying the basic theory, an effort will be made to evaluate the effect of this concept upon the meaning of the laws.
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A simulation of case management operations at the Workers' Compensation Board: a decision support tool for human resource allocationLin, Claire 11 1900 (has links)
The challenges in human resource allocation drive the present project. Conducted at an
office of the Workers' Compensation Board of British Columbia (the WCB), the project
aims at developing a simulation model of claim management operations to facilitate
decision-making in resource allocation. In this context, resource allocation refers to the
alignment of staff to claims. The components of the problem include the number of staff
required and the types of staff required, given targeted system performance.
The volume of claims, the profile of claims, the Workers Compensation Act, the board's
business guidelines and the board's operational targets all influence staffing requirement.
It is far from straightforward to answer the following questions: what is the optimal level
of staffing? What is the right mix of skills? And what is the proper alignment of staff
with claims? How will the system perform given a certain staffing level? How will
change in the profile of incoming claims influence staffing requirement?
A discrete-event simulation model was developed as a decision support tool in this
project. The model was used to evaluate several resource allocation scenarios.
Simulation showed that timeliness measures such as time to decision and time to closure
would improve with additional resources, but the improvement was not drastic. At the
staffing level of 14, compared to the current level of 12, time to decision for
unadjudicated claims would reduce by 6%. Simulation further showed that specialization
of staff by claim type might have a negative impact on system performance measures,
because economics of scale were compromised. Finally, simulation showed that if Site
Visits, a required procedure for adjudicating claims related to Activity-Related Soft
Tissue Diseases, could be conducted by dedicated personnel, time to decision for these
claims might reduce by as high as 60%.
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A simulation of case management operations at the Workers' Compensation Board: a decision support tool for human resource allocationLin, Claire 11 1900 (has links)
The challenges in human resource allocation drive the present project. Conducted at an
office of the Workers' Compensation Board of British Columbia (the WCB), the project
aims at developing a simulation model of claim management operations to facilitate
decision-making in resource allocation. In this context, resource allocation refers to the
alignment of staff to claims. The components of the problem include the number of staff
required and the types of staff required, given targeted system performance.
The volume of claims, the profile of claims, the Workers Compensation Act, the board's
business guidelines and the board's operational targets all influence staffing requirement.
It is far from straightforward to answer the following questions: what is the optimal level
of staffing? What is the right mix of skills? And what is the proper alignment of staff
with claims? How will the system perform given a certain staffing level? How will
change in the profile of incoming claims influence staffing requirement?
A discrete-event simulation model was developed as a decision support tool in this
project. The model was used to evaluate several resource allocation scenarios.
Simulation showed that timeliness measures such as time to decision and time to closure
would improve with additional resources, but the improvement was not drastic. At the
staffing level of 14, compared to the current level of 12, time to decision for
unadjudicated claims would reduce by 6%. Simulation further showed that specialization
of staff by claim type might have a negative impact on system performance measures,
because economics of scale were compromised. Finally, simulation showed that if Site
Visits, a required procedure for adjudicating claims related to Activity-Related Soft
Tissue Diseases, could be conducted by dedicated personnel, time to decision for these
claims might reduce by as high as 60%. / Business, Sauder School of / Graduate
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From court room to board room: Immigration, juries, corporations and the creation of an American proletariat. A history of workmen's compensation, 1898-1915Bellamy, Paul Brian January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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A Study in Industrial Health: Coal Miners in Eastern India, 1890s-1952Chatterjee, Sandip 12 June 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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