Academic Thesis

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Name Juan Du
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Title

Incidence of Workers Compensation Indemnity Claims across Socio-demographic and Job Characteristics. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 54(10), 758-770.

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Joint Author

Author

Juan Du, Paul Leigh

Summary

We hypothesized that low socioeconomic status, employer-provided health insurance, low wages, and overtime were predictors of reporting workers compensation indemnity claims. We also tested for gender and race disparities.
Responses from 17,190 (person-years) Americans participating in the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, 1997?2005, were analyzed with logistic regressions. The dependent variable indicated whether the subject collected benefits from a claim.  Odds ratios for men and African-Americans were relatively large and strongly significant predictors of claims; significance for Hispanics was moderate and con- founded by education. Odds ratios for variables measuring education were the largest for all statistically significant covariates. Neither low wages nor employer-provided health insurance was a consistent predictor. Due to confounding from the ‘‘not salaried’’ variable, overtime was not a consistently significant predictor.

Magazine(name)

American Journal of Industrial Medicine

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Volume

54

Number Of Pages

10

StartingPage

758

EndingPage

770

Date of Issue

2011/10

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Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

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