Monthly Archives

November 2019

Couple claims dislodged pipe caused poisoning, brain injuries to themselves, child

By Personal Injury No Comments

A family claims they were poisoned by carbon monoxide and are blaming a dislodged furnace exhaust pipe, according to a lawsuit filed against a roofer they are allege was partly responsible. Amanda and Eric Zimmerman filed suit Nov. 1 in St. Clair County Circuit Court against roofer, Luis Perez who was hired as a sub-contractor to carry out work on…

Read More

Alleged hit and run victim sues driver charged with aggravated assault, according to complaint

By Personal Injury No Comments

A pedestrian claiming he was the victim of a hit and run driver has filed suit against the motorist, whom the complaint states was later charged with aggravated battery. Ryan Gentelin filed suit against Roger Lawver amid claims the motorist was negligent and intoxicated when the incident happened on Langdon Street in Alton on Sept. 27. In his complaint, filed…

Read More

Indiana Hospital Reports Failure to Disinfect Surgical Tools

By Personal Injury No Comments

Nearly 1,200 surgical patients may have been exposed to hepatitis, HIV and other infectious diseases due to a sterilization failure, a northern Indiana hospital says. A Goshen Hospital sterilization technician failed to complete one crucial step in the sterilizing process of some surgical equipment, potentially exposing to communicable diseases patients who underwent surgery at the hospital between April 1 and…

Read More

Retail injuries in focus as holiday shopping season emerges

By Workers' Compensation No Comments

High rates of employee turnover and a young workforce may be behind increases in workplace injuries reported in the retail sector, but male employees and aging workers are cost drivers in retail workers compensation, according to two reports released in November detailing injury and illness rates for retail workers in 2018. Occupational injury and illness rates for all industries have…

Read More

Worker not entitled to new benefits, injury linked to ongoing medical condition, appeals court rules

By Personal Injury No Comments

An employee has failed to persuade an appeals court that his workers’ compensation claim was linked to a new injury that happened in the course of his employment. The Fifth District Appellate Court, in an order filed Nov. 6, affirmed a decision by a lower court that confirmed a ruling by the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission in a case taken…

Read More

Lack of transparency remains issue in comp pharmacy

By Workers' Compensation No Comments

A lack of transparency in workers compensation pharmacy continues to be an issue for much of the industry, according to a CompPharma study released Tuesday. Opioid prescriptions and overall pharmacy spend declined between 2017 and 2018, reported Maggie Valley, North Carolina-based CompPharma in its 16th annual Survey of Prescription Drug Management in Workers Compensation study. However, 83% of the survey…

Read More

Safer workplaces, policy changes behind comp indemnity drops

By Workers' Compensation No Comments

Compared with rising medical costs, cash benefits paid to injured workers are continuing to decline, which experts peg to safer workplaces curbing injury severity and time away and legislative changes that make it tougher to claim workers compensation among the reasons. “We’ve been doing an outstanding job in modernizing workers compensation and taking a lot of waste and abuse out…

Read More

Home Depot disputes shopper’s complaint, argues plaintiff’s negligence led to injuries

By Personal Injury No Comments

A customer alleges he was injured after being hit by poorly stacked wood during a visit to The Home Depot in Collinsville. Home Depot argues the customer contributed to the incident because of his own negligence. Mitchell Adams filed suit in Madison County Circuit Court, alleging he suffered injuries when he was struck by the wooden planks as he walked…

Read More

City of Alton, police officer, sued following crash last year

By Personal Injury No Comments

A police officer faces accusation he was responsible for an accident that left the passenger in another vehicle needing surgery. A lawsuit was filed against the officer, James Allen Hunt, and his employer, the City of Alton, in the wake of the Nov. 30, 2018, accident. Pamela Price claims the police officer failed to yield to ongoing ahead of making…

Read More

Workers’ Compensation Medical Payments in Illinois Higher Compared with Other Study States

By Workers' Compensation No Comments

The average medical payment per claim with more than seven days of lost time in Illinois was more than 15 percent higher than the median of 18 states studied, according to a recent study by the Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI). For 2017 claims (at 12 months), the average medical payment per workers’ compensation claim was 15 percent higher than…

Read More