Reexamining workers' compensation: a human rights perspective

American Journal of Industrial Medicine
Leslie I Boden

Abstract

Injured workers, particularly those with more severe injuries, have long experienced workers' compensation systems as stressful and demeaning, have found it difficult to obtain benefits, and, when able to obtain benefits, have found them inadequate. Moreover, the last two decades have seen a substantial erosion of the protections offered by workers' compensation. State after state has erected additional barriers to benefit receipt, making the workers' compensation experience even more difficult and degrading. These changes have been facilitated by a framing of the political debate focused on the free market paradigm, employer costs, and worker fraud and malingering. The articles in this special issue propose an alternate framework and analysis, a human rights approach, that values the dignity and economic security of injured workers and their families.

References

Feb 5, 2004·Social Science & Medicine·Lee Strunin, Leslie I Boden
Jan 25, 2012·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·Emily A Spieler, John F Burton
Feb 23, 2012·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·Katherine Lippel
Mar 21, 2012·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·Rodney Ehrlich
Mar 30, 2012·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·J D Rebecca Smith
May 10, 2012·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·Martha T McCluskey

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Citations

May 8, 2014·Journal of Pain & Palliative Care Pharmacotherapy·Mark Collen
May 10, 2017·Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine·Rebecca Casey, Peri J Ballantyne
Mar 31, 2015·New Solutions : a Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy : NS·Michael Lax
Jan 10, 2013·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·Montserrat García GómezPatricia López Menduiña

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