Differences in perceived fairness and health outcomes in two injury compensation systems: A comparative study

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Abstract

Background: Involvement in a compensation process following a motor vehicle collision is consistently associated with worse health status but the reasons underlying this are unclear. Some compensation systems are hypothesised to be more stressful than others. In particular, fault-based compensation systems are considered to be more adversarial than no-fault systems and associated with poorer recovery. This study compares the perceived fairness and recovery of claimants in the fault-based compensation system in New South Wales (NSW) to the no-fault system in Victoria, Australia. Methods: One hundred eighty two participants were recruited via claims databases of the compensation system regulators in Victoria and NSW. Participants were > 18 years old and involved in a transport injury compensation process. The crash occurred 12 months (n = 95) or 24 months ago (n = 87). Perceived fairness about the compensation process was measured by items derived from a validated organisational justice questionnaire. Health outcome was measured by the initial question of the Short Form Health Survey. Results: In Victoria, 84 % of the participants considered the claims process fair, compared to 46 % of NSW participants (χ2 = 28.54; p

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APA

Elbers, N. A., Collie, A., Hogg-Johnson, S., Lippel, K., Lockwood, K., & Cameron, I. D. (2016). Differences in perceived fairness and health outcomes in two injury compensation systems: A comparative study. BMC Public Health, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-016-3331-3

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