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Journal Article

Citation

O'Donnell C. Disabil. Rehabil. 2000; 22(1-2): 88-96.

Affiliation

Department of Behavioural Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, Lidcombe, NSW, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10661761

Abstract

This paper studies scheme structure and information concerning rehabilitation outcome for claimants under the NSW Motor Accidents Scheme and the NSW Workers' Compensation Scheme. It argues that to ensure effective rehabilitation there is a need for consistent, national accident schemes which provide services regardless of fault. In general, health outcomes will be improved if dispute resolution and estimation of level of disability occur in a context which avoids adversarialism. On the other hand, negligence could best be punished and compensation provided to victims as a result of prosecution for breach of duty of care under the relevant protective legislation. Other vital elements in injury prevention and rehabilitation are more effective risk management, worker representation and information provision at the workplace level. Comparable performance measures for rehabilitation and other service providers are also necessary for the attainment of quality management and evidence-based medicine.


Language: en

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