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Courts returning “large number” of claims forms for ex-OIC cases

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Medical reports: Work to ensure they address causation

A large number of claim forms prepared by personal injury solicitors in claims exiting the Official Injury Claim (OIC) portal are being returned because of errors, it has emerged.

There is also an ongoing push to ensure that medical reports address causation, according to the minutes of last month’s meeting of the OIC advisory group, made up of key stakeholders from all sides.

The group heard that, when it came to cases being handed over from the OIC to the court process, “a large proportion of court forms are being sent back to issuers due to errors; often missing information, such as the full defendant address”.

It said a system fix was scheduled which would make the inputting of certain text compulsory.

The OIC does not connect directly to the court system but does provide a summary of the information inputted to the portal so that it does not need to be rekeyed.

There was also a lack of clarity over whether claims which were removed from the OIC portal for complex reasons of law relating to causation, and which then litigated, should be referred to the small claims track rather than the fast-track.

The Ministry of Justice asked for a summary of this in writing so it could consider the issue.

The discussion mirrored concerns expressed [2] recently by one insurer that about the low volume of medical reports being received and their failure to deal with causation.

The working group minutes said compensators have reported that “they are not seeing medical reports coming through in the volumes they would have expected”.

But where this was down to technical reasons, it was hoped that updates to the portal would lead to an improvement.

The minutes went on: “It is important that medical reports address causation. Work is ongoing to ensure that this happens; communications have gone out to medical experts and additional training modules have been introduced to the MedCo accreditation process.

“Medical experts are being reminded that they should assess whether an injury is a whiplash injury in accordance with the definition in the [Civil Liability Act], not the appropriate tariff band.”

The meeting heard too about an increase in the albeit small number of representatives instructing physiotherapists, “who often feel they are not qualified to comment on any psychological element of a claim”.

At the same time, there was concern about claimant referrals to psychologists being made without specific explanation as to why that claimant needed to be referred, adding extra disbursements as a result.

Other issues raised in the meeting included: