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Compensation for Black Lung Claims
The Black Lung Benefits Act covers total disability claims of United States' miners suffering from pneumoconiosis (aka black lung disease), which was contracted due to their employment. Such miners are awarded monthly cash benefits as well as medical benefits. Payments to dependent survivors are also provided for in the Act and include the surviving spouse, children, and dependent parents and siblings.
Avoiding the Employment Relationship
In order to avoid the effects of the workers' compensation system, some employers will deliberately categorize a person as an individual contractor instead of an employee. Some individuals may even categorize themselves as individual contractors, preferring to reject the compensation system. Whether this categorization is successful, however, turns not just on the name given to the employment relationship. Rather, each relationship is examined on its own facts and will be decided based on the conduct exhibited between the parties as well as the work contract entered into between them.
Drug and Alcohol Dependence
SSI and SSDI benefits)
Palliative and Preventive Measures
The provision for medical benefits is a substantial component of workers' compensation. Many states consider palliative measures to be included under the umbrella of "medical benefits." Basically, palliative measures are those extended to the employee for pain and discomfort when there is no hope for recovery. The language of each state's statute is central to whether palliative measures are covered. For example, when a state authorizes medical benefits for the cure and recovery of the injured employee, many courts will consider "recovery" separate from "cure." Thus, the door is opened for palliative measures despite the lack of curability in the employee's condition.
State workers compensation laws
The central question of whether a given state can apply its workers' compensation statute focuses on various factors including the place that the employment contract was entered into, the place of the employee's injury, and the employee's usual place of employment. For example, an employee who entered into an employment contract with a construction company in California, and who was subsequently injured on a construction site in Nevada, may be able to seek workers' compensation benefits in both California and Nevada. However, double recoveries are generally not permitted.

