ACC pays $61m to patients injured in care

Posted: Published on January 2nd, 2013

This post was added by Dr Simmons

A person who went into a medical facility for a biopsy and suffered a stroke has received $661,000 in compensation.

The patient topped a list of payouts made by ACC last year to victims of treatment injuries - including babies being injured because they were deprived of oxygen during birth.

Another stroke victim was paid $161,000 after they went in for spinal decompression treatment in Otago.

Strokes are mainly caused by blood clots entering the brain, Capital and Coast District Health Board neurologist David Abernethy said.

"About 13 per cent of people who have a stroke die, but more importantly about half the people end up disabled and needing help from other people and they're the ones that cost a lot of money."

Figures released to Fairfax under the Official Information Act show the 10 most expensive treatment injury claims totalled $3.2 million in the last financial year.

A total of $61.3m was paid to 7832 people for treatment injuries in the same year.

Money is paid for treatment, rehabilitation and compensation, which can include lost earnings, lump sums and death benefits.

The fifth highest payout, $241,000, went to a person treated in central Auckland who was left a tetraplegic after cranial surgery. A payout of $183,00 related to a Bay of Plenty patient who had spinal decompression and suffered paraplegia.

ACC would only reveal the district health board area where the treatment injury took place, what the patient was being treated for and what the injury was.

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ACC pays $61m to patients injured in care

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