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Wal-Mart Drops Health Costs Reimbursement Effort
The Associated Press reported that Wal-Mart has notified the family of Deborah Shank in a letter that it is dropping its effort – under a common health care insurance provision called subrogation – to reclaim money won in an injury lawsuit to pay back the retailer for health care payments made in Shank’s case (See Family of Ex-Wal-Mart Employee Loses Health Benefits Repayment Fight ) .Wal-Mart Human Resources chief Pat Curran indicated in the letter to the Shanks that the unusual circumstances in Deborah Shank’s situation prompted the firm to re-evaluate its subrogation policy.
Curran said the retailer was required by the rules
of its plan to seek reimbursement from the Shank’s
settlement, but that the case has made Wal-Mart revise
those rules to allow for flexibility in individual cases.
“Occasionally others help us step back and look at a
situation in a different way. This is one of those
times,” Curran wrote in the letter.
Deborah’s husband Jim Shank welcomed the news. “It’s a
good day for the Shank family,” Jim Shank said in a
statement, according to the AP news report.
According to news reports, Shank, 52, lost much of her
memory and ability to communicate or walk due to a crash
between her minivan and a tractor trailer in May 2000. Her
family sued the trucking company and won $700,000.
Court records show that after attorney’s fees and costs, the remaining $417,477 from the settlement went into a trust to care for Shank. The fund now has about $270,000, the family said.
Shank has been confined to a southeast Missouri nursing home after suffering the brain damage.
After the Shanks won their lawsuit, Wal-Mart sued the Shank
family to recover medical costs totaling about
$470,000.