N.Y. Workers’ Compensation Law 232 – Fees for testimony of physicians, podiatrists, chiropractors, dentists, psychologists and health care providers
§ 232. Fees for testimony of physicians, podiatrists, chiropractors, dentists, psychologists and health care providers. Whenever his or her attendance at a hearing, deposition or arbitration before the board or the chair's designee, pursuant to section two hundred twenty-one of this article, is required, the attending physician or attending podiatrist or attending chiropractor or attending dentist or attending psychologist or attending certified nurse midwife of the disabled employee, except such physicians as are disqualified from testifying pursuant to subdivision one of section thirteen-b, or section nineteen-a of this chapter, and except such podiatrists as are disqualified from testifying under the provisions of section thirteen-k, and except such chiropractors as are disqualified from testifying under the provisions of section thirteen-l, and except such psychologists as are disqualified from testifying under the provisions of section thirteen-m, or health care provider shall be entitled to receive a fee in accordance with regulations of the chair.
Terms Used In N.Y. Workers' Compensation Law 232
- Board: means the workers' compensation board created under this chapter. See N.Y. Workers' Compensation Law 201
- Deposition: An oral statement made before an officer authorized by law to administer oaths. Such statements are often taken to examine potential witnesses, to obtain discovery, or to be used later in trial.
- Employee: means a person engaged in the service of an employer in any employment defined in subdivision six of this section, except a minor child of the employer, except a duly ordained, commissioned, or licensed minister, priest or rabbi, a sexton, a christian science reader, or member of a religious order, or an executive officer of a corporation who at all times during the period involved owns all of the issued and outstanding stock of the corporation and holds all of the offices pursuant to paragraph (e) of § 715 of the business corporation law or two executive officers of a corporation who at all times during the period involved between them own all of the issued and outstanding stock of such corporation and hold all such offices provided, however, that each officer must own at least one share of stock, except as provided in section two hundred twelve of this article, or an executive officer of an incorporated religious, charitable or educational institution, or persons engaged in a professional or teaching capacity in or for a religious, charitable or educational institution, or volunteers in or for a religious, charitable or educational institution, or persons participating in and receiving rehabilitative services in a sheltered workshop operated by a religious, charitable or educational institution under a certificate issued by the United States department of labor, or recipients of charitable aid from a religious or charitable institution who perform work in or for the institution which is incidental to or in return for the aid conferred, and not under an express contract of hire. See N.Y. Workers' Compensation Law 201
- Health care provider: shall mean for the purpose of family leave, a person licensed under article one hundred thirty-one, one hundred thirty-one-B, one hundred thirty-two, one hundred thirty-three, one hundred thirty-six, one hundred thirty-nine, one hundred forty-one, one hundred forty-three, one hundred forty-four, one hundred fifty-three, one hundred fifty-four, one hundred fifty-six or one hundred fifty-nine of the education law or a person licensed under the public health law, Article one hundred forty of the education law or Article one hundred sixty-three of the education law. See N.Y. Workers' Compensation Law 201
- Testimony: Evidence presented orally by witnesses during trials or before grand juries.