The issues we address in this workers’ compensation case arose as the result of claimant’s objection to the introduction of evidence obtained by her employer from pre-hearing communications with claimant’s treating physicians without prior notice to claimant.1 The first issue is whether the physician-patient privilege applies to proceedings before the Workers’ Compensation Board (the Board) and, if it does apply, whether claimant waived the privilege. The second issue is whether the Board’s interpretation of its rules, which allows these pre-hearing communications, was an erroneous interpretation of law. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Board’s order without opinion. Booth v. Tektronix, 97 Or App 431, 776 P2d 884 (1989). We affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
FACTS
Lois Booth (claimant) started working for Tektronix (employer) as an “assembler” on February 14, 1966. She later obtained positions with employer as a quality control inspector and then as a “calibrator.” On October 24, 1983, claimant injured her mid-back and right rib cage while working. In November, claimant’s treating physician diagnosed this injury as a pulled muscle or ligament. Claimant filed a claim for a disabling injury which first was accepted and then later denied by employer on the ground that claimant’s pain was unrelated to the injury that had occurred at work.
Followingthe denial in June 1984, another physician examined claimant. At this time, in addition to the rib cage pain, claimant was experiencing pain that radiated down her back. This latter pain eventually was diagnosed as being due to a herniated disc of the spine at the thoracic (chest) level. Upon this physician’s request, employer reopened claimant’s claim and later rescinded its denial of the claim. In November 1985, she was awarded 25 percent unscheduled permanent partial disability due to the mid-back injury.
*467Following surgery to correct the herniated disc and alcohol injections to treat her continuing pain after surgery, claimant continued to suffer low-back pain which radiated down her legs. Employer had denied responsibility for claimant’s low-back problems in May 1985.
After an April 1987 hearing, the referee affirmed the partial denial (low-back) and the award of 25 percent unscheduled permanent partial disability (mid-back). At the hearing, the referee — over claimant’s objections — admitted seven exhibits consisting of letters describing claimant’s condition from three of claimant’s treating physicians. The seven letters resulted from five pre-hearing communications by employer’s lawyer with these physicians. Employer’s pre-hearing communications with the physicians occurred in person, by telephone, and by letters. Employer had not given claimant notice prior to communicating with the physicians.
Claimant requested Board review of the referee’s decision. In its decision, the Board relied upon its prior decisions in AdelbertP. Sheppard, 39 Van Natta 747 (1987), and Allen W. Hayes, Jr., 37 Van Natta 1179 (1985), wherein the Board held that pre-hearing communications between an employer’s lawyer and a claimant’s treating physician without prior notice to claimant were permitted by Board rules. Based on those decisions, the Board agreed with the referee that the letters were admissible and that claimant correctly was denied compensation for her low-back problem because it was unrelated to the on-the-job injury. However, the Board found that the referee incorrectly had determined the extent of claimant’s permanent disability for her compensable mid-back injury and increased her award from 25 percent to 50 percent unscheduled permanent disability.
Claimant sought judicial review, assigning as error the admission of the evidence that resulted from the communications. In additional assignments of error, claimant argued that, without the challenged exhibits, there was no substantial evidence to support the Board’s findings that the low-back problem was not due to her on-the-job injury and that the Board erred in concluding that claimant was only partially, not totally, disabled. The Court of Appeals affirmed *468the Board’s decision without opinion,2 and claimant sought review in this court.
DISCUSSION
The essence of claimant’s argument to this court is that the Board’s interpretation of the statutes and rules, which permits the communications at issue, is an erroneous interpretation of the agency’s own rules, the workers’ compensation statutes, and other provisions of law, thus bringing this case within our scope of review under ORS 656.298(6) and 183.482(8)(a).3 We first examine the status of the physician-patient privilege in workers’ compensation hearings and then review the appropriateness of pre-hearing communications between the employer’s lawyer and the claimant’s treating physician.
A. Physician-Patient Privilege
Claimant argues that the exhibits were inadmissible because the evidence obtained from the pre-hearing communications is protected by the physician-patient privilege, Oregon Evidence Code (OEC) 504-1,4 and neither statutes nor *469the Board’s own rules provide for waiver of this privilege. Employer responds that the physician-patient privilege is inapplicable in workers’ compensation proceedings.
The first step in our analysis is the Workers’ Compensation Law, ORS chapter 656. ORS 656.704 provides, in part:
“(1) Actions and orders of the director, and administrative and judicial review thereof, regarding matters concerning a claim under this chapter [Workers’ Compensation Law] are subject to the procedural provisions of this chapter and such procedural rules as the board may prescribe.
“(2) Actions and orders of the director and the conduct of hearings and other proceedings pursuant to this chapter [Workers’ Compensation Law], and judicial review thereof, regarding all matters other than those concerning a claim under this chapter, are subject only to ORS 183.310 to 183.550 [Administrative Procedures Act] and such procedural rules as the director may prescribe. * * *
“(3) For the purpose of determining the respective authority of the director and the board to conduct hearings, investigations and other proceedings under this chapter, and for determining the procedure for the conduct and review thereof, matters concerning a claim under this chapter are those matters in which a worker’s right to receive compensation, or the amount thereof, are directly in issue.” (Emphasis added.)
The statute references different sources for procedural rules depending upon whether the matter is one, such as the present case, that concerns a claim, or is a matter that does not concern a claim. If the matter concerns a claim, the procedures contained in the Workers’ Compensation Law and rules of the Board apply; in contrast, if the matter does not concern a claim, the Administrative Procedures Act (in part) and rules of the director of the Department of Insurance and Finance apply. Because this case involves a claim, the physician-patient privilege could be made applicable by the workers’ compensation procedural statutes or by a rule that the Board has prescribed. The parties have cited no such statute or rule to this court, and we have not found such a statute or rule.
*470Further, ORS 656.283(7), the Workers’ Compensation Law provision concerning hearing procedures, provides, in part:
“Except as otherwise provided in this section and rules of procedure established by the board, the referee is not bound by common law or statutory rules of evidence or by technical or formal rules of procedure, and may conduct the hearing in any manner that will achieve substantial justice.”
Accordingly, because the Workers’ Compensation Law does not provide that the physician-patient privilege of OEC 504-1 is applicable, the referee was not required by the Workers’ Compensation Law to apply OEC 504-1 and to exclude the evidence resulting from the pre-hearing communications.
Claimant argues, nevertheless, that the Oregon Evidence Code and the Oregon Administrative Procedures Act themselves make the privilege applicable. Claimant relies on the Commentary to OEC 101, which describes the applicability of the Oregon Evidence Code. The legislative commentary states:
“Currently, the rules of evidence except those of privilege do not apply to administrative agencies in contested cases. ORS 183.450. Nothing in [OEC] 101 should be construed to alter present Oregon practice under the administrative procedures statutes.” Kirkpatrick, Oregon Evidence Code 3 (1989). (Emphasis added.)
In response to claimant’s argument, we begin at the place that the commentary to the Oregon Evidence Code suggests that we should begin — an examination of ORS 183.450.
ORS 183.450(1) provides:
“In contested cases:
“(1) Irrelevant, immaterial or unduly repetitious evidence shall be excluded but erroneous rulings on evidence shall not preclude agency action on the record unless shown to have substantially prejudiced the rights of a party. All other evidence of a type commonly relied upon by reasonably prudent persons in conduct of their serious affairs shall be admissible. Agencies shall give effect to the rules of privilege recognized by law. Objections to evidentiary offers may be made and shall be noted in the record. Any part of the *471evidence may be received in written form.” (Emphasis added.)
This broad mandate incorporates the rules of privilege, including those contained in the Oregon Evidence Code, into contested cases. However, another statute, ORS 183.315, lists certain agencies to which the privilege-protecting statute does not apply. The relevant part of ORS 183.315 is subsection (1), which provides:
“Except as otherwise provided in subsection (6) of this section [referring to the Public Utility Commission], the provisions of ORS * * * 183.450 * * * do not apply to * * * [the] Department of Insurance and Finance with respect to its functions under ORS chapters 654 and 656 [chapters concerning workers’ compensation] * * *.”5
Consequently, the statute that retains the evidenti-ary rules of privilege in contested cases (ORS 183.450) specifically does not apply in workers’ compensation claim hearings (ORS 183.315(1)).6 Thus, claimant’s argument based on the Oregon Evidence Code and the Oregon Administrative Procedures Act leads us to the same outcome as our analysis of the Workers’ Compensation Law.
We conclude that the physician-patient privilege does not apply in a workers’ compensation contested case claim hearing. Therefore, the rules of privilege do not make the Board’s interpretation, which permits pre-hearing communications between an employer’s lawyer and a claimant’s physician without prior notice to claimant, incorrect as a matter of law. Consequently, we do not reach the corollary issue of waiver of the privilege.
*472 B. Pre-hearing Communications Appropriateness
The fact that the statutes and rules do not provide for the physician-patient privilege in workers’ compensation contested cases does not resolve entirely the second question of the appropriateness of pre-hearing communications between claimant’s treating physicians and employer’s lawyer. Claimant argues also (1) that even if the privilege is inapplicable, other areas of the law recognize and protect the special relationship between a patient and her physician, and (2) that the workers’ compensation statutes and agency rules do not contemplate this type of communication.
1. Policy
Claimant and amicus Oregon Trial Lawyers Association (OTLA) cite many sources recognizing the special relationship between patient and physician outside the context of the evidentiary privilege. These include: (1) The Hippocratic Oath; (2) willful or negligent disclosure of a professional secret as grounds for suspension of, or refusal to grant, a license to practice medicine, ORS 677.190(5); (3) the existence of tort liability for a physician’s breach of the confidential relationship under Humphers v. First Interstate Bank, 298 Or 706, 696 P2d 527 (1985); (4) the constitutional right to privacy, see Roe v. Wade, 410 US 113, 219, 93 S Ct 705, 35 L Ed 2d 147 (1973) (Douglas, J., concurring) (“[t]he right to privacy has no more conspicuous place than in the physician-patient relationship, unless it be in the priest-penitent relationship”); and (5) ethical obligations of lawyers when approaching a plaintiffs physicians in personal injury cases.7
The respect accorded the physician-patient relationship in other contexts does not govern the status of the *473relationship in workers’ compensation cases. This is especially true, as discussed earlier, when there is no evidentiary privilege connected with that relationship in Workers’ Compensation Law. Thus, these reasons supporting prohibition of such communications are, regardless of their wisdom, no more than policy arguments. Weighing of policy arguments in the administrative law context is within the purview of the legislature, not the courts. The legislature delegated authority to the agency to define policy in this area by promulgating rules regarding physician reporting. ORS 656.252. This court’s review of such delegative rules is largely deferential, especially when the agency has special expertise and has made a statutory interpretation at least as plausible as any challenger’s. As this court has stated:
“All legislative decisions involve value judgments of a political nature and so do delegated legislative decisions.
“* * * The delegation of responsibility for policy refinement under such a [policy-delegating] statute is to the agency, not to the court. The discretionary function of the agency is to make the choice and the review function of the court is to see that the agency’s decision is within the range of discretion allowed hy the more general policy of the statute. ’ ’ Springfield Education Assn. v. School Dist., 290 Or 217, 229, 621 P2d 547 (1980).
See Branscomb v. LCDC, 297 Or 142, 681 P2d 124 (1984) (court will give deference to agency’s interpretation of its rule adopted pursuant to a policy-delegating statute).
The Board is permitted, as it did in Alan W. Hayes, Jr., supra, to adopt a general policy interpreting one of its rules that will be applicable to fiiture cases. ORS 183.355(2); Marbet v. Portland Gen. Elect., 277 Or 447, 461, 561 P2d 154 (1977). The Board, in its interpretation permitting the communications, relied upon the express policy of the Workers’ Compensation Law that seeks to avoid the delay and excessive costs caused by litigation and the adversarial system. ORS 656.012(2)(b); OAR 438-05-035.8 The Board’s interpretation is not inconsistent with this express policy, and it is *474not our task on judicial review to evaluate these competing interests and substitute our judgment for the judgment of the Board on what policy provisions should prevail; this would be beyond our scope of review. ORS 656.298(6) and 183.482(8)(a).
2. Type of Communications Contemplated
Claimant next argues that the workers’ compensation statutes and the rules, themselves, do not envision these types of communications. Moreover, claimant asserts that the existence of numerous detailed workers’ compensation provisions governing written reports by physicians9 manifests an intent to make written reports the exclusive mode of communication between an employer’s lawyer and a claimant’s treating physicians. We find this argument unpersuasive.
ORS 656.252(1) authorizes promulgation of rules regarding physician reporting.10 Subsection (1) does not refer *475to “writing,” but only to reports. We find no reason to presume a legislative intent to require all reports to be written or to restrict verbal communication between employers or their agents and injured workers’ physicians. We note, in fact, that subsection (2) of ORS 656.252 explicitly requires physicians to “advise” insurers and self-insured employers within five days of a worker’s anticipated release to return to work or the reopening of a claimant’s closed claim and subsection (5) requires physicians to “notify” insurers or self-insured employers within five days of changes in physicians or referrals to new physicians. Nothing in the statute addresses how physicians are to report to, advise, or notify insurers or self-insured employers so long as the relay of information is prompt and correct.
Claimant further argues that repeated references to written reports in administrative rules reflect a policy of preventing “unnecessary intrusion into the confidentiality of the physician/patient relationship.” This argument, however, also is belied by ORS 656.252(1), which provides that the purpose of the written report requirement is “to insure the prompt and correct reporting and payment of compensation in compensable injuries.” The legislative history reveals considerable concern about promptness, but no discussion of protecting claimant confidentiality. See, e.g., Minutes, House Committee on Labor and Management, March 22, 1967, pp 1-3. ORS 656.252 goes on to absolve complying physicians from legal liability for disclosure of medical confidences.11 We *476conclude that physician-patient confidentiality was of scant concern to the legislature in this context, especially in the face of competing concerns for promptness and accuracy.
ORS 656.252 is a non-exclusive outline of the types of communications physicians are required to initiate with insurers or self-insured employers. It is not an outline of any particular or exclusive mode for such communications. Therefore, the Board was free to interpret the statute in its rules to define permissible modes of communication.
The Board, in its opinion in Alan W. Hayes, Jr., supra, interpreted the rules consistent with the stated purpose of the written reports. The Board stated:
“We find nothing in the statutes or rules requiring an insurer to give claimant prior notice of its intent to contact his or her physician. Further, we find such a requirement is inconsistent with our stated policy of full, fair and expeditious disclosure of information between the parties. It is also inconsistent with the legislature’s intent to create a compensation system that reduces litigation and minimizes the adversarial process.” 37 Van Natta at 1182.
The Board was within its statutory power in so construing the statute.12
3. Lack of Specific Reference
In essence, claimant argues that the lack of a specific reference to communications of the type involved in this case within the statutes and rules means that such communications are not permitted. The Board takes the opposite view: it *477interprets the absence of specific references prohibiting this type of communication to mean that such communications are permitted. Although claimant’s interpretation is a plausible one, and may be supported by the policy reasons stated above, the Board’s interpretation of the rules also is reasonable and is not inconsistent with the Workers’ Compensation Law and rules made pursuant to that law.
CONCLUSION
We do not find the Board’s interpretation of the Workers’ Compensation Law to be erroneous, ORS 183.482(8)(a), and we defer to the Board’s interpretation of its own rules.13
The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. The order of the Workers’ Compensation Board is affirmed.
This form of communication frequently is labeled “ex parte contact,” using the term “exparte” tornean “[o]n one side only.” Black’s Law Dictionary 576 (6th ed 1990).
The Court of Appeals previously had held, in an opinion on reconsideration, Mershon v. Oregonian Publishing, 96 Or App 223, 772 P2d 440, rev den 308 Or 315 (1989), that the Board’s interpretation of its rules to permit pre-hearing communications between the employer’s lawyer and the claimant’s physician without prior notice to the claimant was not inconsistent with any statute or rule and thus was entitled to deference.
ORS 656.298(6) provides:
“The review by the Court of Appeals shall be on the entire record forwarded by the board. Review shall be as provided in ORS 183.482(7) and (8).”
ORS 183.482(7) provides, in part:
“[T]he court shall not substitute its judgment for that of the agency as to any issue of fact or agency discretion.”
ORS 183.482(8)(a) provides:
“The court may affirm, reverse or remand the order. If the court finds that the agency has erroneously interpreted a provision of law and that a correct interpretation compels a particular action, it shall: [set aside or modify the order or remand the case.]”
OEC 504-1(2) states:
“A patient has a privilege to refuse to disclose and to prevent any other person from disclosing confidential communications in a civil action, suit or proceeding, made for the purposes of diagnosis or treatment of the patient’s physical condition, among the patient, the patient’s physician or persons who are participating in the diagnosis or treatment under the direction of the physician, including members of the patient’s family.”
As a result of a legislatively-directed agency reorganization in 1987, the language in this subsection, which previously listed the “Workers’ Compensation Department,” was changed to substitute the “Department of Insurance and Finance with respect to its functions under ORS chapters 654 and 656.” Or Laws 1987, ch 373, § 21. The Workers’ Compensation Board was a part of the predecessor Workers’ Compensation Department, ORS 656.708 (1985), and now is within the Department of Insurance and Finance, ORS 656.712(1). The proceedings herein spanned the pre- and post-reorganization periods, a factor of no significance in this case.
A statutory exemption of workers’ compensation proceedings from the application of the physician-patient privilege is common amongthe states. See 8 Wigmore, Evidence § 2380 (McNaughton rev ed 1961 & Supp 1991).
Claimants and amicus OTLA cite subsequently withdrawn legal ethics opinions of the Oregon State Bar for the existence of an ethical obligation, e.g., Oregon State Bar, Legal Ethics Opinion No. 248 (Sept 1981). There are no current legal ethics opinions limiting communication between lawyers and physicians. See Oregon Formal Ethics Opinions, v-vi (1991) (all former ethics opinions withdrawn).
We note that the Rules of Conduct adopted by the Oregon State Bar and the Oregon Medical Association limit such communication generally but provide an explicit exception for communication in conformity with Oregon workers’ compensation rules. See Rule 3a, Statement of Principles Governing Certain Lawyer-Physician Relationships (1984).
ORS 656.012(2)(b) provides that an objective of the Workers’ Compensation Law is:
“To provide a fair and just administrative system for delivery of medical and financial benefits to injured workers that reduces litigation and eliminates the *474adversary nature of the compensation proceedings, to the greatest extent practicablef.]”
OAR 438-05-035 states:
“BOARD POLICY; LIBERAL CONSTRUCTION. It is the policy of the Board to expedite claim adjudication and amicably dispose of controversies. These rules shall be liberally construed in favor of the injured worker to carry out the remedial and beneficent purposes of the Workers’ Compensation Law. The overriding principle is substantial justice. With respect to postponement or continuance of hearings, substantial justice requires consideration of the relative financial hardship of the parties. The unrepresented injured worker shall not be held strictly accountable for failure to comply with these rules. Any individual who undertakes to represent a party in proceedings under these rules shall be required to comply with these rules.”
E.g., OAR 436-10-030 (renumbered from OAR 436-69-101 and concerning reporting requirements for medical providers), OAR 436-10-100 (renumbered from OAR 436-69-801 and concerning independent medical examinations), OAR 438-07-005 (regarding presentation of medical evidence at hearings), and OAR 438-07-015 (regarding disclosure of claims information).
ORS 656.252(1) provides:
“(1) In order to insure the prompt and correct reporting and payment of compensation in compensable injuries, the director shall make rules governing * ** * reports by attending and consulting physicians and other personnel of all medical information relevant to the determination of a claim to the injured worker’s representative, the worker’s employer, the employer’s insurer and the department. Such rules shall include, but not necessarily be limited to:
“(a) Requiring attending physicians to make' the insurer or self-insured employer a first report of injury within a specified time after the first service rendered.
*475“(b) Requiring attending physicians to submit follow-up reports within specified time limits or upon the request of an interested party.
“(c) Requiring examining physicians to submit their reports, and to whom, within a specified time.
“(d) Such other reporting requirements as the director may deem necessary to insure that payments of compensation be prompt and that all interested parties be given information necessary to the prompt determination of claims.
“(e) Requiring insurers and self-insured employers to audit billings for all medical services, including hospital services.” (Emphasis added.)
ORS 656.252(4) provides:
“No person who reports medical information to a person referred to in subsection (1) of this section, in accordance with department rules, shall incur any legal liability for the disclosure of such information.”
The purpose for this provision was to encourage prompt release of information and to prevent claimants and their legal counsel from using confidentiality concerns to *476delay or impede the flow of relevant medical information. Exhibit A, Summary of C Engrossed SB 48, May 24,1979.
We note that the dissent’s interpretation of the statute (that a statutory requirement of written reports precludes oral communication between employers and claimants’ physicians) might be plausible but for the context of this statute. The workers’ compensation system is the antithesis of common-law tort rules regarding recovery for personal injury. All references to common-law sources outside the workers’ compensation context are inapposite. The Oregon workers’ compensation system was created by this state’s legislature to streamline the process by which injured workers could be paid for compensable injuries. See generally ORS 656.012. Policy trade-offs were made in this streamlining effort, and it is not for this court to re-weigh competing policies. The legislature did not by statute expressly preclude employer/physician communication and, finding no evidence of legislative intent to do so, we decline to establish a limiting construction.
Claimant also relies on a Washington Supreme Court case, Loudon v. Mhyre, 110 Wash 2d 675, 756 P2d 138 (1988), a wrongful death tort claim. In that personal injury case, the court held that pre-hearing communications by defense counsel with the claimant’s treating physician were not permitted despite waiver of the physician-patient privilege, thus limiting defense counsel to formal discovery methods.
That case is unpersuasive here due to the different context provided by the Workers’ Compensation Law. We express no opinion on the persuasiveness of that case in its own context.