We granted appellants’ discretionary application to determine the entitlement of the Subsequent Injury Trust Fund to certain workers’ compensation benefits following the death of a worker. After reviewing the record, we reverse the judgment rendered by the trial court.
The employee died on October 1, 1981, as a result of a heart attack arising out of and in the scope of his employment. His widow filed a claim for benefits and died before any action was taken on her *370claim, having survived her husband for a period of 43 days. In December 1981, appellee Subsequent Injury Trust Fund (“Fund”) filed a claim for any benefits due on the ground that there were “no dependents qualifying to receive dependency benefits” in this case. See OCGA § 34-9-358 (a). Following a hearing held in October 1983, the administrative law judge found the widow was a dependent within the meaning of the Workers’ Compensation Act for the 43-day period she survived her husband. Based on this finding, the ALJ denied the Fund’s claim, but refused to award the benefits to which the widow was entitled because a representative of her estate had not been made a party.
In a 2-1 decision, the State Board of Workers’ Compensation affirmed the ALJ’s award and found that the widow’s estate had been represented before the ALJ. The board then proceeded to award to the widow’s estate benefits of $115 per week for the 43-day period the widow survived her husband. The superior court, relying on Zachery v. Royal Indem. Co., 80 Ga. App. 659 (56 SE2d 812) (1949), reversed the board’s award. This appeal followed.
The trial court’s and the Fund’s reliance upon Zachery is misplaced. The Zachery court was concerned with a situation in which a primary beneficiary (i.e., a spouse) had survived the worker but had not filed an application for benefits. However, a secondary beneficiary (i.e., the worker’s mother, who could show dependency upon the wage earner for a period of at least three months preceding the worker’s death) had made a timely application. At the time of the decision in Zachery, the primary beneficiary was conclusively presumed dependent upon the deceased and therefore entitled to the benefits. But see Ins. Co. of N. America v. Russell, 246 Ga. 269 (271 SE2d 178) (1980). The Zachery court faced the dilemma of a situation in which a primary beneficiary had survived the decedent but had not filed a timely application for the benefits to which she was entitled. Was her inaction to preclude an award of benefits to the decedent’s mother, who had filed a timely application? The Zachery court suggested that the State Board of Workers’ Compensation defer action on a secondary beneficiary’s application until the one-year statute of limitation had expired to see if any primary beneficiary filed a timely application. Id. at 663-664. The court’s suggestion solved the Zachery problem since the hearing on the mother’s claim had taken place over a year after the worker’s death, and no primary beneficiary had filed an application. However, the court also stated that eligibility for the benefits was to be determined at the date of the hearing. While that language adequately fit the Zachery scheme of things, it was not necessary to the Zachery decision so long as the board adhered to the court’s suggestion that hearings on claims from secondary beneficiaries be deferred until the expiration of the one-year statute of limitation for *371filing claims. In the case at bar we are not concerned with a Zachery-type situation. Instead, there is only one primary beneficiary and she filed a timely claim for benefits. To apply the Zachery rationale to a case where only a primary beneficiary is involved penalizes, without reason, the primary beneficiary.
The Zachery solution also ignores the realities of everyday life and is at odds with the very purpose of the Workers’ Compensation Act. “The policy of the [Workers’] Compensation Act, with respect to the payment of death benefits, is to provide a measure of compensation to persons suffering a direct loss of support because of the death of an employee as a result of his employment.” St. Paul-Mercury &c. Co. v. Robinson, 88 Ga. App. 217, 219 (76 SE2d 512) (1953). Insistence upon a potential beneficiary surviving until the merits of a claim are adjudicated ignores the fact that, from the moment of the wage earner’s death, the needs of the supported spouse are just as real as they were prior to the wage earner’s death, and the survivor needs financial support, support which should emanate from the workers’ compensation laws of this state. Id. See also Williams v. Donovan, 198 FSupp. 237 (E.D. La.) (1961).
Conditioning an award on survival until adjudication also gives a party the opportunity to profit from delay in administrative or judicial proceedings. In re Carlson’s Case, 355 Mass. 131 (243 NE2d 181, 182) (1969). In the case at bar, the hearing on the widow’s claim for death benefits took place over two years after the wage earner’s death, and the board’s award of benefits to the widow’s estate was handed down nearly 33 months after the death of the supporting spouse. Making the hearing date critical to entitlement to benefits opens the entire system to abuse and manipulation. See Parker v. Nat. Zinc Co., 406 P2d 493 (Okla.) (1965). “Sound public policy would frown upon a statutory interpretation which places a premium upon delay in administrative or judicial proceedings.” In re Carlson’s Case, supra at 182.
Finally, viewing the death benefits provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act as a substitute remedy for a wrongful death action where the death of a worker is due to a compensable injury, we must conclude that survival until a hearing is held is inappropriate. If a widow dies during the pendency of her wrongful death action based on her husband’s homicide, the action survives to her personal representative if there are no children. Campbell v. Western & Atl. R., 57 Ga. App. 209 (1) (194 SE 927) (1938). See also OCGA § 9-2-41. In the same way, the estate of the sole potential beneficiary of workers’ compensation death benefits should be allowed to continue a pending action and receive any award made.
The fact of eligibility of a primary beneficiary must be determined as of the date of the accident. Making this date the critical one *372insofar as entitlement is concerned alleviates the financial concerns voiced above and removes the incentive a party might have to drag out proceedings for as long as possible in an effort to outlive the beneficiary. The eligibility language in Zachery is neither controlling nor convincing. The Zachery court had to devise a solution to a situation in which a secondary beneficiary sought benefits during the lifetime of a primary beneficiary, a situation far different from the one presently before us.
In light of the confusion it has caused, we must overrule that language in Zachery which calls for eligibility to be determined as of the date of the hearing on a claim for benefits. Eligibility is to be determined as of the date of the accident. Applying the law to the facts of the present case, we conclude that the board’s findings and award were correct: the widow was a dependent under the Act from the date of her husband’s death until the date of her own passing. The grant to the widow’s estate of benefits for that 43-day period of time was not error. See In re Estate of Pardiew, 19 Ohio App. 2d 207 (250 NE2d 765) (1969); Truck Trailer Sales &c. Co. v. Moore, 244 Miss. 317 (141 S2d 541) (1962); Warren v. Globe Indem., 216 La. 107 (43 S2d 234) (1949). The judgment of the trial court must be reversed.
Judgment reversed.
Deen, P. J., Birdsong, P. J., Carley, Sognier, Pope, and Beasley, JJ., concur. Banke, C. J., and McMurray, P. J., dissent.