Atty. Alana M. Staniszewski
Alana focuses her practice on workers’ compensation defense. She represents employers, insurance carriers and third party administrators throughout Pennsylvania.
Profile Summary
About Alana M. Staniszewski at a glance
Alana M. Staniszewski is an Associate based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, practicing at Marshall Dennehey. They have 5+ years of legal experience, licensed to practice since 2021. Their practice focuses on workers comp. Admitted to practice in Pennsylvania U.S. District Court Western District of Pennsylvania (2021). Educated at Thomas R. Kline School of Law of Duquesne University (J.D., 2020) and Duquesne University (B.A. B.S., 2017). Active member of Allegheny County Bar Association Pennsylvania Bar Association. Serands clients in Pittsburgh, PA and the surrounding metropolitan area.
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About
- Alana focuses her practice on workers’ compensation defense
- She represents employers, insurance carriers and third party administrators throughout Pennsylvania
- Prior to joining Marshall Dennehey, Alana gained valuable experience working for a regional defense firm, including conducting oral arguments before workers’ compensation judges, witness examinations, and depositions of claimants, fact witnesses, and vocational and medical experts
- She is also experienced in handling settlement negotiations
- Alana has also written several articles on topics germane to workers’ compensation
- Alana graduated from Duquesne University School of Law, cum laude, after receiving both a B.S. and B.A. from Duquesne University, magna cum laude
- During law school, Alana was a member of Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity and the Women’s Law Association and served as an Academic Excellence Student Mentor and Student Bar Association Mentor
- She was also the Executive Student Article Editor of the Duquesne University Law Review Volume 58 and participated in the Appellate Moot Court Board
- She was a McGinley Public Service Law fellow, a member of the Order of the Barristers, the recipient of the CALI Excellence for the Future Award - Corporations II, and a merit-based scholarship recipient
- Outside of the office, Alana enjoys making homemade pierogis, spending time with her dog Remy, and all things Disney
- Honors & Awards •The Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch, Workers' Compensation Law - Employers (2026) Published Works •'Pa
- Supreme Court Permits Payment of Specific Loss Benefits to a Deceased Injured Workers’ Estate,' The Legal Intelligencer, August 1, 2025 Thought Leadership What's Hot in Workers' Comp The Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania Narrows Who May Seek Recourse Through The Workers’ Compensation Act’s Fee Review Process March 19, 2026 On March 16, 2026, the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court provided much-needed clarification on who may seek recourse under Section 306(f.1)(5) of the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act-specifically through the Fee Review process
- In Scomed Supply v
- Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company and Sedgwick Claims Management Services, the court held that Scomed Supply, a retail seller of durable medical equipment and medical supplies, does not qualify as a “health care provider” under the Act, and therefore had no standing to dispute the amount of payment issued by the workers’ compensation insurance carrier through a fee review.The case itself stems from a straightforward set of facts
- Scomed provided medical supplies (electrodes, batteries, lead wires, moisturizer, and alcohol wipes) to the claimant
- The supplies were all related to the claimant’s TENS unit that had been prescribed by the claimant’s physician for treatment of a work-related injury
- Between July 2023 and April 2024, Scomed provided these supplies to the claimant on ten separate occasions, and billed the workers’ compensation carrier.The carrier paid less than the full amount billed
- Unsatisfied with the amount of the payment, Scomed filed five fee review applications with the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Medical Fee Review Section
- The section found that the carrier was not required to issue any additional payment
- Still unsatisfied with the amount of payment issued, Scomed filed hearing requests, which were assigned to Hearing Officer Colleen Pickens.In its defense, the carrier argued and Hearing Officer Pickens agreed that Scomed was not a health care provider as defined by Section 109 of the Act and thus, had no recourse under Section 306 (f.1)(5)
- Notably, a Fee Review Hearing Officer has the jurisdiction to conduct a hearing on whether a person invoking the remedy set forth in Section 306(f.1)(5) is a “provider' under the Act
- See Armour Pharmacy v
- Bureau of Workers 'Comp
- Fee Rev. Hearing Off (Wegman's Food Markets, Inc.), 206 A.3d 660, 671 (Pa
- Cmwlth. 2019) (en banc).Section 109 of the Act defines a 'health care provider' asany person, corporation, facility or institution licensed or otherwise authorized by the Commonwealth to provide health care services, including, but not limited to, any physician, coordinated care organization, hospital, health care facility, dentist, nurse, optometrist, podiatrist, physical therapist, psychologist, chiropractor or pharmacist and an officer, employee or agent of such person acting in the course and scope of employment or agency related to health care services. (emphasis added).Scomed argued that the Act defines health care providers broadly and should be construed to include durable medical equipment
- The court rejected this argument, noting that both Section 109 and the Act's Medical Cost Containment (MCC) Regulations describe entities that are 'licensed by the Commonwealth to provide health care services.' The court emphasized that Scomed concerns itself primarily with the sale or distribution of medical goods, not services
- They do nothing to treat a patient, but instead merely dispense a product and function as a middleman
- The court emphasized that this is insufficient to extend the recourse offered by the Fee Review process.The court then reviewed two related decisions issued by it and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court: Harburg Medical Sales Company v
- PMA Management Corp., No. 635 C.D. (Pa
- Cmwlth., August 30, 2021) (holding medical supplies distributor at issue was not a health care provider because it was neither licensed nor authorized by the Commonwealth to provide health care services)
- and Schmidt v
- Schmidt, Kirifides, and Rassias, PC (WCAB), 333 A.3d 310 (Pa. 2025) (holding any item prescribed by a health care provider as a part of a treatment plan for a work-related injury qualifies as medicines and supplies under Section 306(f.1)(1)(i)).Scomed attempted to argue that it was distinguishable from the company at issue in the Harburg case, emphasizing that its various accreditations and compliance with federal regulations made it a more qualified provider than the one at issue in Harburg
- While the court acknowledged Scomed’s accreditations, it rejected the argument, again turning the focus to Scomed’s function as a provider of goods, not health care services.Scomed also attempted to assert that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Schmidt should permit recourse for itself under the Act’s fee review process, as the decision broadly interprets the phrase “medicines and supplies” and broadly interprets what items should be covered by the insurance carrier
- However, the court emphasized that whether an item qualifies as a covered supply, is an entirely separate issue from who qualifies as a provider, and the core of this litigation was whether Scomed was a provider
- As such, the court also rejected this argument.Finally, Scomed attempted to argue that as a matter of policy, the court should extend the recourse offered through the fee review process, as shutting medical supply companies out of the process undermines the Act and impacts injured workers’ access to necessary supplies
- The court acknowledged Scomed’s concern but asserted that the plain language of the Act does not permit an extension of the fee review process, and if Scomed wants this to change, that change must come from the legislature.Ultimately, this case provides workers’ compensation carriers and claims administrators a much needed line of defense against fee review challenges from entities that supply medical goods, not services, to injured workers
- It also provides defense counsel a vehicle through which they can seek the dismissal of some of the ever increasing number of fee reviews
- However, this case does leave an issue unresolved-what recourse, if any, do these medical supply companies have when they believe bills have been underpaid?
- Until that question is resolved by the legislature or further court order, practitioners and insurers alike should review all fee reviews to determine the applicability of this new defense
- Pa
- Supreme Court Permits Payment of Specific Loss Benefits to a Deceased Injured Workers’ Estate August 1, 2025 On May 30, 2025, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued a landmark decision, overturning years of precedent regarding a claimant’s entitlement to workers’ compensation specific loss benefits after death
- This decision will have significant ramifications for how cases involving specific loss benefits are handled, with important implications for settlement strategy, claims management and litigation posture
- News 98 Marshall Dennehey Attorneys Recognized in the 2026 Editions of The Best Lawyers in America and the Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch in America August 20, 2025
Practice Areas Explained
Alana M. Staniszewski's Areas of Practice
Each practice area below reflects the types of cases Alana M. Staniszewski handles, with a brief overview of what that area of law covers.
Workers compensation lawyers help injured workers get medical care, lost wages, and disability benefits. Free consult, no fee unless you win.
Alana M. Staniszewski is one of 55,389 workers comp attorneys indexed nationally. Browse workers comp attorneys in Pennsylvania →
Jurisdictional Context
Why local counsel matters in Pennsylvania
Practicing law in Pennsylvania. Legal matters in Pennsylvania are governed by state-specific rules of civil and criminal procedure, statutes of limitations, and substantive law. Cases originating in Pittsburgh are typically filed in the local municipal court or the appropriate Pennsylvania state district court, depending on subject matter and amount in controversy. An attorney licensed in Pennsylvania brings working knowledge of local procedural deadlines, judicial practices in this andnue, and the substantive law that applies to cases brought here. Out-of-state attorneys generally cannot represent clients in Pennsylvania courts without local counsel or pro hac vice admission.
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