Injured at Work?
Follow these Tips:

1. Report any injury to your supervisor or other authorized person.

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2. Request a claim form as soon as possible. Fill it out, keep a copy, and return it to your employer, making a note of the date you returned it.

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3 . Get the names of any witnesses
to your injury, and, if possible, their home telephone numbers.

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4 . If your injury was caused by a piece of equipment or machinery, or by some physical condition of the place where you work, ask your employer to keep it in the same condition until it can be inspected and photographed. As a precaution, take pictures of it yourself if you are able or ask a trusted co-worker to do this for you.

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5 . For at least the first 30 days after the injury happens, your employer has the right to decide what doctor will treat your injury
, unless you have made a timely, advance designation of a physician of your choice. Contact our office regarding time frames and limitations.

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6 . Make sure you attend all medical appointments
your employer schedules for you, and follow the treatment recommendations.

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7. Be honest and consistent when filling out any medical provider’s forms or when answering any questions during a medical appointment or evaluation.

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8. Make sure your employer is aware of your disability status
– don’t assume your employer will automatically know what’s happening with your injury and your ability or inability to return to work.

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9. Keep a record of any checks you receive and the dates you receive them
, and keep copies of all letters you receive from the Workers’ Compensation insurance carrier.

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10. Make a note of the date and what is said during any conversation
you have with an insurance claims examiner or other insurance company representative – and write down his/her name.

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11 . Take advantage
of a free legal consultation before

you are released from a doctor’s care for your injury.
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As part of our firm’s longstanding commitment to the working people of San Diego County, we have three attorneys who specialize in the practice of Workers’ Compensation law, and a dedicated staff who assist them in their efforts on behalf of injured workers.

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California’s Workers’ Compensation system is designed to assure every California worker certain basic rights when injured in the course of employment regardless of fault. There are generally two categories of workplace injuries: those resulting from a specific incident, such as a fall from a ladder; and those resulting from a continuous or cumulative trauma, such as repetitive typing on a keyboard.

In some situations, an injured worker has a right to receive compensation under both the Workers’ Compensation law and under the civil law. Here are some examples:

When an injury occurs as a result of the worker’s use of a tool, piece of equipment or machinery if it was defectively designed or manufactured or inadequate warnings were given to the worker as the end user of the product. In such cases, the manufacturer or another party – in addition to your employer – may be responsible under the civil law for the harm caused.

When an injury occurs as a result of the negligence or fault of another person outside your place of employment -- such as another driver when you are on the road in connection with your employment, or as a result of the negligence or fault of a person working for another employer -- such as a worker on a construction site working for one subcontractor when you work for another. In such cases, the other party or other party’s employer – in addition to your employer – may be responsible under the civil law for the harm caused.

When an injury or its long-term consequences are made significantly worse by the negligence of a doctor or other medical provider who treats the injured worker. In such cases, the medical provider – in addition to your employer – may be responsible under the civil law for the harm caused.

To protect your rights under the civil law – in addition to your rights under the Workers’ Compensation Statute – it is often critical that evidence be preserved, inspected and photographed on a timely basis. On these occasions, getting competent legal representation can make the difference between a complete and only a partial recovery for all the harm done. See Injury Law.

Whether or not another party will or may become accountable for the harm you have suffered, your employer remains responsible for your injury under California’s Workers’ Compensation law regardless of fault. You have five basic rights under the Workers’ Compensation system.

Your Five (5) Basic Rights
The right to receive a weekly compensation benefit while you are temporarily, totally disabled.
The right to have 100% coverage for the medical care you need to treat your injury.
The right to compensation for any permanent disability.
The right to future, lifetime medical care to treat the effects of your injury.
The right to receive certain retraining benefits, depending upon the date of your injury.

Enforcement of these five basic rights can involve complications – for example, when an employer denies that the injury occurred in the course of the worker’s employment or when an injured worker has a preexisting medical condition; and there are often disagreements about the extent of a worker’s permanent disability and whether or not he or she can return to the same work.


Quality Medical Care
Making a full recovery from a workplace injury is the most important objective and getting quality medical care can make a difference in achieving this objective.

The employer / insurance carrier is obligated to provide you with a doctor within 72 hours of your report of injury and request to see a physician. The employer may require you to treat within their Medical Provider Network, which is a group of doctors what are in the employ of the employer / carrier/ It is important to know who those physicians are and whether or not they can provide the care you require.

And if a full recovery cannot be achieved, the physician who treats your injury will have considerable power to affect each of your five basic rights – favorably or unfavorably. Not all medical providers are created “equal” -- not with regard to their skills and abilities as treating doctors or surgeons and not with regard to their thoroughness and accuracy in assessing the long-term consequences of an injury and the level of likely disability. Having a skilled medical provider – who is fair and objective – may make the difference in how well you “recover,” not only from the injury itself but under the Workers’ Compensation system as well.

Filing A Timely Claim
On-the-job injury claims must be timely reported and filed with the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board (WCAB) in the appropriate County in California. Generally, a claim must be filed within one year from the date of the injury or within one year from the date of the last payment of Workers' Compensation benefits for the injury, whichever of these two events occurred last – but, in any case, must be filed no more than five years from the date of the injury. If an employer accepted an injury as work-related and settled it using the legal device known as a “Stipulation and Award,” then the injured worker has five (5) years from the date of the injury to file a Petition to Reopen with the WCAB in his or her County in order to obtain further benefits for the injury.

Rating Your Permanent Disability
If you do not retain an attorney soon after your injury occurs, at least take advantage of the opportunity to have a free consultation with one of our firm’s Workers’ Compensation experts before your treating doctor releases you from care. Once you are released and you have reached, "Maximum Medical Improvement," your injury will be rated and this rating determines the amount of permanent disability compensation you are entitled to. This is determined by the use of the AMA Guides, which does not take into account your work or ability to work in determining your impairment; rather it is supposedly based on objective factors, such as measurements as well as how your injury affects your, "activities of daily living." Establishing the permanent disability rating for your injury is a critical event in your case and you deserve sound legal advice before this happens.

Special Penalties Against Employers
Special penalties apply when an injury results from an employer’s serious and wilful misconduct.

An employer also may not discharge or discriminate against an employee who is injured on the job because he or she filed a Workers’ Compensation claim, received a rating, award or settlement of a claim, or testified in another employee’s case. An employer who does so commits a misdemeanor entitling the employee to reinstatement, back pay, and half of the Workers’ Compensation benefits to which he/she is entitled up to $10,000.

When an employer discharges or discriminates against an employee based on his/her work-related injury (regardless of his/her participation in claim proceedings), a civil damage remedy under California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act may also be available. See Disability/Pregnancy Discrimination.

Attorney’s Fees
Our firm handles Workers’ Compensation cases on a contingency fee basis -- meaning that an injured worker does not pay any attorney’s fees unless there is a recovery of money. A judge must approve any attorney’s fees to be paid to the attorney for the injured worker and these attorney’s fee awards are a percentage of the permanent disability recovery or of weekly benefits paid during the injured worker’s participation in vocational rehabilitation services, usually ranging from 12% to 15%.

Consultations, however, are free until a representation agreement is made and a fee Disclosure Statement is reviewed, explained and signed by the injured worker. Take advantage of the opportunity for a free consultation to make sure you know your rights and get the benefits you deserve and have earned as a California worker.

You are not alone. See how we will help.

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Injury Law


Legal Team
Michael K. Wax
Position: Partner
Admitted to Bar: 1987, California.
Education: College of Idaho (B.A., 1984); Willamette University (J.D., 1987).
Member: California Applicants’ Attorneys Association (CAAA), San Diego County Bar Association, and State Bar of California.


James “Marty” Stern
Position: Associate
Admitted to Bar: 1977, California; U.S. District Court, Northern, Central and Southern Districts.
Education: San Diego State University (B.A., 1973); University of San Francisco School of Law (JD 1977); Certified Legal Specialist in Workers' Compensation by the State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization.
Of Note: Instructor, University of Phoenix, 1994 to present; President, San Diego Chapter of the California Applicants’ Attorneys Association (CAAA), 2001-2003;
Co-Chair, San Diego County Bar Association Workers' Compensation Law Section, 1999-2001; Chairman, Tort and Insurance Law Section, San Diego County Bar, 1991.
Member: California Applicants’ Attorneys Association (CAAA), San Diego County Bar Association, and State Bar of California.



Disclosure Required by California’s Labor Code § 5432
Making a false or fraudulent workers’ compensation claim is a felony subject to up to 5 years in prison or a fine of up to $50,000 or double the value of the fraud, whichever is greater, or by both imprisonment and a fine. Making a false statement for the purpose of obtaining or denying Workers’ Compensation benefits is also a felony. [This applies to employers as well as to claimants.]
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