Making a Permanent Disability Claim
Following a workplace injury, the injured party needs to act quickly to meet deadlines for eligibility and capture key information for their claim. Within 30 days, the injured person must report the incident to their employer. At that point, the employer should provide a DWC-1 Claim Form, which marks the beginning of the official workers’ compensation claim. Even before that claim is accepted or denied, the employer is required to grant access to funding for immediate medical treatment.
Once the injury has reached stability (known as Maximum Medical Improvement or MMI), the worker can begin determining whether permanent disability applies. This will likely include an evaluation from a Qualified Medical Examiner (QME) or an Agreed Medical Examiner (AME). The medical report from that evaluation will be crucial to the next steps as it identifies the percentage of permanent disability, determines whether the Bakersfield patient can return to work, and outlines eligibility for permanent disability compensation.
Complications in the Permanent Disability Claims Process
Permanent disability workers’ compensation is a right guaranteed to Bakersfield workers and should be available to them when they need it. Unfortunately, many complications and barriers make exercising this right challenging.
Delays may leave workers with mounting medical bills and questions about the future. Disputes over medical reports and which doctors to use can cause complications as well. Sometimes, the initial evaluation leaves injured workers with a low percentage of impairment that does not accurately reflect their disability’s impact and leaves them with insufficient compensation.
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