WHEN INJURED AT WORK - WORKERS' COMPENSATION INFORMATION GUIDE FOR FEDERAL EMPLOYEES
http://www.dol.gov/esa/regs/compliance/OWCP/ca-11.htm
The Federal Employees' Compensation Act (FECA)
(5 U.S.C. 8101 et seq.) is administered by the
Office of Workers' Compensation Programs (OWCP)
of the U.S. Department of Labor. It provides
compensation benefits to civilian employees
of the United States for disability due to personal
injury sustained while in the performance of
duty or to employment-related disease. The FECA
also provides for the payment of benefits to
dependents if the injury or disease causes the
employee's death.
1. In Case of Injury obtain first
aid or medical treatment even if the injury
is minor. While many minor injuries heal
without treatment, a few result in serious prolonged
disability that could have been prevented had
the employee received treatment when the injury
occurred.
For traumatic injuries, ask your employer to
authorize medical treatment on Form CA-16 BEFORE
you go to the doctor. Take Form CA-16 when you
go to the doctor, along with Form OWCP-1500,
which the doctor must use to submit bills to
OWCP. Your employer may authorize medical treatment
for occupational disease ONLY if OWCP gives
prior approval.
Submit bills promptly, as bills for medical
treatment may not be paid if submitted to OWCP
more than one year after the calendar year in
which you received the treatment or in which
the condition was accepted as compensable.
2. Report Every Injury to your supervisor.
Submit written notice of your injury on Form
CA-1 if you sustained a traumatic injury, or
Form CA-2 if the injury was an occupational
disease or illness. (Forms CA-1 and CA-2 may
be obtained from your employing agency or OWCP.)
Form CA-1 must be filed within 30 days of the
date of injury to receive continuation of pay
(COP) for a disabling traumatic injury. COP
may be terminated if medical evidence of the
injury- related disability is not submitted
to your employer within 10 workdays. YOU
ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR ENSURING THAT SUCH MEDICAL
EVIDENCE IS SUBMITTED TO YOUR EMPLOYING AGENCY.
Form CA-2 should also be filed within 30 days.
Any claim which is not submitted within 3 years
will be barred by statutory time limitations
unless the immediate superior had actual knowledge
of the injury or death within 30 days of occurrence.
3. Establish the Essential Elements of Your
Claim. You must provide the evidence needed
to show that you filed for benefits in a timely
manner; that you are a civil employee; that
the injury occurred as reported and in the performance
of duty; and that your condition or disability
is related to the injury or factors of your
Federal employment. OWCP will assist you in
meeting this responsibility, which is called
burden of proof, by requesting evidence needed
to fulfill the requirements of your claim.
4. File a Claim for Compensation. File
Form CA-7, Claim for Compensation on Account
of Traumatic Injury or Occupational Disease,
if you cannot return to work because of your
injury and you are losing (or expect to lose)
pay for more than three days. Give the form
to your supervisor seven to ten days before
the end of the COP period, if you received COP.
If you are not entitled to COP, submit Form
CA-7 when you enter or expect to enter a leave
without pay status. All wage loss claims must
be supported by medical evidence of injury-related
disability for the period of the claim.
If you continue to lose pay after the dates
claimed on Form CA-7, submit Forms CA-8 Claim
for Continuing Compensation on Account of Disability,
through your employer to claim additional compensation
until you return to work or until OWCP advises
they are no longer needed. You are not required
to use your sick or annual leave before you
claim compensation.
If you choose to use your leave, you may, with
your agency's concurrence, request leave buy-back
by submitting Form CA-7 to OWCP through your
employing agency. Any compensation payment is
to be used to partially reimburse your agency
for the leave pay. You must also arrange to
pay your agency the difference between the leave
pay based on your full salary and the compensation
payment that was paid at 2/3 or 3/4 of your
salary. Your agency will then recredit the leave
to your leave record.
5. Return To Work As Soon As your Doctor
Allows You To Do So. If your employing agency
gives you a written description of a light duty
job, you must provide a copy to your doctor
and ask if and when you can perform the duties
described. If your agency is willing to provide
light work, you must ask your doctor to specify
your work restrictions. In either case, you
must advise your agency immediately of your
doctor's instructions concerning return to work,
and arrange for your agency to receive written
verification of this information. COP or compensation
may be terminated if you refuse work which is
within your medical restrictions without good
cause, or if you do not respond within specified
time limits to a job offer from your agency.
In appropriate cases, OWCP provides assistance
in arranging for reassignment to lighter duties
in cooperation with the employing agency. In
addition, injured employees have certain other
specified rights under the jurisdiction of the
Office of Personnel Management, such as reemployment
rights if the disability has been overcome within
one year.
6. Tell Your Family about the benefits they
are entitled to in the event of your death.
For assistance in filing a claim they may contact
your employing agency's personnel office or
OWCP.
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