Structures workers comp rehab documentation with functional capacity evaluation and return-to-work planning. Use when managing work injury rehab, performing FCEs, or documenting return-to-work status.
Structures workers compensation rehabilitation documentation including Functional Capacity Evaluation (FCE), physical demand level classification per the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), return-to-work planning, work conditioning/hardening programs, maximum medical improvement (MMI) determination support, and impairment rating documentation per AMA Guides.
Workers compensation rehabilitation operates at the intersection of clinical care, legal proceedings, and employer/insurer interests. Every document produced in this setting has potential legal significance — it may be used in hearings, depositions, or trial to determine disability status, impairment ratings, and lifetime benefit calculations. FCE results directly determine whether a worker returns to their pre-injury job, accepts modified duty, or receives permanent disability benefits. Documentation standards are higher than standard medical rehabilitation: effort consistency must be assessed, physical demand levels must match DOL classifications, and all findings must be defensible under cross-examination. This skill produces documentation that meets clinical, legal, and regulatory requirements for workers compensation rehabilitation.
Before beginning workers compensation rehabilitation, confirm:
Required clinical questions:
Required documents:
Before rehabilitation can target return-to-work, document what the job requires:
DOL Physical Demand Classifications:
| Level | Occasional Lift (up to 1/3 time) | Frequent Lift (1/3 to 2/3 time) | Constant Lift (2/3+ time) | Other Requirements |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sedentary | 10 lbs | Negligible | Negligible | Primarily sitting; walking/standing limited |
| Light | 20 lbs | 10 lbs | Negligible | Walking/standing significant; sitting with push/pull |
| Medium | 50 lbs | 25 lbs | 10 lbs | Walking/standing significant |
| Heavy | 100 lbs | 50 lbs | 25 lbs | Walking/standing significant |
| Very Heavy | >100 lbs | >50 lbs | >25 lbs | Walking/standing significant |
Essential job function documentation:
The FCE is the gold standard for determining physical work capacity:
FCE protocol elements (full evaluation, typically 4-6 hours over 1-2 days):
Material handling:
Positional tolerance:
Hand function:
Effort consistency assessment (critical for medicolegal defensibility):
Document effort statement: "Based on coefficient of variation analysis (CV = 8-12% across all trials), bell-shaped grip curve bilaterally, heart rate response proportional to exertion level (peak HR 132 during heavy lift, corresponding to RPE 7/10), and consistency between formal testing and observed functional performance, the evaluee demonstrated consistent maximal effort throughout the evaluation." OR document specific inconsistencies factually without attributing intent.
Gap analysis format:
| Job Demand | Required | Demonstrated Capacity | Gap | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Floor-to-waist lift (occasional) | 50 lbs (Medium) | 35 lbs | 15 lbs deficit | Does not meet |
| Waist-to-shoulder lift (frequent) | 25 lbs | 25 lbs | None | Meets |
| Standing tolerance | 4 hours continuous | 45 minutes | 3 hr 15 min deficit | Does not meet |
| Walking | 6 hours total | 2 hours total | 4 hour deficit | Does not meet |
Classification of work capacity:
Work conditioning (exercise-focused, 2-4 hours/day):
Work hardening (multidisciplinary, 4-8 hours/day):
Progress tracking:
Return-to-work documentation format:
Maximum medical improvement (MMI) documentation support:
Impairment rating support (AMA Guides, typically 5th or 6th edition per jurisdiction):
Before finalizing workers compensation rehabilitation documentation: