A work injury should be straightforward. You evaluate, treat, and help your patient recover so they can get back to work.
But then there are forms:
“Do I need to submit a specific form for this visit? Is there a deadline? Can I order imaging without pre-approval?”
And suddenly, the answer isn’t just medical. It depends on what state you’re practicing in. Those rules don’t just change the paperwork; they can change patient care.
In most areas of medicine, variation comes from patients. In occupational medicine, it can also come from the state law:
These might seem like administrative details, but for clinicians caring for workers, this is must-know information.
If you’ve ever tried to keep the laws and guidelines straight across multiple states, you know how quickly things blur. That is exactly why having a quick-reference guide, like Hippo Education’s Workers’ Compensation State Guide, can be so useful in practice.
Some states feel straightforward. Others make you stop mid-visit with a patient and double-check everything.
Here are five states where "straightforward" quickly turns into “Wait…this works differently here.”
In Florida, everything runs through the DWC-25 form: documenting the visit, assigning work status, and initiating referrals.
Miss a step or delay form submission, and care can stall:
Texas is one of the fastest ways to realize how states vary in the workers’ comp world.
It’s the only state where most private employers are not required to carry workers’ compensation insurance.
From there, the nuances build:
California brings structure to caring for workers — and a lot of it.
Patient care is guided by the Medical Treatment Utilization Schedule (MTUS).
In practice:
Clinical judgment still matters, but it has to fit within the framework.
Washington operates with both state-funded and private systems. Each entity has its own process.
What stands out most is how the documentation comes into play.
For example, take the Activity Prescription Form (APF). This form plays a role in determining work status and eligibility for time-loss compensation. If it isn’t completed or updated correctly, patient care and benefits may be delayed.
Add in other forms, required provider systems, and strong clinician control over referrals, and Washington becomes a place where documentation can be challenging.
New York introduces a nuance that can catch clinicians off guard.
While patients may present to any clinician for the initial visit, ongoing care in New York’s workers’ compensation system requires providers to be authorized by the Workers’ Compensation Board.
That means registering, completing training, and applying for authorization (with additional requirements for PAs).
Layer in detailed, state-specific treatment guidelines, and you get a system where continuity depends on navigating the process, not just using your clinical skills.
After navigating a few of these state variations, a few things become clear:
It’s easy to think of this as administrative complexity rather than a clinical one.
But for patients, it shows up as:
And for clinicians, it creates that constant question: “Am I doing this right for the state that I practice in?”
The injury might be straightforward. The system around it? Not quite.
And in occupational medicine, understanding that system is part of the patient’s care. Because the next time someone says, “I was injured at work,” you’ll know it’s not just about clinical management. It’s about what state you practice in and having the right resource at your fingertips.
That’s why we built the Workers’ Compensation State Guide. In the middle of your next busy shift, you’re not second-guessing the rules. You’re moving care forward.