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Calls Answered Seven Days a Week |
WORKERS'
COMPENSATION LAWYERS |
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Parker Scheer LLP
Boston Office
1 Constitution Plz
Boston, Massachusetts
02129
Directions
Phone: 617-886-0500
Fax: 617-886-0100
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Perhaps the single biggest obstacle, which an
injured worker encounters when filing a workers' compensation
claim, is an alleged failure to report the claim. While the
Massachusetts Workers' Compensation Act requires an injured
worker to give notice as soon as practicable after an injury,
and to file a claim within 4 years of the time when one knows
or should know that he or she has suffered an injury caused
by employment, technical compliance with the law is not the
real problem. Rarely does one wait too long to file a claim.
The problem that arises is a failure to report an accident
on the day it occurs. The best way to understand this problem
may be by way of the following example.
It is late in the day on Friday when John feels
pain in his low back when lifts a heavy box at work. Rather
than tell his supervisor, he assumes the pain will go away
over the weekend, and chooses not to make a big deal out of
it. Saturday morning John wakes up and has such bad back pain
that he needs help to get out of bed. He goes the local emergency
room and is told that he should not work until he seeks a
neurologist or orthopedic surgeon.
John follows this advice, and calls work on
Monday to inform his supervisor that he cannot work because
he hurt his back the preceding Friday at work. Before John
has a chance to explain what happened, the supervisor asks
him what he did over the weekend to injure himself. The insurer
then adopts the supervisor's statement, and uses it to argue
that the employee injured himself at home, and not at work.
The lesson to be learned form this example is
that one should report all injuries no matter how minor they
appear to be. In most instances, the effects of a minor injury
are gone within a few days. However, if what seems to be relatively
minor takes a turn for the worst, a difficult situation can
be made easier if it has been reported.
Many companies have policies for reporting on
the job injuries. These should be followed. Often times the
reporting requirement involves the completion of a form. Follow
the company policy, and it may help you to avoid a problem
down the road. Additionally, the completion of such a form
most likely serves to satisfy the notice requirements under
the Workers' Compensation Act if the information requested
in the company form includes the identity of person who has
been injured, and gives the time, place and cause of the injury.
Failure to give notice does not prevent the
successful filing of a claim. The filing of a claim with the
Department of Industrial Accidents, in many instances, satisfies
the statutory notice requirements if the claim is filed in
a timely manner. The safest course of action in all instances,
however, is to follow company policy and report all accidents.
If your employer or its insurer tells you your claim is barred
because you failed to provide notice, do not accept that statement
as true. Seek legal advice as soon as possible.
To speak with a highly experienced workers’
compensation lawyer, click
here, or telephone Parker Scheer LLP seven days
a week, toll free at 886-414-0400. There is no fee charged
to discuss your case, and all information furnished will be
kept strictly confidential.
Massachusetts
Workers' Compensation - F.A.Q's
Massachusetts
Premier Workers' Compensation Lawyers
Other Massachusetts Workers'
Compensation Resources
Massachusetts
Workers' Compensation Act
Massachusetts
Department of Industrial Accidents
Injured
Worker's Guide (Publication of Mass. Department of Labor)
The
Workers' Compensation Rating and Inspection Bureau
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Parker Scheer LLP lawyers handle workers' compensation claims in Massachusetts towns including Acton, Amesbury, Amherst, Andover, Arlington,
Ashburnham, Ashfield, Ashland, Athol, Attleborough, Barnstable,
Barre, Bedford, Belmont, Berkley, Berlin, Bolton, Boston, Boxborough,
Boxford, Boylston, Bradford, Braintree, Burlington, Buzzards
Bay, Cambridge, Carlisle, Charlemont, Charlestown, Charlton,
Chelmsford, Chelsea, Clinton, Concord, Danvers, Dedham, Deerfield,
Dudley, Duxbury, East Longmeadow, Essex, Fall River, Fitchburg,
Foxboro, Framingham, Franklin, Freetown, Gardner, Gill, Gloucester,
Granby, Groveland, Hadley, Hamilton, Hanover, Haverhill, Holbrook,
Holliston, Holyoke, Hopkinton, Hubbardston, Hudson, Ipswich,
Kingston, Lakeville, Lancaster, Lawrence, Leominster, Lexington
Lincoln, Lowell, Ludlow, Lynn, Lynnfield, Malden, Marblehead,
Marlborough, Marshfield, Maynard, Melrose, Methuen, Methuen,
Middleborough, Middlefield, Milford, Milton, Monterey, Nantucket,
Natick, Needham, New Bedford, Newbury, Newburyport, Newton,
North Attleborough, North Brookfield, Northampton, Northborough,
Paxton, Peabody, Pepperell, Pittsfield, Plymouth Provincetown,
Quincy, Reading, Richmond, Rockport, Rowe, Rowley, Salem, Saugus,
Sherborn, Southbridge, Spencer, Sterling, Stoughton, Stow, Sturbridge,
Sudbury, Templeton, Topsfield, Townsend, Truro, Upton, Wakefield,
Waltham, Watertown, Wayland, Wellesley, West Boylston, West
Newbury Westborough, Westford, Weston, Westport, Williamstown,
Wilmington, Winchendon, Winchester, Woburn, Worcester, Yarmouth.
Parker Scheer also provides referral services for personal injury
lawyers in states other than Massachusetts.
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