NSW Work Injury Claim

NSW Work Injury Claim

NSW workers compensation insights

Blog guides, page 6

More practical articles for injured workers, kept to four guides per page so the archive is easy to scan. Page 6 is a decision-triage archive: use it to match the article to your insurer notice, medical evidence, payment risk, or Personal Injury Commission (PIC) step before you decide what to read next.

Quick answer

What should you use this archive page for?

Use page 6 of the NSW workers compensation blog to find focused guides on NSW workers compensation evidence, insurer decisions, deadlines, and practical dispute steps. The safest next step is to pick the guide that matches the decision or evidence problem in front of you, then cross-check it against your claim documents, medical certificates, insurer notices, and any Personal Injury Commission (PIC) material before acting.

If a decision has arrived

Read the closest article first, save the section 78 notice, work capacity decision, medical assessment certificate, or insurer letter, record the date received, and avoid assuming every dispute uses the same deadline or pathway.

If evidence is weak

Look for the guide that explains medical, wage, capacity, treatment, domestic assistance, or whole person impairment (WPI) evidence, then ask your doctor or lawyer what is missing before the insurer position hardens.

If you are unsure

Start with the workers compensation overview or request a free claim check so the issue is triaged before you spend time on the wrong article.

How to read these case notes safely

Case notes are useful because they show how evidence, jurisdiction, remedy choice, and legal-error arguments can affect a NSW workers compensation dispute. They are not a promise that another worker will receive the same result. A different medical history, date of injury, certificate wording, insurer notice, or procedural step can change the pathway. Treat each article as general information and use it to prepare better questions for legal advice, not as a substitute for advice on your own claim.

For page 6, the common thread is choosing the right forum and evidence target before the dispute escalates. Before responding, collect the decision, medical reports, certificates of capacity, correspondence, and any PIC orders so the next step is based on the actual dispute, not a general impression from the headline.

Page 6 of 11

Blog guides

Case Note

Jajaw case note: Section 60 treatment for cervical symptoms

NSWPIC accepted section 60 treatment liability for cervical symptoms linked to accepted psychological injury despite earlier motor accident history.

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Case Note

Shlimon v Steric [2025] NSWPICPD 70: deemed date of injury in disease claims

Presidential appeal on section 15 deemed date, section 322 aggregation, and why date framing changes section 66 valuation outcomes.

Read article

Case Note

Ypermachou v PMK [2026] NSWSC 149: judicial review limits in WPI and section 66 disputes

NSW Supreme Court dismissed a judicial review challenge to a PIC Appeal Panel decision, reinforcing the legal-error threshold for court review.

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Section 151H

Section 151H work injury damages NSW: 15% WPI gateway explained

How the section 151H threshold operates in practice, and what evidence is needed before common law strategy can proceed.

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