NSW Work Injury Claim

NSW Work Injury Claim

Hand nerve injury workers compensation NSW

A NSW workers compensation claim for hand nerve injury should connect the diagnosis with the actual work demands, not just name the injured body part. Common work features include high-repetition tool, keyboard, scanning or gripping work, sustained wrist or elbow posture and forceful hand use. Useful evidence commonly includes nerve conduction study, ultrasound or specialist report where relevant, task frequency and force description and hand therapy or physiotherapy notes. Insurer disputes often focus on whether repetitive work materially contributed and whether symptoms are unrelated or constitutional, while weekly payments and suitable duties usually turn on grip strength, keyboarding, tool use, overhead work and lifting tolerance and dominant-hand limits and two-handed tasks.

Key References & Legislation

  • Workers Compensation Act 1987
  • Workplace Injury Management and Workers Compensation Act 1998
  • SIRA workers compensation guidelines
Hand nerve injury workers compensation evidence review with medical reports, treatment notes, certificate of capacity and workplace duties documents.

Quick answer for NSW injured workers

A NSW workers compensation claim for hand nerve injury should connect the diagnosis with the actual work demands, not just name the injured body part. Common work features include high-repetition tool, keyboard, scanning or gripping work, sustained wrist or elbow posture and forceful hand use. Useful evidence commonly includes nerve conduction study, ultrasound or specialist report where relevant, task frequency and force description and hand therapy or physiotherapy notes. Insurer disputes often focus on whether repetitive work materially contributed and whether symptoms are unrelated or constitutional, while weekly payments and suitable duties usually turn on grip strength, keyboarding, tool use, overhead work and lifting tolerance and dominant-hand limits and two-handed tasks.

Plain English summary

A NSW workers compensation claim for hand nerve injury should connect the diagnosis with the actual work demands, not just name the injured body part. Common work features include high-repetition tool, keyboard, scanning or gripping work, sustained wrist or elbow posture and forceful hand use. Useful evidence commonly includes nerve conduction study, ultrasound or specialist report where relevant, task frequency and force description and hand therapy or physiotherapy notes. Insurer disputes often focus on whether repetitive work materially contributed and whether symptoms are unrelated or constitutional, while weekly payments and suitable duties usually turn on grip strength, keyboarding, tool use, overhead work and lifting tolerance and dominant-hand limits and two-handed tasks.

General information only. It is not legal advice for your individual matter, and past outcomes do not guarantee future results.

How this injury commonly happens at work

  • high-repetition tool, keyboard, scanning or gripping work
  • sustained wrist or elbow posture
  • forceful hand use
  • vibration exposure
  • repetitive reaching, gripping, keyboard or tool use
  • lifting above shoulder height or away from the body
  • falls onto an outstretched arm
  • forceful pulling, pushing or carrying
  • vibration, awkward wrist posture or sustained hand use

Evidence that may help

  • nerve conduction study, ultrasound or specialist report where relevant
  • task frequency and force description
  • hand therapy or physiotherapy notes
  • workstation or tool-use evidence
  • ultrasound, MRI, X-ray or nerve conduction studies where relevant
  • treating GP, physiotherapy and specialist reports
  • job descriptions showing repetition, force, posture and tool use
  • photos or safe notes about equipment, workstation or task setup
  • records of modified duties and failed attempts at normal tasks

Common insurer disputes

  • whether repetitive work materially contributed
  • whether symptoms are unrelated or constitutional
  • whether modified duties truly reduce repetition and force
  • whether symptoms are work-related or age-related
  • whether repetitive work materially contributed to the diagnosis
  • whether surgery, injections, splints or therapy are reasonably necessary
  • whether suitable duties still exceed gripping, reaching or lifting limits
  • whether restrictions have been underestimated by an IME

Treatment and surgery issues

  • splints, hand therapy, injections, decompression or tendon release where supported
  • physiotherapy, hand therapy, splinting, injections or specialist review
  • surgery such as decompression, repair or fixation where clinically indicated
  • workstation or task modification to reduce repeat aggravation
  • rehabilitation after immobilisation or surgery

Weekly payments and work capacity

  • grip strength, keyboarding, tool use, overhead work and lifting tolerance
  • dominant-hand limits and two-handed tasks
  • safe duties that avoid repetition or forceful use
  • weekly payments where partial capacity is disputed

Permanent impairment and lump sum issues

  • WPI may arise for permanent loss of movement, strength, nerve function or surgical outcome
  • assessment usually depends on stable symptoms and objective findings
  • lump sum advice should be based on medical evidence, not assumptions

How NSW Work Injury Claim can help

  • separate diagnosis, work exposure and capacity evidence
  • test suitable duties against actual hand, wrist, elbow or shoulder demands
  • review treatment denial reasons and IME assumptions
  • plan WPI or dispute steps where appropriate

Common questions about hand nerve injury claims

Can I make a NSW workers compensation claim for hand nerve injury?

A claim may be available if the hand nerve injury arose out of work or was materially aggravated by work. The practical starting point is to compare the diagnosis with work features such as high-repetition tool, keyboard, scanning or gripping work, sustained wrist or elbow posture and forceful hand use, then check the certificates of capacity, treatment notes and any insurer decision already made.

What evidence usually matters most for hand nerve injury?

Helpful evidence usually includes nerve conduction study, ultrasound or specialist report where relevant, task frequency and force description, hand therapy or physiotherapy notes and workstation or tool-use evidence. The best evidence depends on the diagnosis and the dispute raised by the insurer.

What if the insurer says the hand nerve injury is not work-related?

The response should address the actual reason given. For hand nerve injury, that may mean dealing with whether repetitive work materially contributed, whether symptoms are unrelated or constitutional and whether modified duties truly reduce repetition and force. A short evidence-based chronology is usually more useful than a broad complaint.

Can treatment or surgery for hand nerve injury be disputed?

Yes. Treatment may be disputed on causation, necessity, timing or whether conservative care has been tried. For hand nerve injury, treatment evidence may need to address splints, hand therapy, injections, decompression or tendon release where supported, physiotherapy, hand therapy, splinting, injections or specialist review and surgery such as decompression, repair or fixation where clinically indicated. A treating specialist report can be important, but approval is never guaranteed.

Can hand nerve injury affect weekly payments or suitable duties?

It can. For hand nerve injury, capacity evidence often needs to deal with grip strength, keyboarding, tool use, overhead work and lifting tolerance, dominant-hand limits and two-handed tasks and safe duties that avoid repetition or forceful use. Duties should be tested against the actual restrictions, not just a generic light-duties label. Weekly payments may turn on whether capacity has been assessed correctly.

Can hand nerve injury lead to a permanent impairment or lump sum claim?

It may, if the injury becomes stable and the medical evidence supports a permanent impairment assessment. WPI results, thresholds and entitlement depend on the accepted injury, objective findings and correct assessment process.

Request a calm claim position review

If you have received an insurer decision or you are unsure how your injury evidence fits together, we can help you identify the issue, organise the documents and consider the next step. Where ILARS funding is approved, eligible legal costs and necessary disbursements may be covered.

Request a claim reviewCall (02) 7233 3661

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