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Berlin Work Injury Attorneys

Your work related injury or illness can alter your life in ways you might never have imagined. You try to make due while you are unable to work. You may get frustrated because you don’t understand (or given wrong information) about what to do after you suffer a work-related injury. You need assistance and you need it fast.

At the Berlin, New Jersey based Doner & Castro, we understand your frustration and will work with you to file claim petitions to obtain benefits you may not even know about. Part of working within the workers’ compensation system is knowing it – we want our clients to have the information to help their claim or appeal to go through. To find out more about workers’ compensation in New Jersey, read on or contact a workers’ comp lawyer at Doner & Castro.

Doner & Castro
Berlin Workers Compensation Lawyers
540 North Route 73
Berlin Township, NJ  08091
Tel:  856-719-8711
Fax:  856-719-8720
e-mail

2327 Westchester Pike
Broomall, PA  19778
Tel:  610-355-0150
Fax:  610-355-0157

320 Old County Road
Garden City, NY  11530
Tel:  516-227-3388
Fax: 516-873-9798

The personal injury lawyers at Doner & Castro represent clients throughout South New Jersey including Albion, Atco, Atlantic City, Audubon, Barrington, Bellmawr, Berlin Burrow, Berlin Township, Blackwood, Blenheim Brooklawn, Cedar Brook, Cherry Hill, Chesilhurst, Clementon, Collingswood, Delair East Camden, Echelon, Erial, Erlton, Gibbsboro, Glendora, Gloucester City, Haddon Heights, Haddonfield, Hammonton, Hilltop, Kirkwood, Lakeland, Laurel Springs, Lawnside, Lindenwold, Magnolia, Merchantville, Mount Ephraim, Oaklyn, Pennsauken, Pine Hill Pine Valley, Runnemede, Sicklerville, Somerdale, Stratford, Tavistock, Turnersville Voorhees, Waterford, Westmont, Winslow, Woodcrest, Woodlynne and Camden, Atlantic, Burlington, Gloucester counties.

Workers' Compensation - An Overview

Workers' compensation has become part of the fabric of the American workplace. Benefits are routinely paid for work-related injury, disease and death. This brings stability to the individual employee and his or her family even in the face of severe workplace injury or debilitating industrial disease. An experienced and skillful workers' compensation lawyer can answer your workers' compensation questions and assist you with your claim.

History and Origins

The need for and idea of workers' compensation has origins in Germany in the early 1800s. The industrial revolution brought dangerous new workplaces into existence such as railroads, factories and mines with accompanying increases in injuries, deaths and new work-related diseases. Social and political sympathy for the common worker grew and led to the enactment of early workers' compensation legislation.

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Employer Retaliation against the Workers' Compensation Claimant

Workers' compensation is sometimes viewed as a compromise between employees and employers: workers give up the right to sue for large awards in court in exchange for certain and timely, albeit relatively lower, reimbursement for work-related injuries and illnesses. Employers take on the responsibility for these injuries and illnesses even if they are not at fault, but they no longer have to worry about being tied up in court and potentially liable for large verdicts.

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Can I Recover Workers' Compensation Benefits if I Work for a Government Employer?

Workers' compensation benefits are usually the exclusive remedy for workers injured on the job. But is that still true if you are a public employee? If you or a loved one has been injured or killed on the job as a public servant, you should consult an experienced workers' compensation attorney to determine your rights under the workers' compensation laws.

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Can I Sue My Employer Instead of Filing a Workers' Compensation Claim?

The answer to this question is, in most cases, no. Workers' compensation systems were established as a trade-off in which employees gave up the right to sue employers in court for their work-related injuries and occupational diseases in exchange for the right to receive workers' compensation benefits regardless of who was at fault for their injuries. Most employers are required by law to either carry workers' compensation insurance or to self-insure for the benefit of their employees. In exchange for providing that insurance, employers are protected from defending personal injury claims brought by employees in civil lawsuits.

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What Are the Rehabilitation Rights of Injured Workers?

The word "rehabilitation" in the area of workers' compensation has two very different meanings. When most people think of rehabilitation, they think of physical therapy or rehabilitative care aimed at overcoming an injury and regaining functionality. Did you know that there is also vocational rehabilitation? In many states, injured workers who cannot return to their former employment are entitled to this type of rehabilitation at the expense of their employer, their employer's workers' compensation insurance carrier, the state or some combination of these sources, as determined by the law of the state in question.

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Workers' Compensation: Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is workers' compensation?

A: Workers' compensation laws allow workers who are injured, sickened or killed in the courses of their employment to receive compensation without filing traditional lawsuits. An injured worker need not prove that his or her employer was negligent or at fault, only that the injury happened in the course of the worker's employment. Unless someone other than the employer (or a coworker, in most cases) was responsible for the worker's injuries, workers' compensation is usually the sole, exclusive remedy for the injuries.

Q: What kinds of work-related injuries are covered?

A: Back injuries and repetitive stress injuries are very commonly compensated, but almost any kind of physical injury or disease is covered by workers' compensation, as long as it is work related. In some states, mental, emotional or psychological harm is also covered in certain situations. An injury or medical condition you already had will not qualify unless it was exacerbated or hastened on the job.

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The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. You should consult an attorney for individual advice regarding your own situation.

Copyright © 2008 by Doner & Castro. All rights reserved. You may reproduce materials available at this site for your own personal use and for non-commercial distribution. All copies must include this copyright statement.