Welcome to Federal Mental Health
Call for Help: (214) 471-5837
Welcome to Federal Mental Health
Call for Help: (214) 471-5837

Federal Mental Health | February 2026
If you’re a federal employee recovering from a workplace injury — whether in Dallas, elsewhere in Texas, or across the country — you may be focused on physical healing.
Doctor visits.
OWCP paperwork.
Medical documentation.
Return-to-work questions.
But emotionally, something feels different.
You’re more anxious.
You’re not sleeping well.
You feel irritable or mentally exhausted.
You worry constantly about your claim or your job.
And you wonder:
Is this normal?
Yes. It is.
Emotional and psychological symptoms are common after a federal workplace injury. In fact, they’re often overlooked because most injury clinics focus only on the physical side of recovery.
At Federal Mental Health (FedMH), based in Dallas, we work exclusively with injured federal workers navigating the OWCP/DFEC system. We see firsthand how frequently emotional symptoms develop alongside physical injuries.
Let’s break down what may be happening.
A workplace injury doesn’t just affect your body. It disrupts your stability.
Federal employees often carry high levels of responsibility — whether working for USPS, TSA, VA hospitals, DHS, SSA, or other agencies throughout Texas and nationwide.
When an injury occurs, it can create:
●Financial uncertainty
●Career concerns
●Fear of reinjury
●Loss of daily structure
●Stress from the OWCP process
Even if the injury wasn’t life-threatening, the disruption itself can trigger a stress response in your nervous system.
That reaction is human — not weakness.
Here are the most common mental health patterns we see among injured federal workers.
After a workplace injury, anxiety often centers around uncertainty:
●“Will OWCP approve my claim?”
●“Will I be forced back too soon?”
●“Is my supervisor questioning my case?”
●“What happens if I can’t return to my role?”
You may notice racing thoughts, muscle tension, irritability, or difficulty focusing.
When your career feels unstable, your brain shifts into protection mode.
Depression after a federal injury can develop gradually.
Time away from work, chronic pain, or feeling disconnected from coworkers can lead to:
●Low energy
●Reduced motivation
●Withdrawal
●Hopelessness
●Loss of confidence
Many injured federal employees say, “I just don’t feel like myself anymore.”
That experience is more common than people realize.
Even temporary medical restrictions can feel destabilizing.
Federal workers are often used to high performance and routine. When that changes suddenly, it can lead to:
●Mood swings
●Frustration
●Emotional instability
●Feeling overwhelmed by simple decisions
This isn’t a personal flaw. It’s a reaction to disruption.
Some federal roles involve direct exposure to traumatic events — including assault, threats, or high-risk environments.
In Texas alone, federal workers in correctional facilities, TSA operations at DFW, USPS routes, and VA hospitals may encounter high-stress or dangerous situations.
Trauma-related symptoms may include:
●Intrusive thoughts
●Hypervigilance
●Avoidance
●Sleep disturbance
●Emotional numbness
PTSD and trauma-related conditions are real medical responses — not signs of weakness.
Sleep is often the first thing affected.
You may find yourself:
●Lying awake replaying conversations
●Waking up throughout the night
●Having vivid dreams
●Feeling mentally exhausted during the day
Sleep disruption can intensify anxiety and depression, creating a cycle that’s hard to break.
Pain and mood are neurologically connected.
Ongoing physical discomfort can increase:
●Irritability
●Frustration
●Hopelessness
●Mental fatigue
If you’ve noticed emotional changes alongside chronic pain, that connection makes biological sense.
Navigating DFEC/OWCP documentation can be stressful.
There are forms, medical narratives, deadlines, and communication delays. Many federal workers describe feeling like they’re constantly defending their injury.
Common thoughts include:
●“What if I say the wrong thing?”
●“What if my claim is denied?”
●“Do emotional injuries even count?”
That ongoing pressure alone can increase anxiety and depressive symptoms.
One of the biggest misconceptions we hear from federal employees in Dallas and across Texas is:
“OWCP only covers physical injuries.”
That’s not accurate.
Under FECA, emotional and psychological conditions may qualify when:
●There is a workplace connection
●Symptoms are diagnosed by a licensed provider
●Documentation meets DFEC standards
Conditions that may be covered include:
Proper evaluation matters — but emotional injuries are recognized.
Sometimes emotional symptoms don’t appear immediately.
You may feel stable at first, then struggle months later.
Delayed stress responses are common, especially in trauma-related cases. Once the immediate crisis passes, your nervous system may begin processing what happened.
If you’re noticing symptoms long after your injury, that doesn’t invalidate your experience.
Federal employees are often resilient, capable professionals.
But resilience does not mean immunity from stress.
Workplace injuries disrupt stability. The emotional impact is real — especially when layered with paperwork, job uncertainty, and chronic pain.
Seeking support is not a weakness. It’s part of recovery.
At Federal Mental Health (FedMH), headquartered in Dallas, we provide confidential virtual therapy designed specifically for injured federal workers.
We understand:
●DFEC documentation requirements
●The pressures of federal employment
●The stigma concerns many employees carry
●The connection between physical injury and emotional distress
Our focus is exclusively federal civilian employees covered under FECA.
We provide clinical care — not legal advice — but we understand the structure of the system you’re navigating.
You may benefit from speaking with a provider if you are experiencing:
●Persistent anxiety
●Ongoing sadness
●Sleep disruption
●Irritability that feels out of control
●Intrusive thoughts
●Increased reliance on alcohol or medication
You don’t need to wait until symptoms become severe.
If you’re wondering whether what you’re feeling is normal after a federal workplace injury — that question alone matters.
Visit our Conditions We Treat hub to explore detailed information about:
●Anxiety
●Depression
●PTSD
●Adjustment disorders
●Chronic pain-related emotional distress
●Sleep disturbances
Emotional recovery is just as important as physical recovery.
And both deserve attention.
