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

Federal Mental Health | February 2026
If you are a federal worker dealing with a workplace injury, trauma, or stress-related condition, one of the first questions you may face is this: should you file a CA-1 or a CA-2?
Choosing the right form matters. It can affect how your claim is processed, what evidence OWCP expects, whether you may qualify for Continuation of Pay, and how clearly your condition is documented from the beginning. For injured federal workers seeking emotional recovery, this decision can also shape how mental health treatment is connected to the claim.
At FedMH, the focus is not just on symptoms. The site consistently centers care around virtual therapy for injured and traumatized federal workers, OWCP claim support, and condition-specific care for issues like anxiety after federal workplace injury, PTSD after workplace trauma, adjustment disorder, and chronic pain and mental health.
This guide explains the difference between the two forms, when each one is typically used, and how federal workers can think about the mental health side of an OWCP claim.
The simplest way to understand it is this:
A CA-1 is generally used for a traumatic injury, meaning an injury caused by a specific event or incident that happened during a single work shift.
A CA-2 is generally used for an occupational disease or illness, meaning a condition that developed over time because of repeated exposure, repetitive duties, or ongoing workplace factors.
That difference aligns with OWCP’s timing framework. The training material in Basic Elements of a Claim explains that traumatic injury claims are tied to an identifiable time, place, and circumstance, while occupational disease claims generally arise gradually and are timed from the later of last exposure or the point when the employee becomes aware the condition may be work-related.
A CA-1 is usually the right form when your injury or trauma can be traced to one specific incident.
Common examples may include:
OWCP’s own framework for traumatic injury claims says the employee has three years to file, and that time begins from the date of injury where the injury can be identified as to time, place, and circumstances. It also notes that a claim for Continuation of Pay must be filed within 30 days of the date of injury on Form CA-1.
That means if a federal worker experiences a sudden traumatic event and then develops panic, intrusive memories, fear of returning to work, or other trauma-related symptoms, a CA-1 may be the correct starting point.
This is especially relevant for readers who may later need support for PTSD after federal workplace trauma or who recognize early signs of anxiety after a federal workplace injury. FedMH’s condition pages make clear that symptoms can begin immediately after an event or intensify later during recovery.
A CA-2 is generally used when the condition did not come from one single event, but instead developed gradually because of the work environment or repeated exposures.
Examples can include:
OWCP’s claim guidance for occupational disease states that these claims generally arise gradually over time, and the filing clock begins on the later of two dates: the date of last exposure to the employment conditions believed to be the cause, or the date the employee became aware that the disease or condition might be related to employment.
This is where many psychological claims fit more naturally. A worker may not point to one single traumatic shift, but instead may describe months of escalating symptoms connected to pain, disrupted sleep, repeated exposure to distressing material, or the emotional fallout of injury and work disruption.
That makes a CA-2 particularly relevant to readers who may identify with adjustment disorder after federal workplace injury or chronic pain and mental health after federal workplace injury. FedMH’s condition pages describe how extended leave, uncertainty about returning to work, and ongoing OWCP processes can intensify psychological strain over time.
Filing the correct form helps establish the story of the claim from the start.
OWCP evaluates claims using five core elements: time, civil employee status, fact of injury, performance of duty, and causal relationship. All five must be met before benefits can be awarded.
If the form does not match how the condition actually developed, it can create avoidable confusion around:
For example, a sudden workplace assault followed by immediate trauma symptoms often fits a CA-1 framework better. A condition that worsened over months due to cumulative stress, chronic pain, or repeated exposure often fits a CA-2 framework better.
The How OWCP Claims Work page on FedMH already highlights this distinction by noting that traumatic injuries should be filed on CA-1 for COP eligibility, while occupational diseases should be filed on CA-2 once you realize the condition is work-related.
Yes. Mental health conditions can be part of either type of claim, depending on how they arose.
A mental health condition may fit under CA-1 when it follows a specific traumatic workplace event, such as assault, violence, or a severe incident witnessed on duty.
A mental health condition may fit under CA-2 when it develops over time, such as ongoing anxiety during recovery, cumulative trauma exposure, or emotional distress tied to chronic pain, uncertainty, or prolonged work disruption.
The OWCP training document explains that for stress claims, the condition must arise out of and in the course of employment, and that a resulting disability may be compensable when emotional stress occurs in carrying out assigned duties or special assignments. It also notes that the mere fact an employee has an emotional condition during a period of employment does not itself entitle the worker to benefits.
That distinction matters for SEO and for user trust. Readers searching this topic are not just looking for a form number. They are trying to understand whether what they are feeling is real, whether it can be connected to work, and whether treatment may be covered.
That is why this article should naturally link to pages such as mental health care for injured federal workers, OWCP claims guidance, and condition pages for PTSD, anxiety, adjustment disorders, and chronic pain. FedMH’s own site structure clearly supports those topical relationships.
Regardless of whether a federal worker files a CA-1 or a CA-2, the claim still needs evidence.
OWCP’s materials explain that fact of injury has two parts: a factual part and a medical part. The worker must establish that the incident or employment factor occurred, and also establish a diagnosed medical condition connected with the accident, incident, or exposure.
For emotional and psychological claims, the medical side is especially important. The same training materials state that causal relationship is the link between the work-related exposure or injury and the medical condition found on examination, and that this is based entirely on medical evidence from physicians who have examined and treated the employee.
FedMH’s OWCP page reinforces that strong medical documentation is critical and specifically mentions the importance of reports linking the condition to the job.
Use this simple mental filter:
Choose CA-1 when the condition came from one identifiable event.
Choose CA-2 when the condition developed gradually over time.
That is not legal advice, and some cases are more complex than they first appear. But it is a practical way to guide the initial decision.
Here are the strongest internal links to keep in this article:
The best version of this article for FedMH is not just informational. It should guide readers from confusion to clarity, then from clarity to care.
A worker searching “CA-1 vs CA-2” is often early in the journey, but not casual. They may already be injured, overwhelmed, anxious, or unsure how their mental health fits into the claim. This article should therefore connect form selection to real next steps: understanding the claim, recognizing symptoms, and getting the right support.
That matches the way FedMH presents itself across the site: specialized care for federal workers, delivered virtually, with a strong focus on OWCP navigation and injury-related mental health recovery.
