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
Filing an OWCP claim after a workplace injury can feel overwhelming—especially when you’re already dealing with physical pain, emotional stress, or trauma.
Many federal workers assume the hardest part is the injury itself. But in reality, one of the biggest challenges is navigating the claims process correctly from the start.
At Federal Mental Health, we’ve worked with countless injured and traumatized federal employees. And time after time, we see the same issue:
This mistake can delay your claim, trigger requests for more evidence, or even lead to denial.
The good news? It’s avoidable and understanding how can protect both your benefits and your recovery.
Many federal workers believe that if they were injured at work, their claim should automatically be approved.
Unfortunately, that’s not how OWCP works.
To receive benefits, you must meet five basic elements of a claim, including:
Out of all five, causal relationship is where most claims fall apart.
Causal relationship is the medical link between your job and your injury or condition.
In simple terms, OWCP is asking according to OWCP guidelines:
This is where many federal workers unintentionally make mistakes.
Most claim issues come down to this:
❌ The worker files the claim
❌ The injury is real
❌ But the medical documentation doesn’t clearly connect it to the job
This can happen when:
Even though Fact of Injury requires both factual and medical evidence , many workers assume a diagnosis alone is enough.
It’s not.
There are a few reasons this happens frequently:
Not all providers are familiar with federal workers’ compensation standards. They may treat your symptoms—but not document them in a way OWCP needs.
Many people rush to submit forms (like CA-1 or CA-2) without realizing that documentation is what actually drives approval.
Unlike a visible injury, emotional conditions require:
OWCP specifically notes that emotional conditions must arise out of and in the course of employment, not just exist during employment
This mistake is even more critical for federal workers dealing with:
For example:
A worker may clearly feel overwhelmed, anxious, or traumatized—but if the medical report doesn’t explain how work caused or contributed to it, OWCP may deny the claim.
This is why it’s important to understand conditions like:
These are not just symptoms—they are conditions that must be medically tied to your work environment.
A federal employee experiences ongoing workplace stress and develops anxiety.
They file a claim and submit a doctor’s note that says:
“Patient has anxiety and reports stress at work.”
This is one of the most important steps.
Your provider should:
At Federal Mental Health , providers specialize in working with federal employees and understand how to support OWCP claims.
Don’t just say “I’m stressed.”
Instead, describe:
This helps your provider build a strong medical narrative.
Strong reports often include phrases like:
Without this, your claim may lack the required connection.
Delays can raise red flags. OWCP may question claims with:
The earlier your condition is documented, the stronger your case.
Filing the wrong form can weaken your narrative.
👉 If your condition came from a single event, use CA-1
👉 If it developed over time, use CA-2
(You can read more in our guide: CA-1 vs CA-2: Which OWCP Form Should You File?)
When claims are delayed or denied due to weak evidence, it doesn’t just affect paperwork.
It affects:
Many federal workers wait months before getting proper mental health support—when they could have started much earlier.
At FedMH, the focus is not just therapy—it’s claim-aligned care.
We provide:
Before submitting or continuing your claim, ask:
✔ Do I have a clear medical diagnosis?
✔ Does my report explain how my job caused or contributed to my condition?
✔ Is the explanation detailed—not vague?
✔ Am I working with a provider who understands OWCP?
If the answer to any of these is no, your claim may be at risk.
The biggest mistake federal workers make isn’t filing the wrong form.
It’s failing to prove the connection between their condition and their work.
Once you understand that OWCP decisions are driven by medical evidence—not just events—you can take control of your claim.
And more importantly, you can take control of your recovery.
Federal Mental Health (FedMH) is here to support you.
