Back Injury Workers' Comp Lawyer
Back injuries — herniated discs, spinal stenosis, fractures, and chronic pain — are complex claims that insurers aggressively dispute. Proper medical documentation, AMA Guides rating, and apportionment defense are critical to maximizing your permanent disability award.
Back Injuries: California’s Most Common Workers’ Comp Claim
Back injuries account for more workers’ compensation claims in California than any other body part. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that back disorders are responsible for roughly one in every five workplace injuries and illnesses, and they cost more in total benefits than any other injury category. Despite their prevalence, back injury claims are among the most aggressively contested by insurance companies because of the high cost of treatment (particularly surgery) and the substantial permanent disability ratings these cases generate.
What makes back injury claims especially contentious is the concept of apportionment. Insurance companies routinely argue that a portion of the worker’s spinal condition is attributable to pre-existing degenerative changes—age-related disc desiccation, facet arthropathy, and spondylosis that appear on virtually every MRI of a worker over age 40. Under LC §4663, the insurer bears the burden of proving apportionment with substantial medical evidence, but in practice, many AME and QME physicians are sympathetic to apportionment arguments, and injured workers need a specialist attorney who understands spinal pathology well enough to challenge unfair apportionment opinions.
A board-certified specialist handles back injury claims differently from a generalist. We understand spinal anatomy, can read MRI reports, know which surgical procedures generate the highest permanent disability ratings, and can identify when a medical evaluator has applied the AMA Guides incorrectly. The difference between a properly rated and improperly rated back injury case can be tens of thousands of dollars in permanent disability benefits.
Understanding Your Spine: Anatomy That Affects Your Claim
The human spine consists of 33 vertebrae divided into five regions: cervical (C1–C7 in the neck), thoracic (T1–T12 in the mid-back), lumbar (L1–L5 in the lower back), sacral (S1–S5, fused), and coccygeal (tailbone). Between each pair of movable vertebrae sits an intervertebral disc composed of a tough outer ring (annulus fibrosus) and a gel-like center (nucleus pulposus). These discs act as shock absorbers and permit spinal flexibility.
The lumbar spine bears the greatest load and is the most common site of work-related injury. The L4–L5 and L5–S1 segments are particularly vulnerable because they bear the highest compressive and rotational forces. Cervical spine injuries at C5–C6 and C6–C7 are the second most common, often resulting from motor vehicle accidents during work, overhead lifting, or cumulative trauma from sustained awkward postures.
Understanding which spinal segment is injured and the specific pathology at that level is critical for your claim. A bulging disc (where the disc wall deforms but does not rupture) is rated differently under the AMA Guides than a herniated disc (where the nucleus pulposus extrudes through the annulus). A disc herniation with radiculopathy (nerve compression causing radiating pain, numbness, or weakness in the arms or legs) warrants higher impairment ratings than a disc herniation without neurological deficit. The distinction matters enormously in determining your permanent disability rating and settlement value.
Types of Back Injuries in Workers’ Compensation
Herniated discs are the most significant spinal injury in workers’ comp claims. A herniation occurs when the nucleus pulposus breaches the annulus fibrosus and compresses adjacent nerve roots. Symptoms include localized back or neck pain, radiating pain into the extremities (sciatica for lumbar herniations, radiculopathy for cervical herniations), numbness, tingling, and muscle weakness. Large herniations can cause cauda equina syndrome—a surgical emergency involving loss of bowel and bladder control.
Spinal stenosis is a narrowing of the spinal canal that compresses the spinal cord or nerve roots. While stenosis often has a degenerative component, work-related trauma can accelerate the narrowing or create acute stenosis through disc herniation, ligamentum flavum hypertrophy, or vertebral fracture. Spondylolisthesis, where one vertebra slips forward over the one below it, is frequently work-related in occupations involving repetitive hyperextension such as construction, warehouse work, and commercial driving.
Compression fractures of the vertebral body occur from falls, heavy impacts, and motor vehicle accidents. These fractures can result in permanent height loss of the vertebral body, kyphotic deformity, and chronic pain. Facet joint injuries, sacroiliac joint dysfunction, and annular tears (internal disc disruption without herniation) are additional common findings that generate compensable permanent disability. Cumulative trauma to the spine—developing over months or years of heavy lifting, vibration exposure, or repetitive bending—is compensable under LC §3208.1 as an occupational disease.
Degenerative Disc Disease and the Apportionment Battle
Degenerative disc disease (DDD) is the single most contested issue in back injury workers’ comp claims. DDD is a radiological finding reflecting age-related wear on the intervertebral discs—disc desiccation, loss of disc height, osteophyte formation, and endplate changes. It appears to some degree on virtually every MRI of a patient over 35. Insurance companies exploit DDD as grounds to apportion a significant portion of the worker’s disability to non-industrial factors, effectively reducing the permanent disability award.
Under LC §4663, apportionment must be based on substantial medical evidence. The evaluating physician must identify the specific non-industrial factors (genetics, age, prior injuries, recreational activities) and quantify the percentage of disability attributable to each. The seminal case of Escobedo v. Marshalls (2005) established that apportionment to causation of the permanent disability is required, not apportionment to the underlying pathology. This means the evaluator must determine what percentage of the worker’s current functional limitation is caused by the industrial injury versus pre-existing factors.
The practical battleground is the medical-legal report. When a QME or AME physician assigns 50% apportionment to pre-existing DDD, that opinion halves the worker’s permanent disability award. A specialist attorney challenges these opinions by demonstrating that the worker was asymptomatic before the industrial injury (meaning the DDD was clinically silent), that the work duties caused the DDD to become symptomatic, and that under the Benson v. WCAB (2009) framework, asymptomatic pre-existing conditions should not be the basis for apportionment. The attorney may also depose the evaluating physician to test the foundation of the apportionment opinion and expose analytical errors.
Spinal Fusion: Authorization, Surgery, and PD Ratings
Spinal fusion surgery—the surgical joining of two or more vertebrae to eliminate motion at a painful segment—is one of the most frequently disputed treatments in workers’ compensation. Insurers deny fusion requests through Utilization Review at a high rate because fusions are expensive ($100,000–$250,000 per procedure) and because they generate high permanent disability ratings post-operatively.
Under the MTUS guidelines, spinal fusion is indicated for conditions including unstable spondylolisthesis, fracture nonunion, progressive neurological deficit, and disc herniation with persistent radiculopathy unresponsive to at least six months of conservative treatment. The treating surgeon must document failure of conservative measures (physical therapy, epidural injections, medication management) before requesting fusion authorization. When UR denies the request, IMR review is the next step, and we aggressively pursue IMR appeals with supplemental medical evidence demonstrating surgical necessity.
Post-fusion, permanent disability ratings increase substantially. Under the AMA Guides 5th Edition, a single-level lumbar fusion typically results in a DRE (Diagnosis-Related Estimates) Category IV rating of 20–23% Whole Person Impairment (WPI). Multi-level fusions, fusions with persistent radiculopathy, or fusions with residual functional deficits can produce ratings of 25–33% WPI or higher. After adjustment for occupation and age under the PDRS (Permanent Disability Rating Schedule) and application of the diminished future earning capacity modifier, these impairment ratings translate to permanent disability percentages that commonly range from 40–65% for single-level fusions and higher for multi-level procedures.
How Back Injuries Are Rated Under the AMA Guides 5th Edition
California uses the AMA Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, 5th Edition (published 2001) for rating permanent impairment in workers’ compensation cases. For spinal injuries, the Guides offer two rating methodologies: the Diagnosis-Related Estimates (DRE) method and the Range of Motion (ROM) method. The DRE method is preferred and is used when a specific injury can be identified and attributed to a particular spinal segment.
The DRE method classifies spinal impairment into five categories. DRE Category I represents no significant clinical finding and yields 0% WPI. DRE Category II involves minor objective findings (muscle guarding, asymmetric loss of range of motion, non-verifiable radiculopathy) and yields 5–8% WPI for the lumbar spine. DRE Category III involves radiculopathy confirmed by clinical findings and corresponding imaging, yielding 10–13% WPI. DRE Category IV involves loss of motion segment integrity (surgical fusion, alteration of motion segment) at 20–23% WPI. DRE Category V involves radiculopathy with loss of motion segment integrity at 25–28% WPI.
The impairment rating is then converted to a permanent disability rating through the PDRS, which adjusts the WPI for the worker’s occupation and age at the time of injury. An industrial worker with a physically demanding occupation receives a higher occupational adjustment than an office worker with the same impairment. The adjusted rating is further modified by the diminished future earning capacity (DFEC) factor. The final PD percentage determines the dollar amount of the permanent disability award under the statutory PD rate schedule. For back injuries involving fusion, final PD ratings between 40% and 60% are common, translating to awards ranging from approximately $50,000 to $120,000 or more depending on the date of injury and applicable PD rate schedule.
Fighting Unfair Apportionment in Back Injury Claims
Apportionment is where back injury claims are won or lost. A specialist attorney approaches apportionment as a litigated issue requiring the same rigor as any other element of the claim. The first line of defense is the medical record itself. If the worker had no documented complaints of back pain before the industrial injury, had no prior treatment for spinal conditions, and was performing full-duty work without restrictions, the argument that pre-existing DDD should reduce the award is substantially weakened.
We routinely depose medical evaluators who assign high percentages of non-industrial apportionment. In deposition, we test whether the physician properly distinguished between pathology (the radiological finding) and disability (the functional limitation). Under Escobedo and its progeny, apportionment must be to the cause of the disability, not to the underlying condition. If the physician cannot articulate a medically reasonable explanation for why 30% or 50% of the worker’s current functional limitation is attributable to non-industrial factors, the apportionment opinion lacks substantial medical evidence and should not be adopted by the judge.
Additionally, we challenge apportionment opinions that rely on the worker’s age as a standalone factor. In Gatten v. WCAB (2015), the court held that age alone is not a proper basis for apportionment—the physician must identify specific pathological processes associated with aging that independently contributed to the disability. Simply stating that “30% of the disability is due to age-related degeneration” without identifying the specific degenerative changes and explaining their independent contribution to functional limitation is insufficient. These legal distinctions are the difference between a 35% PD rating and a 55% PD rating—potentially tens of thousands of dollars in benefits.