“I am glad and so very pleased...he made happen what no other attorney could do. So far he has proven his weight in gold.”
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Antelope Valley
✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦
By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231
Did the insurance company deny your Camarillo workers' comp claim, or cut off the care your doctor ordered? Take a breath. A denial is not where this ends. It is where your fight for benefits begins, and the law hands you real ways to push back.
Many of those denials do not survive a proper, on-time appeal. There are two main routes. If they refused a treatment, you challenge it through Independent Medical Review. If they rejected your whole claim or a judge ruled against you, you file a Petition for Reconsideration. Both clocks are short, so the time to move is now.
Here is what to do today:
Yes. Nearly every workers' comp denial in Camarillo can be appealed. The route depends on what was denied, and each has its own short deadline.
A denial letter feels final. It is not. Insurers deny claims and treatments every day, and plenty of those denials do not hold up once someone challenges them the right way. Stock shelves at the Camarillo Premium Outlets? Lift patients at St. John's Pleasant Valley Hospital? Run a line at a local electronics plant? Your right to appeal is the same. The job is matching your situation to the right route before the deadline passes.
A denied treatment goes to Independent Medical Review. A denied claim or wrong ruling goes to a Petition for Reconsideration. Different routes, different clocks.
People say "I want to appeal" and mean very different things. Figuring out which system you are in is the first job, because the two run on separate tracks with separate deadlines.
When your doctor orders surgery, therapy, or an MRI, the insurer runs it through a screening called Utilization Review. A reviewer you never meet can approve, change, or reject it. If they reject it, you do not argue with the claims adjuster. Instead, you appeal to an outside doctor review called Independent Medical Review. You have only 30 days from the denial to ask for it. An independent physician then checks your records against the state's treatment guidelines. The state explains the IMR process here.
One hard truth about that medical appeal: it is nearly final. Under §4610.6, an Independent Medical Review decision can be set aside only on narrow grounds. Think fraud, bias, or a reviewer with a conflict of interest. You cannot simply re-argue the medicine. That is why the first appeal has to be built right, with complete records and a clear opinion from your treating doctor. There is rarely an easy second chance.
The other track is the courtroom track. Maybe the insurer rejected your whole claim. Maybe you went to a hearing and the judge issued a Findings and Award you believe is wrong. Too little permanent disability. Or it swallowed the insurer's apportionment story. You challenge that with a Petition for Reconsideration under §5903.
Labor Code §5903: "At any time within 25 days after the service of any final order, decision, or award ... any aggrieved person may petition for reconsideration upon one or more of the following grounds and no other."
A Petition for Reconsideration is not a complaint letter. It is a formal legal filing that tells the Appeals Board exactly where the judge went wrong on the law or the evidence. Your window is short: 25 days if the decision came by mail, 20 days if it was served electronically. Miss it and the ruling locks in. From there, the Oxnard judge's file goes up to the seven-commissioner Appeals Board in San Francisco for a fresh look.
If the Appeals Board turns down your petition, the road still continues. You can take the case to the California Court of Appeal by asking for a Writ of Review. You then have 45 days to file it. Separately, a case you closed years ago can sometimes be reopened. If it has gotten worse, you may reopen it for new or increased disability within five years of the original injury. Most workers never hear that either option exists.
You file the petition, the judge writes a report, and the Appeals Board reviews the record. It can affirm, change, or send the case back.
Once we file a Reconsideration, here is the path it follows, in plain order:
The treatment appeal works differently. There is no hearing and no courtroom. You submit the medical records, an outside physician reviews them on paper, and a written decision comes back. The upside is speed. The downside is the finality we covered above, which is exactly why the paperwork must be complete the first time.
Appeals are won on the existing record, not new arguments. The strongest grounds show the ruling lacks support in the substantial medical evidence on file.
An appeal is not a do-over where you bring fresh witnesses. The Appeals Board studies the record that already exists and asks one question: is the judge's decision supported by substantial evidence? So the winning move is showing where the evidence does not actually back the ruling. Many Camarillo appeals turn on the panel doctor's report. Each side strikes one name from a three-name state panel. The neutral evaluator left over often decides the case.
On a Camarillo claim, the grounds that tend to carry weight are concrete:
Not long. A denied treatment allows 30 days. A judge's ruling allows 25 days by mail, or 20 if served electronically.
Every appeal deadline in workers' comp is short and strict, and the board rarely forgives a late filing. Miss the date and you usually lose the right to challenge the decision. Find the date on your denial letter or your judge's decision, then match it to this chart:
| What was denied | Your appeal route | Deadline | Law |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment denied at Utilization Review | Independent Medical Review | 30 days from the denial | §4610.5 |
| IMR upheld the denial | Appeal only on narrow grounds (fraud, bias, conflict) | 30 days | §4610.6 |
| A judge's decision (Findings and Award) | Petition for Reconsideration | 25 days if mailed, 20 if electronic | §5903 |
| Reconsideration denied | Writ of Review to the Court of Appeal | 45 days | §5950 |
| New or worse disability after a closed case | Petition to Reopen | Within 5 years of the injury | §5803 |
Not sure which row is yours, or whether your clock has already started? One free call sorts it out: (661) 273-1780.
Everything above rests on these California Labor Code sections. Each link opens the official statute text.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Every Ventura County appeal, Camarillo's included, is filed at the Oxnard district office, then decided by the Appeals Board in San Francisco.
If you live or got hurt in Camarillo, your appeal starts at the Oxnard district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, at 2220 E Gonzales Road. That office covers all of Ventura County, including Camarillo, Oxnard, Ventura, Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Moorpark, Santa Paula, Port Hueneme, and Ojai. Your Petition for Reconsideration is filed and served there. From Oxnard, the file travels to the seven-commissioner Appeals Board in San Francisco, which makes the final call. Yazdchi Law files at the Oxnard board regularly and knows how it runs.
Here is a local detail that catches Camarillo workers off guard. When the Oxnard office serves a decision electronically instead of by mail, your reconsideration deadline drops from 25 days to 20. Five days may not sound like much. It is often the difference between an appeal the board hears and one it tosses as late. We check the service method on every decision so that shorter clock never surprises you.
Denials and disputed ratings in Camarillo cluster around the city's biggest employers:
Insurers fight these the same handful of ways: deny the treatment, lowball the rating, or pin the damage on an old injury. The appeal routes above answer each one.
Nothing up front, and nothing unless we win. A judge sets the fee, usually 12 to 15 percent of what we recover for you.
You pay nothing by the hour and nothing to start. In California workers' comp, the WCAB judge sets the attorney fee. It is usually 12 to 15 percent of your award or settlement, and only when there is a recovery. If we lose, you owe no fee. A warehouse picker and a hospital nurse get the same representation as anyone else.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). Fewer than 1% of California attorneys hold this credential. He has represented hundreds of California workers and appears regularly at the Oxnard WCAB. The firm has recovered up to $5,000,000 for a catastrophic spinal-cord injury and $1,500,000 for a cervical-spine injury. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. More about Eman Yazdchi. Verify his State Bar profile.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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