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✦ 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
A denial letter starts a new phase of the case, not the end of the claim.
A denied workers' comp claim can leave a Sherman Oaks employee with no paycheck, no approved doctor, and a stack of letters that sound final. They are not final. The first job is to separate what the carrier denied. Some letters deny the entire injury. They may say the fall on Ventura Boulevard did not happen at work, the back injury was preexisting, the worker was an independent contractor, or the claim was reported late. Other letters accept the injury but deny an MRI, surgery, therapy, injections, or home care.
Those two problems use different paths. A whole-claim denial is fought at the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board. For Sherman Oaks, that usually means the Van Nuys WCAB. A treatment denial often starts with Utilization Review and then Independent Medical Review. The wrong filing can waste weeks. A worker from a restaurant near Ventura and Sepulveda, a medical office near Van Nuys Boulevard, or a retail store at Sherman Oaks Galleria needs the same first step: preserve the paper trail.
Yazdchi Law reviews these dates first because timing can change the case. Eman Yazdchi is the attorney. Mike Crouch is the business owner, a separate person. The lawyer handling strategy is Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi, California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California.
| Local issue | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| WCAB office | Sherman Oaks denied claims are commonly heard at the Van Nuys WCAB. |
| Frequent jobs | Restaurant, retail, medical office, hospitality, delivery, and home service work appear often. |
| Common denial | The carrier says the injury was not work related or says the requested care is not needed. |
| Key document | The DWC-1 claim form starts important duties for the employer and insurer. |
The strategy depends on whether the carrier denied injury liability or denied a specific medical request.
When the insurer denies the whole claim, the case must be built like a proof file. The facts need to show that the injury arose out of work and happened during the course of employment. That proof can come from an accident report, a witness, security video, time records, job duties, and the first medical record. In a repetitive injury case, the proof is often the job itself. A prep cook lifting cases for months, a hotel housekeeper pushing carts, or a receptionist typing through wrist pain may not have one dramatic accident. The medical report must connect the work pattern to the body part.
The insurer's delay also matters. Labor Code section 5402(b) gives the carrier a 90 day decision window after the claim form is filed. If the carrier waits too long, the worker may gain a strong presumption that the injury is covered.
Labor Code section 5402(b) 90-day rule: If liability is not rejected within 90 days after the date the claim form is filed under Section 5401, the injury shall be presumed compensable under this division.
That rule does not automatically pay every benefit the same day. It does give the worker a serious legal position at the Van Nuys WCAB. The carrier then has to deal with the missed deadline and with limits on evidence it could have found earlier. This is why the date on the DWC-1 and the date on the denial letter are not small details.
A liability denial usually calls for an Application for Adjudication, a medical-legal evaluation, and a hearing plan. The Qualified Medical Evaluator may decide whether the job caused or worsened the condition. The report should address the actual Sherman Oaks job, not a generic job title. A cafe server who carried loaded trays along Ventura Boulevard is different from a desk worker in the same zip code.
A treatment denial is narrower. The carrier may accept the knee injury but deny an MRI. It may accept the back injury but deny injections. These disputes usually turn on the treating doctor's request, the Utilization Review reasoning, and the Independent Medical Review packet. The appeal should include the records that show failed conservative care, objective findings, and daily limits.
If the denial was unreasonable, a penalty may be available. That argument is separate from proving the injury. It depends on what the carrier knew, when it knew it, and whether it had a fair reason to withhold benefits. The goal is practical: get medical care moving, recover wage loss when owed, and bring the case back into a posture where settlement or trial can be evaluated honestly.
The most useful proof is usually ordinary. A worker should collect the schedule for the week of injury, the name of the manager who received notice, photos of the work area, names of coworkers who saw the incident or knew about pain complaints, and the first clinic paperwork. For cumulative trauma, calendars and pay stubs can show how long the worker performed the same tasks. If the denial says no injury was reported, a text to a supervisor, a request for ice, or a changed shift can matter. If the denial says no medical support exists, the earliest records may show that the worker reported the job before a lawyer was involved.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Sherman Oaks cases often involve mixed service jobs, nearby medical providers, and fast access to the Van Nuys WCAB.
Sherman Oaks is not an industrial city, but many injury claims come from physical work hidden inside service jobs. Restaurant staff lift kegs, bus tubs, produce boxes, and floor mats. Retail workers unload stock before the store opens. Dental and medical office staff move equipment and help patients. Residential service workers drive from the hillside neighborhoods to apartment buildings near Magnolia and Burbank. A claims adjuster may call these jobs light duty. The worker's body often tells a different story.
The local hearing office matters because the file is not just paperwork. The Van Nuys WCAB is close enough for appearances, status conferences, and trial settings without treating the case like a distant venue. A well prepared file gives the judge clean dates, clear medical issues, and a direct explanation of the job duties. That helps when the carrier's denial letter uses broad phrases such as non-industrial, late reporting, no medical evidence, or preexisting condition.
Medical geography also matters. A worker may first go to Sherman Oaks Hospital, an urgent care near Ventura Boulevard, or a personal doctor before learning that workers' comp has a provider network. Early records can help or hurt. A note that says the pain began while lifting at work can support the claim. A rushed note that omits work can give the carrier an opening. The fix is not to rewrite history. The fix is to gather the full record and explain gaps with care.
Spanish-speaking workers have the same rights as every other employee. Immigration status does not erase workers' comp coverage. Interpreter help should be requested for hearings, depositions, and medical-legal exams when needed. The firm keeps the focus on the injury, the job, and the benefits owed. For a Sherman Oaks denial review, call (661) 273-1780.
Local work routines also affect settlement value. A worker who cannot return to repeated lifting at a Ventura Boulevard restaurant may need different work restrictions than a worker who can sit and stand as needed in an office. A driver making short deliveries through canyon streets may have trouble with sitting, twisting, and getting in and out of a vehicle. A medical assistant may be unable to help patients transfer safely. These are not abstract limits. They affect temporary disability, permanent disability, modified work, and whether the employer can offer a real return to work.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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