There’s a moment in every workers’ compensation claim where a human being becomes a file number. It happens almost imperceptibly – somewhere between the first report of injury and the assignment to an adjuster’s caseload. One minute, Maria is a shipping clerk who slipped on a wet floor and is scared about how she’s going to pay her rent while her ankle heals. The next, she’s Claim #WC-2026-047821, one of 150 open files competing for attention on an overworked adjuster’s desk.
I’ve spent decades in this industry, and we’ve seen this transformation happen many times. It’s not malicious. It’s not even intentional. It’s simply what happens when we build systems designed to process volume rather than serve people.
The workers’ compensation system has become remarkably efficient at processing claims. We’ve developed sophisticated algorithms for reserving, automated systems for bill review, and streamlined processes for everything from initial intake to settlement negotiations. From a purely operational standpoint, we’ve never been better at moving paper.
The problem is that injured workers aren’t paper.
When I wrote Thank You For Holding: Your Injury Is Important To Us, I wasn’t trying to indict the entire industry. I was trying to hold up a mirror. The title itself came from countless hours spent listening to injured workers describe their experiences with the system, the endless hold times, the form letters, the feeling of being processed rather than helped. That automated message we’ve all heard a thousand times; “Your call is important to us,” has become the unintentional motto of an industry that has forgotten how to demonstrate that importance through action.
Here’s what the data consistently shows us, and what common sense should have told us all along: when injured workers feel like they’re being treated as human beings rather than claim numbers, outcomes improve. Across the board.
Workers who feel heard and respected return to work faster. They’re less likely to hire attorneys. They report higher satisfaction with medical care. They’re more likely to comply with treatment protocols. Their claims close sooner and cost less.
This isn’t soft science or wishful thinking. This is what happens when you treat people like people.
The inverse is equally true. When injured workers feel ignored, dismissed, or processed, they dig in. They become adversarial. They seek legal representation not because they need it, but because they feel they need protection. What could have been a straightforward claim becomes a contested battleground, with costs multiplying at every turn.
We’ve created a system that often generates the very friction it then struggles to overcome.
For years now, we’ve been talking about the biopsychosocial model of injury and recovery. The concept is simple: a person’s recovery from a workplace injury isn’t determined solely by the physical nature of the injury itself. Psychological and social factors play enormous roles, stress, fear, financial anxiety, relationships with supervisors, perceptions of fairness.
An injured worker who believes their employer cares about them, who trusts that the system will treat them fairly, who feels supported rather than surveilled, that worker heals differently than one who feels abandoned, suspected, or processed.
We know this. The research is overwhelming. And yet our systems continue to be designed as though injuries happen to bodies rather than to people.
The good news is that restoring humanity to workers’ compensation doesn’t require burning down the existing system and starting over. Often, it requires remarkably small changes that yield disproportionate results.
A phone call instead of a form letter. Using someone’s name instead of their claim number. Asking “How are you doing?” before asking for documentation. Explaining the next steps rather than just processing them. Following up to ensure someone understood their benefits rather than assuming they did.
These aren’t revolutionary concepts. They’re basic human courtesies that have somehow become casualties of our drive for efficiency.
I’ve talked with adjusters who tell me they want to provide this kind of personal attention but feel crushed by caseload expectations. I’ve heard from managers who say they’d love to emphasize humanity but are measured solely on cycle times and closure rates. I’ve sat with executives who genuinely care about injured workers but have built organizations that inadvertently do the opposite. I’ve chatted with regulators that recognize the issue, but are saddled with legislative guidelines that were created with process in mind rather than outcomes.
The system didn’t become impersonal because bad people designed it. It became impersonal because we optimized for the wrong things.
This is why, for more than a decade now, I’ve been advocating for a shift in how we think about what we do. We don’t just compensate workers for their injuries. We help them recover; physically, financially, and psychologically – from events that have disrupted their lives.
The difference isn’t semantic. It’s foundational.
When our goal is compensation, we focus on processing the claim correctly and closing the file. When our goal is recovery, we focus on helping a human being return to wholeness. The processes may look similar on the surface, but the outcomes differ dramatically.
Workers’ Recovery isn’t a new program or a branded initiative. It’s a philosophy, a reminder that behind every claim number is a person with fears and hopes, a family depending on them, a life that has been disrupted by something they didn’t choose.
I’m not naive. I understand the pressures facing adjusters, employers, and carriers. I know that caseloads are high, margins are thin, and everyone is being asked to do more with less. Telling people to “just be more human” isn’t a strategy.
But I also know that the current approach isn’t working as well as it should. We’re spending enormous resources on litigation that wouldn’t exist if people felt heard. We’re extending claim durations through adversarial relationships that could have been prevented with early communication. We’re paying for problems we created.
Restoring the human element isn’t just the right thing to do, it’s the smart thing to do. It’s how we reduce friction, improve outcomes, and build a system that actually serves its intended purpose.
It starts with recognizing that every claim number has a name. Every file has a face. Every injured worker is someone who woke up that morning expecting to come home at the end of their shift the same way they left.
They deserve better than “Thank you for holding.”
Shameless plug: If this message resonates with you, I invite you to explore WorkersRecovery.com and join the conversation around workers’ compensation 2.0. We’re building something different – and we’d love to have you be part of it.