More workers from select occupations will be provided with easier access to workers’ compensation for psychological injuries caused by work-related trauma.
Effective Monday, June 10, 2024, 11 new occupations added to the mental-health presumption under the Workers Compensation Act include community-integration specialists, coroners, harm-reduction workers, parole officers, probation officers, respiratory therapists, shelter workers, social workers, transition house workers, victim service workers and withdrawal-management workers. These join occupations, such as first responders, already covered under the presumption.
The mental-health presumption fast tracks the claims process with WorkSafeBC and provides workers faster access to treatment and workers’ compensation benefits once a formal diagnosis of the psychological injury has been made. These changes will help ensure the workers who are counted on to care for others also receive the support they need.
Workers whose occupations are not covered by the presumption can still submit a claim with WorkSafeBC if they believe their mental-health illness or injury is caused by work-related factors.
The Workers Compensation Act allows the addition of other occupations to the existing presumption as new evidence becomes available. Several factors are considered when adding an occupation to the presumption, such as the nature of the work, potential for exposure to traumatic events, and information and data about psychological injuries.
The ministry reviews and considers all submissions it receives for expanding the presumption to additional occupations.
Quick Facts:
- In 2018, government amended the Workers’ Compensation Act to establish a new mental-health presumption for municipal and federal firefighters, police, paramedics, sheriffs and correctional officers.
- In 2019, additional occupations were added, including emergency response dispatchers, nurses, publicly funded health-care assistants, as well as forest firefighters, fire investigators and firefighters working for Indigenous organizations.
A backgrounder follows.