Thank You For Holding.
Your Injury Is Important to Us.
A Lightheartedly Serious Look at Workers’ Compensation Reform
Overview
More than 7,000 Americans are newly injured on the job every single day. Each one enters a system that was designed over a century ago and has been legislatively tinkered with ever since — a system so layered with regulations, procedures, and competing interests that the human being at its center has become almost incidental to the process.
This book takes you on a guided tour of that system — from the moment of injury through the paperwork avalanche, the employer shuffle, the insurance labyrinth, the medical merry-go-round, and the often-clumsy return to work. Along the way, you’ll laugh at the absurdities, wince at the failures, and sit with the human cost of getting this wrong.
And then you’ll see the blueprint for getting it right.
Workers’ Recovery is not a call for revolution. It is a practical, achievable framework for transforming workers’ compensation from a system that manages claims into a system that restores lives. Written by Bob Wilson, a veteran of the workers’ compensation industry who has spent over a decade developing and promoting this reform vision, the book combines deep industry knowledge with strategic humor to make a serious case for change that busy professionals will actually read.
What’s Inside
Preface: Over a Decade in the Making — How a 2013 blog post and a 2015 academic debate with one of the industry’s most respected scholars became the foundation for a comprehensive reform vision.
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Chapter 1:
Welcome to the System
Meet the Rube Goldberg machine that is modern workers’ compensation, and learn why the system’s very name is sending the wrong signal. -
Chapter 2:
The Injury — It’s Not Just a Scratch
Why the moment of injury should be the beginning of a recovery process, not a claims process. -
Chapter 3:
Paperwork: The Second Injury
The forms, the jargon, and the bureaucratic avalanche that hits an injured worker before they’ve even started healing. -
Chapter 4:
The Employer Shuffle
What employers get right, what they get spectacularly wrong, and why the first five minutes are the most important clinical intervention available. -
Chapter 5:
Insurance: Where Hope Goes to Hold
Inside the insurance labyrinth, where often undertrained and overloaded adjusters have 1.92 minutes per claim per day to change someone’s life. -
Chapter 6:
The Medical Merry-Go-Round
The referral carousel, the authorization delays, and the IME process that has turned medical care into a bureaucratic obstacle course. -
Chapter 7:
The Waiting Game
The devastating effects of the delays, silences, and uncertainty that define the injured worker’s experience. -
Chapter 8:
Return to Work: The Plot Twist
Why “return to work” fails when it’s treated as an administrative mandate instead of the natural extension of return to function. -
Chapter 9:
The Human Cost Nobody Talks About
Depression, substance abuse, family breakdown, and the statistic the industry doesn’t track. The moral argument for reform.
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Chapter 10:
A Better Way
The complete Workers’ Recovery framework, assembled in one place. Recovery Specialists, Four Points of Communication, Return to Function, outcome-based medical networks, and the business case for doing better. -
Chapter 11:
The Injured Worker’s Responsibility
The most important person in the recovery process is the person recovering. An honest conversation about mindset, engagement, and the distinction between impairment and disability. -
Chapter 12:
Rise of the Machines
AI, automation, and the technological future — and whether these tools will be programmed for recovery or simply make the current system’s worst tendencies faster. -
Chapter 13:
A Call to Arms
Specific, actionable steps for employers, insurers, legislators, regulators, physicians, and injured workers. You are someone. This is the something.
Praise
“If you are a Bob Wilson fan you will greatly enjoy this book. If you haven’t heard his message, you will enjoy his sense of humor and his sharp insights into both the problems of “workers’ compensation” and the promise of Employee’s Recovery will be enlightening. They jump off every page.”
Abbie Hudgens, MPA, ARM, AIC
“This is an unmatchable, essential analysis of how the workers compensation claims process performs. Every major problem in current practice is examined. His Harvard Business School – quality critique starts with the fundamental goal: return injured workers to economic livelihood. Anyone who aims to improve the system must start by showing how their proposal corrects one or more of the problems Wilson dissects, usually with a dose of dark humor.”
Peter Rousmaniere
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