A police officer who pulls a child from a fatal crash. A nurse who works through a ventilator shortage during a public health crisis. A bank teller who survives an armed robbery. A construction worker who watches a co-worker fall four stories. The physical injuries from these moments may heal in weeks. The psychological injuries often do not. Workers in these positions sometimes assume that workers’ comp only pays for what shows up on an X-ray, and that mental health claims are off the table. The Law Offices of Anthony Carbone has handled psychological injury claims throughout New Jersey for over 35 years, and the picture is more open than most workers expect, with specific rules that decide which cases the system pays and which ones it sends away.
The Two Categories That Matter
New Jersey workers’ compensation law treats mental health claims under the same general framework as physical injuries, but with a layer of additional analysis that depends on how the injury arose. Cases generally fall into one of three categories that lawyers and the Division of Workers’ Compensation use to organize the analysis.
A physical-mental claim involves a psychological condition that develops out of a physical injury. A worker who suffered a serious back injury and developed depression during a long, painful recovery period falls into this category. These claims are generally compensable when the medical evidence supports the connection between the physical injury and the psychological condition.
A mental-physical claim involves physical symptoms that develop from psychological stress at work. A worker whose chronic workplace stress produced a heart attack or a stroke falls here. New Jersey courts have allowed recovery in these cases when the stress can be shown to be the substantial contributing cause of the physical condition.
A mental-mental claim involves a purely psychological injury caused by a psychological event or condition at work. PTSD from a traumatic incident, anxiety disorder from workplace harassment, or depression from sustained psychological pressure all fall into this category. These cases are compensable in New Jersey, but they carry the highest evidentiary burden.
What the Mental-Mental Standard Actually Requires
The leading case on mental-mental claims in New Jersey is Goyden v. State Judiciary, decided in the early 1990s. The court held that purely psychological injuries from purely psychological causes are compensable, but only when the working conditions are objectively stressful or traumatic, peculiar to the particular workplace, and a material contributing cause of the psychological injury.
That formulation matters in practice. A claim based on a single traumatic event, including witnessing a death, surviving an assault, or being held at gunpoint, generally meets the standard without difficulty. A claim based on accumulated workplace stress is harder. The stress has to be objectively measurable as more than the ordinary pressures of the job. A worker who simply found the workload heavy, the supervisors demanding, or the office politics unpleasant is unlikely to recover. A worker whose specific working conditions exposed them to repeated traumatic incidents, escalating threats, or extreme circumstances has a real claim.
The “peculiar to the workplace” element is the part that does the most work. Stress that a reasonable person would experience in any job, or stress tied to ordinary employment frictions, generally does not qualify. Stress that arises from circumstances specific to the worker’s particular role, such as the trauma exposure that comes with first-responder work, the volatility that comes with certain healthcare settings, or the threat exposure in particular financial or retail positions, often does.
First Responders and the Statutory Update
The mental-mental analysis was supplemented in 2019 by P.L. 2019, c. 157, which created a presumption of compensability for PTSD and acute stress disorder in certain public safety workers exposed to qualifying events. Police officers, firefighters, EMS personnel, and certain corrections officers who develop PTSD after a qualifying critical incident now enter the workers’ comp system with a legal presumption working in their favor.
The qualifying events are spelled out in the statute and include responding to a death of a child, witnessing serious injury or death, and exposure to incidents involving multiple casualties or significant violence. A first responder diagnosed with PTSD after a qualifying event does not have to meet the Goyden standard from the ground up. The presumption shifts the burden to the carrier to prove the condition was not work-related.
Workers outside these public safety categories continue to operate under the Goyden framework, but the statutory development has shaped how courts approach mental health claims more broadly. Cases that once might have been viewed skeptically now move forward more often when the medical and factual record supports them.
The Medical and Documentation Demands
A psychological injury claim depends heavily on the treatment record. The diagnosis has to come from a qualified mental health professional, with documentation of the symptoms, the diagnostic criteria met under the current DSM, and the connection to the workplace exposure. A worker who tried to handle the symptoms privately, or who saw a primary care physician for medication without a formal psychiatric or psychological evaluation, often has gaps in the record that the defense will exploit.
The treating clinician’s opinion on causation is the foundation. The defense will retain its own expert, and the case often becomes a contest between two qualified opinions on whether the work was a material contributing cause. Workers who present the case with a treating clinician who has documented the connection over time, rather than one who issued a single causation letter at the request of counsel, are usually in a stronger position.
Pre-existing mental health history is not a bar to recovery, but it has to be addressed directly. A worker with prior anxiety treatment whose condition was exacerbated by a workplace event has a compensable claim under aggravation theory. The medical record has to support the worsening, with clear documentation of the baseline before the exposure and the changes after.
How The Law Offices of Anthony Carbone Approaches These Claims
The early steps in a psychological injury claim include identifying the appropriate treating clinician, documenting the workplace events with as much specificity as possible, and filing the claim petition through the Division of Workers’ Compensation within the statutory window. Notice and statute of limitations rules apply, and a worker who delays past the deadlines can lose an otherwise valid claim regardless of the strength of the underlying facts.
For first responders covered by the 2019 statute, the work involves documenting the qualifying event, securing a PTSD diagnosis from a qualified provider, and asserting the presumption in the claim petition. For other workers, the work involves building the Goyden case from the ground up, with detailed evidence of the working conditions and the medical connection.
The Next Step If You Are Dealing With a Workplace Mental Health Injury
A worker in Jersey City, Newark, Hoboken, Bayonne, or anywhere else in New Jersey suffering from PTSD, depression, anxiety, or other psychological conditions tied to the job should not assume the workers’ comp system has nothing to offer. The Law Offices of Anthony Carbone offers a free consultation to walk through the available categories, the medical record, and the realistic path forward. Reach out before the notice deadlines run and before the workplace evidence becomes harder to gather.
