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Texas Workers Health is here to help YOU.
In Texas, Workers' Compensation (also known as workers' comp or workman's comp) can often seem confusing. You may be unclear on what your rights are under workers' comp in Texas. You may be in pain from work related injuries.
The Texas Workers Comp Help Line will provide you with the information you need to make the right choices. With the information you find here, we help you get:
Texas Workers Comp lets you, the injured worker get medical benefits, as well as income benefits. You deserve treatment for ALL of your injuries, not just the injuries the insurance company wants to accept.
An experienced workers comp attorney can stop the carrier and the employer from harassing you into returning to work before your doctor says that you are ready to return to work. In addition, you need to make certain you have a good doctor working for your interests, not a doctor working for the insurance company's interests.
Texas worker's compensation entitles you to workers' comp medical benefits and income benefits if you have been injured at your job. If you have experienced an injury while at work, lost time or lost wages from your job call us now in the San Antonio Area at (800) 819-2006 or in the Area at , or contact us online.
Workers' compensation denied? How to successfully appeal your case
Posted on Monday March 10, 2025
They can help you file a workers’ compensation claim or appeal a denied claim. Visit online or call 800-862-1260 to schedule a free consultation. This article is educational in nature and should ...
Texas Workers' Comp Commissioner Resigns | The Texas Tribune
Posted on Monday June 09, 2014
Texas Workers' Compensation Commissioner Rod Bordelon speaks to Texas Tribune reporter Elise Hu in 2010. ... a San Antonio lawyer who represents workers in disputes with insurance companies, ...
Texas and workers compensation - San Antonio Business Journal
Posted on Monday March 24, 2014
The cost per claim for medical treatment for injured Texas workers increased 8 percent in 2011 — the latest year measured in a new study by the Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI).