Serving Phoenix & Mesa, AZ

Workers Compensation Doctor in Phoenix & Mesa, AZ

  • Board-Certified physician, not an urgent care clinic
  • Same-day and next-day appointments available
  • Complete ICA documentation and employer coordination
  • Mesa walk-ins welcome — Phoenix by appointment
A doctor in a white coat discusses paperwork with a man in work clothes at a desk in a well-lit office.

Injured at Work in Arizona?
Here Is What Happens Next.

A workplace injury creates two immediate problems at once: you are in pain and you are worried about what it is going to cost you.

I want to address the second problem right away so you can focus entirely on the first.

Under Arizona law, your employer is required to provide all reasonably necessary medical care for accepted work injuries, with no copays, no deductibles, and no out-of-pocket costs to you.

Workers’ compensation is paid for by your employer’s insurance carrier, not by you.

At The Accident Doctors, I am certified to treat Arizona workers’ compensation patients and I am familiar with the Industrial Commission of Arizona requirements for documentation, treatment authorization, and Independent Medical Examinations.

We handle all of that coordination directly with your employer and their insurance carrier.

You show up. We handle the rest.

Our Mesa clinic accepts walk-in work injury patients during business hours.
Phoenix sees patients by appointment. Call or text (602) 632-0000.

How Workers’ Compensation Medical Care
Works in Arizona Step by Step

Step 1: Report the Injury to Your Employer Immediately

Arizona law requires you to report your work injury to your employer as soon as possible. Do not wait. Delayed reporting can complicate your claim and give the insurance carrier reason to question whether the injury happened at work. After you report, your employer notifies their workers’ compensation insurance carrier and files an Employer’s Report of Injury. Here is a handbook.

Step 2: Get Medical Care. You Have More Choice Than You Think

Most workers assume they are required to use whatever doctor or urgent care clinic their employer sends them to. That is only partially true. Your employer can direct you to a specific provider for the first visit. After that first visit, in most Arizona cases you have the right to choose your own treating physician — as long as you make that choice before going back to the employer’s provider a second time.

This matters. If you return to the employer’s clinic for a second visit, that provider becomes your “attending physician” for the entire claim, which makes switching later significantly more complicated.

At The Accident Doctors, we see patients as their chosen treating physician after that first visit — or as their first visit when employers direct patients to us directly.

Step 3: We File the Required Documentation With the ICA and Carrier

Your treating physician files a Worker’s and Physician’s Report of Injury with the Industrial Commission of Arizona and your employer’s insurance carrier. This formally starts your claim. Our clinic handles this paperwork as part of your care; you do not manage this yourself.

Step 4: Treatment Begins, & Insurance Pays the Bills Directly

Once your claim is accepted, your employer’s workers’ comp carrier pays all covered treatment bills directly to our clinic. You receive care, physical exams, diagnostic imaging, injections, referrals to physical therapists and chiropractors, without paying anything out of pocket.

For higher-level treatments, such as surgery or other advanced procedures, your treating physician submits a Medical Treatment Preauthorization Form to the insurance carrier with supporting documentation. Under ICA rules, the carrier must respond within 7 business days, approving, partially approving, or denying the request with written reasons.

Step 5: We Coordinate Your Documentation Through the Entire Claim

Workers’ compensation cases are documentation-heavy. Diagnosis, causation, work status, light duty restrictions, and maximum medical improvement (MMI) determinations all require consistent, accurate medical records from your treating physician. Gaps or inconsistencies in documentation are one of the primary ways insurance carriers reduce or deny claims.

Dr. Nguyen produces thorough, ICA-compliant medical records throughout your treatment. We also communicate directly with workers’ comp attorneys when legal representation is involved in your case.

What the Industrial Commission of Arizona Does
And Why It Matters for Your Claim

The Industrial Commission of Arizona (ICA) is the state agency that oversees all workers’ compensation claims in Arizona. The ICA does not insure you; your employer’s carrier does that, but the ICA sets the rules, monitors how carriers handle claims, and runs the hearing process when disputes arise.

If your employer’s insurance carrier denies your claim, delays treatment, or cuts off benefits, you have the right to file a Request for Hearing with the ICA. An administrative law judge then reviews the evidence and issues a decision.

The ICA also oversees Independent Medical Examinations (IMEs), exams ordered by the insurance carrier to get a second medical opinion on your injury, treatment needs, or ability to return to work. If you are asked to attend an IME, the carrier must pay your travel expenses. If you believe the request is unfair or abusive, you can file a Motion for Protective Order with the ICA.

Understanding that the ICA exists and what it does is important. Most injured workers do not know they have appeal rights until it is too late to use them.

Why Your Choice of Doctor Affects Your Entire Claim

Most workers do not realize that the physician they choose as their treating doctor makes a significant difference in how their claim unfolds.

Here is why.

Your treating physician drives every major decision in your workers’ comp case: whether your condition is work-related, whether more treatment is needed, when you have reached maximum medical improvement, and whether you have permanent impairment.

Insurance carriers base authorization decisions, claim closures, and settlement calculations heavily on the treating physician’s documented opinions.

A Board-Certified Internal Medicine physician with workers’ compensation experience produces documentation that carries more weight with insurance carriers and ICA administrative judges than care from an urgent care provider who handles a few comp cases per month.

Dr. Nguyen is certified to treat Arizona workers’ compensation patients and understands exactly what the documentation needs to say, and why.

Workers We Treat and Industries We Serve in Maricopa County

The Phoenix metro area is one of the fastest-growing construction and logistics markets in the country, and workplace injuries here reflect that.

We regularly treat workers from the construction, warehouse, landscaping, restaurant, retail, healthcare, and transportation industries across Maricopa County.

Common work injury cases we see at our Mesa and Phoenix clinics include:

  • Construction site falls, tool injuries, and lifting accidents
  • Warehouse and logistics repetitive stress and overexertion injuries
  • Restaurant and hospitality slip and fall incidents
  • Delivery driver and fleet vehicle accidents
  • Landscaping injuries from equipment and heat exposure
  • Healthcare worker lifting and repetitive motion injuries

If you were injured on the job anywhere in the East Valley, West Valley, or central Phoenix area, call or text (602) 632-0000. We will get you in the same day or next day in most cases.

Work Injury FAQs
Your Questions Answered

No. Arizona law requires your employer to cover all reasonably necessary medical care for accepted work injuries with no copays, no deductibles, and no upfront costs to you. Workers’ compensation premiums are paid entirely by your employer; it is illegal under Arizona law for employers to deduct comp premiums from your wages. At The Accident Doctors, you pay $0 for your evaluation and treatment when your case is covered by workers’ comp. Call (602) 632-0000 to confirm your situation before your first visit.

This is a legitimate concern. If your claim is denied after you have begun treatment, the unpaid bills become a potential issue depending on the circumstances. This is one reason why seeing a physician who understands workers’ comp documentation from the very first visit matters; accurate, consistent medical records from day one give you the strongest foundation if a denial is disputed. The carrier has approximately 21 days from receipt of your injury report to accept or deny the claim. If denied, you have the right to file a Request for Hearing with the Industrial Commission of Arizona.

No. For accepted work injuries, treatment is billed to your employer’s workers’ compensation carrier, not your personal health insurance. The two systems are kept separate. If your workers’ comp claim is disputed and treatment bills are temporarily unresolved, there are legal mechanisms to address that, which is another reason to involve an attorney early if your employer is pushing back on your claim.

For the first visit only, your employer can direct you to a specific provider or clinic. After that first visit, most Arizona workers have the right to choose their own treating physician, as long as they make that choice before returning to the employer’s provider a second time. If you go back to the employer’s clinic for a second visit, that provider typically becomes your attending physician for the entire claim. At The Accident Doctors, we regularly see patients exercising their right to choose their own doctor after their first employer-directed visit. Call us at (602) 632-0000, and we will walk through your situation.

Switching doctors mid-claim is more complex than the initial choice, but it is possible in certain circumstances, particularly when care has been unreasonable or the doctor-patient relationship has broken down. This typically requires following specific legal and procedural steps. If you are in this situation, we recommend speaking with a workers’ compensation attorney before making any changes, as switching without following the correct process can create problems for your claim.

Urgent care clinics handle high volumes of basic injuries and typically do not specialize in workers’ compensation documentation, ICA requirements, or the long-term treatment management that serious work injuries require. Dr. Nguyen is Board-Certified in Internal Medicine, certified as an Arizona workers’ compensation treating physician, and experienced with the specific documentation requirements that affect claim outcomes. We treat construction accidents, repetitive stress injuries, lifting injuries, slip-and-fall injuries, and occupational exposure cases throughout Maricopa County, and we handle all coordination with your employer, carrier, and attorney directly.

Your treating physician recommends your care. For routine treatment, the carrier generally covers it without prior approval. For higher-level procedures, surgery, advanced imaging, and specialized injections, your doctor submits a Medical Treatment Preauthorization Form to the carrier with supporting medical documentation. Under ICA rules, the carrier must respond within 7 business days. If they deny the request, they must provide written reasons, and you have the right to challenge that denial through ICA reconsideration and hearing processes.

An IME is a one-time exam ordered by your employer’s insurance carrier, not your doctor, to get an independent medical opinion on your injury, treatment needs, or work status. Carriers use IME opinions to decide whether to continue, reduce, or end your treatment and benefits. In most cases, you are required to attend if the carrier requests it. However, the carrier must pay your travel expenses, and if you believe the request is abusive or unfair, you can file a Motion for Protective Order with the ICA so an administrative law judge can decide whether you must attend. If you receive an IME request, contact your treating physician and attorney before the appointment.

After your employer files the injury report with their insurance carrier and the ICA, the carrier generally has approximately 21 days to accept or deny the claim. During that window, most carriers authorize initial medical care while the investigation is ongoing. If the claim is denied, you have the right to file a Request for Hearing with the ICA. Most straightforward claims resolve within 12 to 18 months, though serious or disputed cases involving surgery, permanent impairment, or contested causation can take longer.

Arizona is an at-will employment state, but retaliation against an employee for asserting workers’ compensation rights can create separate legal issues for the employer. If you believe you are being retaliated against, reduced hours, reassignment, or termination after filing a work injury claim, speak with a workers’ compensation attorney promptly. This is a separate legal matter from your medical claim, but the two can affect each other depending on timing and circumstances.

We treat a broad range of workplace injuries throughout Maricopa County, including construction accidents, lifting and overexertion injuries, repetitive stress and cumulative trauma injuries, slip-and-fall injuries, vehicle accidents on the job, tool and equipment injuries, and occupational exposure incidents. We serve workers in Mesa, Phoenix, Scottsdale, Tempe, Chandler, and Gilbert. Our Mesa clinic accepts walk-in work-injury patients during business hours, Monday through Friday, 9am to 5pm. Call or text (602) 632-0000 for same-day or next-day appointments.

Get Seen Today.
Your Employer’s Insurance Pays for Everything

Dr. Nguyen is certified to treat Arizona workers’ compensation patients at both our Mesa and Phoenix locations.
Documentation is handled correctly from your first visit, so your claim has the strongest possible foundation.

Mesa Clinic (walk-ins welcome): 1155 S Country Club Dr., Mesa, AZ 85210

Phoenix Clinic (by appointment): 4338 W Thomas Rd, #117, Phoenix, AZ 85031

Hours: Monday through Friday 9am to 5pm | Saturday and Sunday by appointment

What Patients Say About The Accident Doctors in Phoenix & Mesa

Contact Us Today

Give us a text or call:
(602) 632-0000

Business Hours
Mon – Fri: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Sat – Sun: Appointment Only

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Mesa Clinic

1155 S Country Club Dr.
Mesa, AZ 85210
(Northeast corner of Country Club and Southern)

Phoenix Clinic

4338 W Thomas Rd, #117
Phoenix, AZ 85031
(Northwest corner of Thomas and 43rd Avenue – inside the Family Practice office)