A picker at a Carteret distribution center wakes up one morning unable to grip a coffee mug. A packer at a Secaucus warehouse develops shoulder pain that gets worse every shift until raising her arm overhead is no longer possible. A loader at a Newark facility starts feeling lower back spasms that stop him from sleeping more than three hours at a time. None of them can point to a single moment when something went wrong. The Law Offices of Anthony Carbone has handled these claims throughout New Jersey for over 35 years, and the absence of a discrete accident is one of the biggest reasons workers walk away from valid cases that the system would have paid if presented correctly.
How New Jersey Treats Occupational Disease Claims
The New Jersey Workers’ Compensation Act covers more than the dramatic moment of a fall or a crush injury. The statute, at N.J.S.A. 34:15-31 and the related provisions, recognizes occupational disease as a compensable category. An occupational disease is one that arises out of and in the course of employment due to causes characteristic of, or peculiar to, the work performed. Repetitive stress injuries fall squarely inside that definition.
A carpal tunnel syndrome claim from a worker who scanned 1,500 packages a shift for three years is a workers’ comp claim. A rotator cuff tear in a worker who lifted boxes from waist height to overhead shelving for the same duration is a workers’ comp claim. A lumbar disc injury in a worker who twisted while loading pallets thousands of times across years of employment is a workers’ comp claim. The absence of a single trigger event does not defeat the case. It just changes how the case has to be built.
The benefits available are the same as any other workers’ comp claim. Authorized medical treatment under N.J.S.A. 34:15-15. Temporary disability at 70 percent of the average weekly wage. Permanent partial disability awards calculated under the schedule when the injury reaches maximum medical improvement.
The Notice Problem That Catches Most Workers
A traditional workplace accident has a clear date. A repetitive stress injury does not. New Jersey’s workers’ comp statute requires notice to the employer within 90 days of the worker knowing, or having reason to know, that the condition is work-related. The clock does not start on the day the symptoms began. It starts on the day the worker had enough information to connect the symptoms to the job.
That distinction protects workers, but it also creates a documentation requirement. The medical record has to reflect, at some point, a treating physician’s opinion that the condition is work-related. A worker who saw three doctors over two years for shoulder pain, none of whom asked about job duties, and then finally got a referral to an occupational medicine specialist who made the connection, often has a better notice posture than they realize. The day of the occupational medicine visit, not the day the pain began, is what the analysis turns on.
A worker who suspected the connection but waited too long to report can run into trouble. A worker who reported promptly after a doctor identified the cause is in a strong position even when the symptoms had been building for years.
The Evidence That Actually Wins These Cases
A repetitive stress claim depends on the medical record more heavily than a traditional injury claim. The defense in these cases will argue that the condition is degenerative, age-related, or caused by activities outside of work, including hobbies, prior employment, or simple aging. Building the case requires direct evidence linking the work to the injury.
The first piece is a job description that captures the actual demands. Most warehouse positions have generic written descriptions that do not reflect the real workload. Pulling productivity records, scan rates, lift counts, and shift schedules gives a more accurate picture. A picker required to scan an item every 10 seconds across a 10-hour shift is performing 3,600 cycles a day. A worker handling boxes averaging 35 pounds at a rate of 200 lifts an hour is moving seven tons over the course of a shift. Numbers like that, on the record, are what move a case from theoretical to concrete.
The second piece is medical causation. The treating physician’s opinion that the condition is work-related, supported by reasoning that addresses the specific job demands, is the foundation. An independent medical examination through the workers’ comp carrier will likely come back with a competing opinion. The case is often won or lost on the strength of the treating physician’s analysis and the worker’s ability to bring in an additional expert if needed.
The third piece is the worker’s own history. A clean medical record before the symptoms began, no history of the same body part being treated, and no significant outside activities that could explain the condition all strengthen the causation argument. A worker with prior issues is not barred from recovery, but the analysis becomes more nuanced and the documentation has to address the prior history directly.
The Aggravation and Acceleration Theories
Even workers with pre-existing conditions can recover under New Jersey workers’ comp law when the work activities aggravated or accelerated the underlying condition. A worker with mild osteoarthritis whose lifting duties pushed the arthritis into a disabling state has a compensable claim. A worker with a prior shoulder strain whose ongoing work made it permanent has a compensable claim. The aggravation does not have to be the sole cause. It only has to be a material contributing cause, which is a more forgiving standard than many workers assume.
This piece matters because the defense will lean heavily on prior records. A claim built around aggravation theory, with medical opinions specifically addressing the worsening attributable to work, can survive defense efforts that would defeat a claim positioned solely as a new injury.
How The Law Offices of Anthony Carbone Approaches These Cases
The first move in a repetitive stress case is the medical workup. Getting the worker in front of a physician who understands occupational medicine and will document the work connection in detail. The second is the workplace evidence, including productivity records, supervisor statements, and ergonomic assessments where available. The third is the formal claim filing through the Division of Workers’ Compensation, with the notice and the supporting documentation lined up before the carrier mounts its defense.
A claim filed without medical causation language, or filed too late under the notice rule, becomes much harder to recover. A claim filed correctly, with the right evidence assembled, often produces meaningful permanent partial disability awards that recognize the long-term impact on the worker’s career.
The Next Step If You Have a Repetitive Stress Injury
A worker in Jersey City, Newark, Carteret, Secaucus, Edison, or anywhere across New Jersey who has developed a repetitive stress injury from warehouse, distribution, or similar work should not write off the claim because there was no single accident. The Law Offices of Anthony Carbone offers a free consultation to walk through the medical record, the notice timeline, and the realistic value of the claim. Reach out before the deadlines run and before the workplace records become harder to obtain.



