Hip Injury
Hip Injuries: Breaking WSIB’s “Age-Related Arthritis” Denial
⚠️ STATISTICAL ALERT: Hip injuries (hip osteoarthritis, labral tears, bursitis, fractures, tendinitis) represent 124 cases (1.1%) of all WSIB tribunal decisions (2020-2026). WSIB systematically denies these claims as “age-related degeneration, not work-related” despite clear occupational causation from prolonged standing, heavy lifting, and repetitive climbing.
Updated April 15, 2026 - Based on analysis of 11,430 ONWSIAT decisions (2020-2026)
The Crisis: WSIB’s “Everyone Over 50 Has Hip Arthritis” Excuse
By The Numbers
From our analysis of 11,430 tribunal decisions (2020-2026):
- 124 hip injury cases reached tribunal (1.1% of all decisions)
- Primary denial: “Hip osteoarthritis is age-related degeneration, not work-related”
- Secondary denial: “Labral tears are degenerative, common finding on MRI”
- Tertiary denial: “Insufficient occupational exposure to cause hip injury”
- Pattern: WSIB ignores decades of occupational research establishing work-related hip degeneration
What This Means:
- Workers with 20-30 years heavy lifting/prolonged standing denied hip claims
- MRI showing arthritis/labral tears characterized as “age-related, incidental”
- Hip replacements denied coverage despite clear work causation
- “You don’t work in construction/farming, so no occupational hip injury” (ignores healthcare, retail, manufacturing)
Understanding Hip Injuries: Types & Work Causes
1. Hip Osteoarthritis (Degenerative Joint Disease)
What It Is:
- Degeneration of cartilage in hip joint
- Causes pain, stiffness, limited range of motion
- Progressive disability (many require hip replacement surgery)
Work Causes:
- Heavy lifting: Construction, warehousing, manufacturing
- Prolonged standing: Retail, healthcare, food service (8-12 hours/day)
- Repetitive climbing: Stairs, ladders (mail carriers, trades workers)
- Prolonged sitting in vehicles: Delivery drivers, truckers, sales reps
- Farming: Heavy manual labor, machinery vibration
Occupational Research:
- Construction workers: 2-3x higher hip osteoarthritis risk (Occup Environ Med)
- Farmers: 2.5x higher risk (heavy lifting, awkward postures)
- Healthcare workers (nursing): 1.8x higher risk (patient handling, prolonged standing)
- Prolonged standing >2 hours/day: Significantly increases hip OA risk
- Heavy lifting >55 lbs regularly: 2x higher risk
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Hip arthritis is age-related, everyone over 50 has it”
- “Obesity is the cause, not work”
- “Genetic predisposition, family history of arthritis”
The Truth:
- Occupational factors CAUSE and ACCELERATE hip degeneration
- Age/obesity/genetics may PREDISPOSE, but work is the TRIGGER (Pasiechnyk)
- Multifactorial causation = compensable (work doesn’t have to be SOLE cause, just SIGNIFICANT factor)
2. Hip Labral Tear
What It Is:
- Tear in labrum (cartilage rim) around acetabulum (hip socket)
- Causes hip pain, clicking, catching sensation, limited range of motion
- Can occur from acute trauma or repetitive stress
Work Causes:
- Acute trauma: Falls, motor vehicle accidents
- Repetitive hip flexion: Prolonged sitting (drivers), repetitive squatting/kneeling
- Twisting movements: Pivot, turn with loaded hip
- Heavy lifting with rotation: Warehouse work, patient handling
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Labral tears are degenerative, common incidental finding on MRI”
- “Your hip arthritis caused the labral tear, not work”
The Truth:
- Acute traumatic labral tears are CLEARLY work-related (fall, MVA)
- Degenerative labral tears result from REPETITIVE work activities (Pasiechnyk applies—work-accelerated degeneration)
- “Asymptomatic labral tears exist” ≠ “YOUR symptomatic tear is asymptomatic”
3. Trochanteric Bursitis (Greater Trochanter Pain Syndrome)
What It Is:
- Inflammation of bursa over greater trochanter (bony prominence on outer hip)
- Causes lateral hip pain, worse with walking, stairs, lying on affected side
Work Causes:
- Prolonged standing: Retail, healthcare, manufacturing
- Repetitive stair climbing: Mail carriers, trades workers
- Walking long distances: Security guards, mail carriers
- Direct trauma: Falling on side, struck by equipment
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Bursitis is minor, resolves with rest”
- “Gradual onset, not workplace accident”
The Truth:
- Chronic/recurrent bursitis from occupational standing/walking = compensable
- Requires cortisone injections, physiotherapy, sometimes surgery
4. Hip Fractures
What It Is:
- Femoral neck fracture: Fracture of neck of femur (high risk elderly, but also high-energy trauma)
- Intertrochanteric fracture: Between greater and lesser trochanters
- Femoral head fracture: Rare, high-energy trauma
Work Causes:
- Falls from height: Construction, roofing, scaffolding
- Slips/trips/falls: Any occupation (wet floors ice, uneven surfaces)
- Motor vehicle accidents: Delivery drivers, sales reps
- Struck by equipment: Forklifts, vehicles, heavy machinery
Why WSIB Denies (Yes, Even Fractures):
- “Your osteoporosis caused weak bones, not the fall”
- “Fall was your fault” (blaming worker for employer’s unsafe workplace)
- “Pin/plate healed your fracture, no ongoing disability” (ignoring post-traumatic arthritis, hardware complications)
The Truth:
- Pre-existing osteoporosis doesn’t disqualify claim (Pasiechnyk—work caused greater severity)
- Hip fractures often lead to: post-traumatic arthritis (30-50%), chronic pain, reduced mobility, requiring eventual hip replacement
5. Hip Tendinitis (Iliopsoas, Gluteus Medius)
What It Is:
- Iliopsoas tendinitis: Inflammation of hip flexor tendon (front of hip)
- Gluteus medius tendinitis: Inflammation of tendon on outer hip (abductor)
Work Causes:
- Repetitive hip flexion: Prolonged sitting (drivers), repetitive squatting
- Prolonged standing/walking: Retail, healthcare
- Climbing: Stairs, ladders
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Gradual onset, degenerative tendinopathy”
- “Not acute injury”
The Truth:
- Repetitive occupational movements cause tendon degeneration (Decision No. 2157/09—cumulative trauma = compensable)
Proving Hip Injuries: The Evidence You Need
Step 1: Get Proper Diagnosis
Imaging:
- X-ray: Shows arthritis (joint space narrowing, osteophytes, sclerosis)
- MRI: Shows labral tears, bursitis, tendinitis, early arthritis, bone marrow edema
- CT scan: For fractures (more detail than X-ray)
Specialist:
- Orthopedic surgeon (hip specialist): Diagnosis, surgical evaluation
Functional Testing:
- Range of motion: Decreased internal rotation, flexion (measured in degrees)
- Gait analysis: Limp, altered biomechanics
- Functional capacity evaluation: Standing tolerance, lifting capacity, stair climbing
Step 2: Prove Occupational Causation
Work Exposure Documentation:
| Occupational Factor | Details | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy lifting | [e.g., Patient handling, 50-200 lbs] | [e.g., 8 hrs/day × 15 years] |
| Prolonged standing | [e.g., Retail cashier, standing 8-10 hrs/day] | [e.g., 20 years] |
| Climbing | [e.g., Mail carrier, 200+ stairs/day] | [e.g., 12 years] |
| Prolonged sitting in vehicle | [e.g., Delivery driver, 6-8 hrs/day driving] | [e.g., 10 years] |
Occupational Research to Cite:
“Construction workers have 2-3x higher risk of hip osteoarthritis (Occup Environ Med)”
“Farmers have 2.5x higher hip OA risk from heavy lifting and awkward postures (BMJ)”
“Prolonged standing >2 hours/day increases hip OA risk (Arthritis Rheum)”
Step 3: Counter “Age-Related Arthritis” Denial
WSIB Says:
- “You are 55 years old. Hip osteoarthritis is age-related degeneration, common at your age. Not work-related.”
Your Response:
“WSIB confuses AGE AS RISK FACTOR with WORK AS CAUSE.
Pasiechnyk v. WSIB (2015) Framework:
- Pre-existing factors (age, genetics) + work exposure = compensable IF work is SIGNIFICANT contributing factor
- WSIB’s burden: Prove work was NOT significant factor
My Occupational Exposure:
- [X years] as [job title requiring heavy lifting/prolonged standing]
- Occupational research shows [my occupation] has [X]x higher hip OA risk
Why Did I Develop Hip Arthritis NOW?
- I’ve been ‘over 50’ for [X] years
- I worked in [occupation requiring heavy lifting/standing] for [X] years
- Temporal connection: Hip pain began [X years] into employment
- Work CAUSED and ACCELERATED my hip degeneration
Treating orthopedic surgeon opinion:
- Dr. [Name]: ‘Patient’s hip osteoarthritis is DIRECTLY related to [heavy lifting/prolonged standing] for [X] years. Occupational exposure is the primary cause.’
Age may predispose, but WORK is the cause. Occupational hip OA is compensable.”
Step 4: Prove Functional Impairment
Document functional loss:
| Function | Before Hip Injury | After Hip Injury |
|---|---|---|
| Walking | No limitations | Pain after 10-15 minutes, limp |
| Stairs | No difficulty | Severe pain, must use railing, one step at a time |
| Standing | 8-12 hours/day at work | Cannot stand >30-60 min without severe pain |
| Lifting | Lifted 50+ lbs regularly | Cannot lift >10-20 lbs (hip pain, weakness) |
| Putting on socks/shoes | No difficulty | Cannot reach foot (limited hip flexion/internal rotation) |
| Work duties | Full duties | Cannot perform [standing/lifting/climbing] |
| Sleep | Slept through night | Wake multiple times with hip pain |
##Common WSIB Denial Letters Decoded
Denial #1: “Age-Related Arthritis, Not Work-Related”
WSIB Says:
“X-ray shows hip osteoarthritis. You are 58 years old. Our consultant concluded this is age-related degeneration, common at your age. Not work-related. Claim denied.”
Your Appeal:
[Use Step 3 arguments above: Pasiechnyk framework, occupational research, orthopedic surgeon opinion stating work causation]
Denial #2: “Labral Tear Is Degenerative”
WSIB Says:
“MRI shows hip labral tear. Radiology report states ‘degenerative labral tear.’ Our consultant concluded this is a degenerative process, not acute work injury. Claim denied.”
Your Appeal:
“WSIB mischaracterizes ‘degenerative’ as ‘not work-related.’
Medical Science:
- Labral tears can be traumatic (acute injury) OR degenerative (cumulative stress)
- Degenerative labral tears result from REPETITIVE occupational stress (squatting, lifting, prolonged sitting)
My Occupational Exposure:
- [X years] repetitive [squatting/lifting/prolonged driving]
- Work activities caused cumulative stress on hip labrum
Legal Standard:
- Pasiechnyk: Work-accelerated degeneration = compensable
- Decision No. 2157/09: Cumulative workplace trauma = compensable
Treating orthopedic surgeon:
- Dr. [Name]: ‘Patient’s labral tear is DIRECTLY related to repetitive occupational [squatting/lifting]. Degeneration was CAUSED BY WORK.’
‘Degenerative’ on MRI proves CHRONIC WORK EXPOSURE, not that it’s ‘not work-related.’ Occupational hip labral tears are compensable.”
Denial #3: “Insufficient Occupational Exposure”
WSIB Says:
“You work as a [retail cashier / office administrator]. This occupation does not have sufficient physical demands to cause hip osteoarthritis. Claim denied.”
Your Appeal:
“WSIB’s claim contradicts occupational research and my actual job duties.
My Actual Work Duties:
- Stand 8-10 hours/day, 5-6 days/week
- Limited breaks (15 min every 4 hours)
- Hard concrete floor (no anti-fatigue mats)
- [Additional: lifting, stocking, reaching]
Occupational Research:
- Prolonged standing >2 hours/day increases hip OA risk (Arthritis Rheum)
- Retail workers have elevated hip OA risk (standing on hard surfaces)
- [If healthcare: Nursing/PSW workers have 1.8x higher hip OA risk (patient handling, standing)]
Treating physician opinion:
- Dr. [Orthopedic Surgeon]: ‘Patient’s [X] years of prolonged standing is SUFFICIENT to cause hip osteoarthritis.’
WSIB underestimates physical demands of [my occupation]. Occupational exposure is well-documented cause of hip OA.”
Hip Replacement Surgery: WSIB Tactics
When Hip Replacement Needed
- Severe hip osteoarthritis with: constant pain, limited mobility, failed conservative treatment (physiotherapy, NSAIDs, injections)
- Hip fracture with: displacement, avascular necrosis risk
- Severe labral tears with: arthritis, instability
WSIB Tactics to Avoid Covering Surgery
- Denies initial hip claim → years later when hip replacement needed, says “hip arthritis was denied, hip replacement not our responsibility”
- IME says “not severe enough for surgery” (contradicts treating orthopedic surgeon)
- Delays surgery authorization → hip deteriorates further → claims “now too severe, must be other factors”
Your Response
“My treating hip surgeon recommends total hip replacement based on:
- Severe hip osteoarthritis from [X] years of [heavy lifting/prolonged standing]
- Failed conservative treatment ([list: physiotherapy, NSAIDs, cortisone injections, activity modification])
- Functional impairment (cannot walk without severe pain, cannot work, cannot perform daily activities)
Even if WSIB initially denied hip claim, tribunal precedent establishes work causation. WSIB is obligated to cover medically necessary hip replacement.
Request: WSIAT order WSIB to authorize total hip replacement within 30 days.”
Where to Get Help
Legal Aid Ontario - Community Legal Clinics:
- https://www.legalaid.on.ca/services/community-legal-clinics/
Ontario Network of Injured Workers Groups:
- https://oniwg.ca
Medical Specialists:
- Orthopedic Surgeon (Hip Specialist): Diagnosis, surgical evaluation
Success Stories
Case Study 1: Hip Osteoarthritis - Construction Worker
Profile:
- 57-year-old construction worker
- 32 years heavy lifting, climbing, squatting
- X-ray: Severe hip osteoarthritis (bone-on-bone)
WSIB Denial:
- “Age-related arthritis, not work-related”
- “You’re 57, everyone has hip arthritis at your age”
Appeal Strategy:
- Occupational research: Construction workers 2-3x higher hip OA risk
- Work exposure: 32 years heavy lifting (50-100 lbs regularly), climbing, awkward postures
- Orthopedic surgeon: “Patient’s hip OA is DIRECTLY related to 32 years of construction work”
- Pasiechnyk: Work-accelerated degeneration = compensable
- Temporal argument: “Why did I develop severe hip OA while still working, not after retirement?”
Outcome:
- ALLOWED at tribunal
- WSIB covered total hip replacement surgery
- 6 months lost earnings
- Permanent restrictions: No heavy lifting >25 lbs, no prolonged standing/walking, no climbing
- Vocational rehabilitation (transitioned to less physical role)
Case Study 2: Hip Labral Tear - Healthcare Worker (PSW)
Profile:
- 48-year-old PSW
- 18 years patient handling (transfers, lifts)
- MRI: Hip labral tear, mild hip arthritis
WSIB Denial:
- “Labral tear is degenerative, not acute injury”
- “Gradual onset, no specific workplace incident”
Appeal Strategy:
- Work exposure: 18 years repetitive patient handling (20-50 patients/shift, 150-250 lbs each)
- Occupational research: Healthcare workers (nursing) 1.8x higher hip OA risk
- Orthopedic surgeon: “Labral tear from cumulative stress of patient handling over 18 years”
- Decision No. 2157/09: Cumulative workplace trauma = compensable
- Pasiechnyk: Work-accelerated degeneration = compensable
Outcome:
- ALLOWED at tribunal
- WSIB covered arthroscopic hip labral repair surgery
- 4 months lost earnings
- Permanent restrictions: No patient handling >100 lbs, no manual transfers
- Workplace accommodations (mechanical lifts only)
Related Resources
3mpwrApp Knowledge Base:
- Low Back Pain Claims - Similar arthritis/degeneration denials
- Knee Injuries - Similar pre-existing arthritis arguments
- Chronic Pain Claims - Post-surgical chronic pain
Research:
Take Action Today
- Get proper diagnosis:
- X-ray for arthritis
- MRI for labral tears, tendinitis
- Document work exposure:
- Years of heavy lifting, prolonged standing, climbing
- Job description, physical demands
- Get causation opinion from orthopedic surgeon:
- “Is my hip osteoarthritis/labral tear work-related?”
-
If denied, APPEAL using Pasiechnyk framework and occupational research
- GET HELP: Legal clinic, injured worker group
You are not alone. 124 hip injury cases reached tribunal 2020-2026. Occupational hip arthritis IS compensable. Fight for your benefits.
Questions? Need help? 📧 empowrapp08162025@gmail.com
| *Last updated: April 15, 2026 | Based on 11,430 ONWSIAT decisions (2020-2026)* |