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Rehabilitation That Gets People Back to Work | RIW

Written by Linda Trafton, DPT | March 11, 2026 5:15:00 PM Z

When an injury keeps someone off the job for weeks or months, it doesn’t just affect their body. Work touches everything — identity, routine, finances, relationships, sense of purpose.

That’s why getting back to work after a serious injury can feel so overwhelming, even when the initial medical treatment is “done.” RIW’s Work Rehabilitation Program is designed for exactly that moment.

Instead of focusing only on pain or a specific body part, we look at the whole person and the real-world demands of their job. Our program blends physical rehabilitation, behavioral health, and return-to-work planning into one coordinated approach that helps injured workers move from “I don’t know if I can” to “I know I can, and I have a plan.”

The program is more than just exercising. It brings together:

  • Physical therapy to build strength, endurance, mobility, and confidence in movement.
  • Occupational Therapy for work simulation and functional restoration to practice the exact tasks a worker needs to do on the job — lifting, carrying, reaching, pushing, pulling, standing, crouching, and more.
  • Behavioral health and pain psychology to address the emotional, cognitive, and behavioral barriers that often get in the way of recovery.
  • Case coordination and return-to-work planning to align goals with employers, vocational counselors, insurers, and the rest of the care team.

Importantly, the focus is always on function. What does this person need to be able to do to get back to work safely? And what’s standing in their way, either physically, emotionally, or practically?

Going beyond an injury

By the time many injured workers arrive at RIW, they’ve already been through a lot — multiple appointments, imaging, maybe a surgery or two, and plenty of time away from their normal routine. It’s common to see a fear of re-injury, or sleep problems, or anxiety and depression.

That’s why our Work Rehabilitation Program includes behavioral health when recommended.

Pain psychologists and behavioral health clinicians work alongside the rehab team to educate workers about the nervous system and pain.

Sessions often include relaxation training, mindfulness-based strategies, and structured problem-solving. The goal is to give them tools that help their nervous system calm down, so their body can do more and their life can open back up.

How the program helps patients get back to work

Every person enters the program with a different story, job, and set of limitations. We start by understanding all of that through a comprehensive evaluation, including:

  • Medical and injury history
  • Functional abilities and limitations
  • Job demands and work history
  • Pain and symptom patterns
  • Psychological and social factors affecting recovery

From there, our team and the worker build a personalized treatment plan anchored around clear, measurable goals.