Article
5 min read

WorkCover Certificates for Australian GPs

Published on
January 1, 2026
Contributors
Adrian Lee
Subscribe to our newsletter
Read about our privacy policy.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

WorkCover Certificates for Australian GPs

Workers' compensation certification, now formally known in most Australian jurisdictions as the Certificate of Capacity, is a significant administrative workload in general practice. The requirements vary by state, and the certificate has material consequences for patients whose income, medical treatment access, and return-to-work arrangements depend on it being completed accurately and on time. This article covers the current framework, the common documentation issues, and how Lyrebird supports certificate drafting.

The Role of the Certificate of Capacity

The Certificate of Capacity is the primary medical document used in the Australian workers' compensation system to certify a worker's injury, capacity for work, treatment plan, and anticipated duration of any incapacity. It is the document on which weekly compensation payments, employer obligations, and return-to-work planning are based. Without a valid Certificate of Capacity, insurers cannot process weekly payments.

The certificate is not only a clinical document. It is an administrative one, with deadlines and prescribed formats that matter as much as the clinical content. A generic medical certificate is not sufficient to support a workers' compensation claim. The worker must sign a declaration section confirming they have not engaged in other paid employment during the incapacity period, and this declaration is a required part of the form.

Jurisdictional Variation

WorkCover is a state jurisdiction in Australia, and each state and territory operates its own scheme with its own prescribed forms.

New South Wales: Administered by SIRA (State Insurance Regulatory Authority) and icare for most employers. The Certificate of Capacity form is prescribed by SIRA. First certificate: up to 14 days. Subsequent certificates: up to 28 days.

Victoria: Administered by WorkSafe Victoria. A single Certificate of Capacity form is used for both WorkCover and TAC (Transport Accident Commission) claims. First certificate: up to 14 days. Subsequent certificates: up to 28 days. Certificates can be backdated up to 90 days, covering periods of no more than 28 days at a time.

Western Australia: Administered by WorkCover WA. Uses the prescribed First Certificate of Capacity (CC1) form. WorkCover WA maintains specific guidance for medical practitioners on completing Certificates of Capacity.

Queensland, SA, Tasmania, ACT, NT, and Comcare all operate their own schemes with their own forms and requirements. GPs working across jurisdictional boundaries should confirm the correct form for the worker's employment location rather than the practice location.

Who can complete certificates varies too. In most jurisdictions, the first Certificate of Capacity must be completed by a registered medical practitioner (GP, specialist, psychiatrist). Subsequent certificates can sometimes be completed by approved allied health practitioners such as physiotherapists, chiropractors, or osteopaths, with the specifics set by each state scheme. Psychologists generally cannot complete Certificates of Capacity in most jurisdictions, even for mental health injuries.

Documentation Issues That Commonly Cause Problems

Four issues recur across disputed certifications and claim delays.

Insufficiently specific diagnosis. A certificate that records a vague complaint rather than a specific diagnosis with enough detail to justify the certification period is frequently challenged by insurers or employers. "Back pain" is less defensible than "lumbar strain, mechanism consistent with reported workplace incident."

Inconsistent or vague capacity assessment. Certificates that record "unfit for work" without specifying what activities are and are not possible create ambiguity that complicates return-to-work planning. Modified-duties certification, with specific restrictions on duration, posture, weight-handling, repetitive movements, or cognitive function, is increasingly the expected standard. WorkCover WA's guidance explicitly asks for clinical reasoning when there is no capacity for work.

Missing review timing. Certificates that do not specify a review interval, or that schedule review unrealistically far out, create gaps in certification that delay payments. Gaps also complicate the worker's right to continuous weekly payments.

Inadequate treatment plan documentation. Certificates that do not specify what treatment is being provided, planned, or referred make it harder for insurers to assess reasonableness of claims and for employers to plan accommodation.

Avant's claims analysis consistently identifies omissions in diagnosis specificity and capacity assessment as among the most common documentation failures that become medicolegal issues.

AHPRA Expectations for Medical Certificates

Medical certificates of any kind fall under the AHPRA shared Code of conduct and the Medical Board of Australia's Good medical practice. The expectation is that practitioners only issue certificates based on actual examination or assessment, and that the content of the certificate is accurate and clinically defensible.

The related practice of backdating certificates is legally permitted in most Australian WorkCover schemes within specified limits (typically up to 90 days) but only where the medical practitioner has a defensible basis for certifying the earlier period, usually from prior examination or contemporaneous notes. Certificates that cannot be clinically justified for the period they cover create significant medicolegal exposure.

How Lyrebird Supports Certificate Drafting

Lyrebird's dictation mode is typically the better capture method for Certificates of Capacity than ambient scribing. The field structure of the prescribed forms is more predictable than the conversational flow of a consult, and the clinician's explicit dictation produces cleaner drafts for the specific fields required.

The practical workflow is to conduct the clinical assessment as usual, then use dictation mode to populate the certificate content: specific diagnosis, detailed capacity assessment (with restrictions), treatment plan (current and referred), and review interval. The draft is generated in the format specified by the clinician's template, which can be adapted to the jurisdiction relevant to the practice.

For Bp Premier users, the completed certificate content can be saved alongside the consultation note through the Best Practice integration. The prescribed certificate form itself must still be completed and signed by the clinician — Lyrebird generates the content but the regulated form submission remains the clinician's responsibility.

Consent Considerations

Certificates of Capacity involve information sharing with the workers' compensation insurer, the employer in some formats, and potentially allied health providers involved in rehabilitation. The worker declaration section itself authorises certain information sharing, but the clinician's broader consent conversation about AI scribe use still applies in the usual way, consistent with the TGA's August 2025 guidance on digital scribes and the Australian Privacy Principles.

Lyrebird processes and stores all data on Australian servers, so APP 8 offshore-transfer disclosure does not apply.

Next Steps

To trial Lyrebird directly, book a demo. Lyrebird Free is available for free to Best Practice clinics.

More Resources
Continue reading
Posts
The dangers of Copy Paste Scribes
Read More
Posts
How to use an AI medical scribe
Read More
Posts
December Product Updates
Read More
Article
TGA Regulation and AI Scribes
Read More
Announcement
Four South West London NHS Trusts Deploy Lyrebird to 20,000 Clinicians
Read More
Announcement
Lyrebird Announces Partnership with Ochre Health
Read More
Post
5 min read

WorkCover Certificates for Australian GPs

Published on
January 1, 2026
Contributors
Adrian Lee
Subscribe to our newsletter
Read about our privacy policy.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

WorkCover Certificates for Australian GPs

Workers' compensation certification, now formally known in most Australian jurisdictions as the Certificate of Capacity, is a significant administrative workload in general practice. The requirements vary by state, and the certificate has material consequences for patients whose income, medical treatment access, and return-to-work arrangements depend on it being completed accurately and on time. This article covers the current framework, the common documentation issues, and how Lyrebird supports certificate drafting.

The Role of the Certificate of Capacity

The Certificate of Capacity is the primary medical document used in the Australian workers' compensation system to certify a worker's injury, capacity for work, treatment plan, and anticipated duration of any incapacity. It is the document on which weekly compensation payments, employer obligations, and return-to-work planning are based. Without a valid Certificate of Capacity, insurers cannot process weekly payments.

The certificate is not only a clinical document. It is an administrative one, with deadlines and prescribed formats that matter as much as the clinical content. A generic medical certificate is not sufficient to support a workers' compensation claim. The worker must sign a declaration section confirming they have not engaged in other paid employment during the incapacity period, and this declaration is a required part of the form.

Jurisdictional Variation

WorkCover is a state jurisdiction in Australia, and each state and territory operates its own scheme with its own prescribed forms.

New South Wales: Administered by SIRA (State Insurance Regulatory Authority) and icare for most employers. The Certificate of Capacity form is prescribed by SIRA. First certificate: up to 14 days. Subsequent certificates: up to 28 days.

Victoria: Administered by WorkSafe Victoria. A single Certificate of Capacity form is used for both WorkCover and TAC (Transport Accident Commission) claims. First certificate: up to 14 days. Subsequent certificates: up to 28 days. Certificates can be backdated up to 90 days, covering periods of no more than 28 days at a time.

Western Australia: Administered by WorkCover WA. Uses the prescribed First Certificate of Capacity (CC1) form. WorkCover WA maintains specific guidance for medical practitioners on completing Certificates of Capacity.

Queensland, SA, Tasmania, ACT, NT, and Comcare all operate their own schemes with their own forms and requirements. GPs working across jurisdictional boundaries should confirm the correct form for the worker's employment location rather than the practice location.

Who can complete certificates varies too. In most jurisdictions, the first Certificate of Capacity must be completed by a registered medical practitioner (GP, specialist, psychiatrist). Subsequent certificates can sometimes be completed by approved allied health practitioners such as physiotherapists, chiropractors, or osteopaths, with the specifics set by each state scheme. Psychologists generally cannot complete Certificates of Capacity in most jurisdictions, even for mental health injuries.

Documentation Issues That Commonly Cause Problems

Four issues recur across disputed certifications and claim delays.

Insufficiently specific diagnosis. A certificate that records a vague complaint rather than a specific diagnosis with enough detail to justify the certification period is frequently challenged by insurers or employers. "Back pain" is less defensible than "lumbar strain, mechanism consistent with reported workplace incident."

Inconsistent or vague capacity assessment. Certificates that record "unfit for work" without specifying what activities are and are not possible create ambiguity that complicates return-to-work planning. Modified-duties certification, with specific restrictions on duration, posture, weight-handling, repetitive movements, or cognitive function, is increasingly the expected standard. WorkCover WA's guidance explicitly asks for clinical reasoning when there is no capacity for work.

Missing review timing. Certificates that do not specify a review interval, or that schedule review unrealistically far out, create gaps in certification that delay payments. Gaps also complicate the worker's right to continuous weekly payments.

Inadequate treatment plan documentation. Certificates that do not specify what treatment is being provided, planned, or referred make it harder for insurers to assess reasonableness of claims and for employers to plan accommodation.

Avant's claims analysis consistently identifies omissions in diagnosis specificity and capacity assessment as among the most common documentation failures that become medicolegal issues.

AHPRA Expectations for Medical Certificates

Medical certificates of any kind fall under the AHPRA shared Code of conduct and the Medical Board of Australia's Good medical practice. The expectation is that practitioners only issue certificates based on actual examination or assessment, and that the content of the certificate is accurate and clinically defensible.

The related practice of backdating certificates is legally permitted in most Australian WorkCover schemes within specified limits (typically up to 90 days) but only where the medical practitioner has a defensible basis for certifying the earlier period, usually from prior examination or contemporaneous notes. Certificates that cannot be clinically justified for the period they cover create significant medicolegal exposure.

How Lyrebird Supports Certificate Drafting

Lyrebird's dictation mode is typically the better capture method for Certificates of Capacity than ambient scribing. The field structure of the prescribed forms is more predictable than the conversational flow of a consult, and the clinician's explicit dictation produces cleaner drafts for the specific fields required.

The practical workflow is to conduct the clinical assessment as usual, then use dictation mode to populate the certificate content: specific diagnosis, detailed capacity assessment (with restrictions), treatment plan (current and referred), and review interval. The draft is generated in the format specified by the clinician's template, which can be adapted to the jurisdiction relevant to the practice.

For Bp Premier users, the completed certificate content can be saved alongside the consultation note through the Best Practice integration. The prescribed certificate form itself must still be completed and signed by the clinician — Lyrebird generates the content but the regulated form submission remains the clinician's responsibility.

Consent Considerations

Certificates of Capacity involve information sharing with the workers' compensation insurer, the employer in some formats, and potentially allied health providers involved in rehabilitation. The worker declaration section itself authorises certain information sharing, but the clinician's broader consent conversation about AI scribe use still applies in the usual way, consistent with the TGA's August 2025 guidance on digital scribes and the Australian Privacy Principles.

Lyrebird processes and stores all data on Australian servers, so APP 8 offshore-transfer disclosure does not apply.

Next Steps

To trial Lyrebird directly, book a demo. Lyrebird Free is available for free to Best Practice clinics.

Keep reading

All posts
Questions about compliance?