If you’ve been hurt on the job in Tennessee, one of your first questions is probably about medical care. Many injured workers in Knoxville and across East Tennessee assume their employer gets to pick the doctor, full stop. That assumption causes real harm, because workers end up accepting care they didn’t choose and, in some cases, missing out on an accurate diagnosis. Understanding your rights under Tennessee workers’ comp law can make a significant difference in the outcome of your claim. OEB Law has helped injured workers across Knox County and East Tennessee navigate exactly these situations. In this blog post, Knoxville attorney Tim Elrod discusses whether workers’ comp in Tennessee can force you to see their doctor and what rights injured workers have when it comes to choosing medical care.
Key Takeaways
- Tennessee employers must provide a panel of physicians, not just one doctor. Under Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-204, your employer must offer a panel of at least three independent and reputable physicians for you to choose from.
- You select your authorized treating physician (ATP) from that panel. You complete Form C-42 to make your official choice, giving you meaningful input into your own medical care.
- You can request a change of doctors under certain conditions. Tennessee law allows ATP changes with proper documentation and Tennessee Bureau of Workers’ Compensation approval.
- Ignoring the panel process can cost you. Seeing an outside doctor without authorization may mean you pay out of pocket for that treatment.
In Tennessee, workers’ comp does not give the employer the power to force you to see one specific doctor they designate outside a proper panel. Instead, your employer must provide a panel of at least three independent and reputable physicians, and you choose your authorized treating physician from that list by completing Form C-42. If your employer fails to provide this panel within three business days, you may have the right to choose a physician of your own selection for initial treatment.
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About OEB Law, Your Knoxville Legal Team

This guide is provided by the experienced attorneys at OEB Law, led by Managing Attorney Timothy G. Elrod. Founded in Knoxville in 2004, our firm has over 50 years of combined experience navigating East Tennessee’s legal system.
We have successfully represented thousands of personal injury clients, developing deep expertise in Tennessee’s complex wrongful death and accident laws. As East Tennessee natives, we have a direct understanding of the local court systems, law enforcement agencies, and community needs. Our commitment is to provide trusted, authoritative information to our neighbors in Knoxville and the surrounding Tennessee communities. However, this information does not constitute legal advice. If you or a loved one has been injured in an accident or needs legal help, call us today for a free, no obligation, initial consultation.
How Tennessee’s Workers’ Comp Doctor Panel System Actually Works
Tennessee law is clear on this point: your employer does not get to hand you a business card for one doctor and call it a day. Under Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-204, your employer must provide a panel of at least three independent and reputable physicians. You then select your authorized treating physician (ATP) from that list by completing Form C-42. That choice is yours, not your employer’s.
The three-business-day rule is important. After you report a workplace injury, your employer must deliver that panel promptly. Delays are not just inconvenient; they can trigger specific legal rights for you as the injured worker. If you are an injured worker in Knoxville or anywhere in Knox County, this same process applies regardless of the size of your employer or the industry you work in.
The phrase “independent and reputable” in the statute carries real meaning. Panel physicians should not have a financial conflict of interest with your employer. If you suspect the panel doctors are connected to your employer’s occupational health provider in a way that compromises their independence, that is worth raising with an attorney before you sign Form C-42. Your workers’ compensation claim can be significantly affected by the quality and objectivity of the ATP you select.
“A lot of injured workers in Knoxville come to us thinking they had no choice but to see the doctor their employer pointed them to. The reality is that Tennessee law gives you a list of doctors to choose from, and that choice matters enormously for the outcome of your claim.” – Knoxville attorney Tim Elrod
What Does “Independent and Reputable” Mean for Your Panel Doctors?
Panel physicians should not be captive occupational medicine providers controlled by the employer’s insurance carrier. Workers have the right to question a panel’s composition if the listed doctors appear to have close financial ties to the employer. Raising this concern early, preferably before signing Form C-42, gives you the strongest legal footing. An attorney can help you evaluate the panel before you commit.
Tennessee Workers’ Comp Doctor Choice: How the Panel Process Works
Work injury occurs
Report injury to employer immediately
Employer must provide panel of 3+ physicians within 3 business days
Employee selects ATP and completes Form C-42
ATP provides authorized medical treatment
If change needed, file petition with TN Bureau of Workers’ Compensation
Frequently Asked Questions
Form C-42 is the official Tennessee document used to record your selection of an authorized treating physician (ATP) from the employer’s panel. Signing this form is an important legal step, so review the panel carefully before choosing. If you have questions about your options, speaking with a workers’ comp attorney before signing can protect your rights.
Under Tennessee law, if your employer fails to provide a panel of physicians within three business days of your reported injury, you may have the right to seek treatment with a doctor of your own choosing. You should document this failure in writing and contact the Tennessee Bureau of Workers’ Compensation. An attorney can help you understand your options and protect your claim.
In Tennessee, the employer does not pick a single company doctor for you. They must provide a panel of at least three independent physicians, and you make the selection. If the panel is not properly provided, or if you believe the physicians are not independent, a workers’ comp attorney can help you challenge the process.
Tennessee workers’ comp does not set a specific numerical limit on ATP changes, but changes require documented cause and Bureau approval in most cases. Frequent change requests without good reason can negatively affect your claim. Consulting an attorney before requesting a change is strongly recommended.
Injured workers in Tennessee have the right to medical treatment, wage replacement benefits, and a panel of independent physicians to choose from. You also have anti-retaliation protections under Tennessee law, meaning your employer cannot legally punish you for filing a workers’ comp claim. If you believe your rights have been violated, the Tennessee Bureau of Workers’ Compensation and a qualified workers’ comp attorney can help.
Yes. Tennessee workers’ comp law recognizes that emergencies do not allow time for the panel process. If you need immediate emergency treatment, you may receive care from the nearest available provider, and the cost should be covered by your employer’s workers’ comp insurance. You should notify your employer as soon as reasonably possible after receiving emergency care.
In most cases, no. Tennessee workers’ comp generally covers treatment only from your authorized treating physician or a specialist your ATP formally refers you to. If you seek treatment outside the panel without proper authorization, you may be personally responsible for those medical costs. Limited exceptions exist, such as emergency care situations, but it is always best to follow the panel process and consult a Knoxville workers’ comp attorney before seeking any outside treatment to protect your claim.
What Happens When Your Employer Does Not Follow the Panel Rules
Not every employer follows the rules. Some employers delay providing the panel, hand over an incomplete list, or simply direct injured workers to one specific doctor without mentioning the panel at all. When this happens in Tennessee, the injured worker has legal options. However, acting quickly and documenting everything is essential.
If your employer fails to provide a proper panel within three business days of your reported injury, you may have the right to seek treatment from a physician of your own choosing. The key word here is "may." This right is not automatic, and exercising it incorrectly can create complications for your claim. Therefore, you should document the delay in writing immediately, including the date you reported the injury, the date you requested the panel, and who you contacted. Then contact the Tennessee Bureau of Workers' Compensation, which is the regulatory body that handles panel violation complaints, before proceeding with outside treatment.
Tennessee law also provides anti-retaliation protections for injured workers. Your employer cannot legally punish you, demote you, or terminate your employment for filing a workers' comp claim or exercising your rights under Tennessee law. If you experience any adverse employment action after reporting a workplace injury in Knox County or anywhere in East Tennessee, that is a serious legal matter worth discussing with an attorney immediately. Your personal injury rights and your workers' comp rights can both be affected by how quickly you respond to employer misconduct.
Here is a quick summary of common panel-related situations and your options:
- Employer provides panel on time: Choose your ATP from the list and complete Form C-42 carefully.
- Employer delays beyond 3 business days: Document the delay in writing and contact the Bureau before seeking outside treatment.
- You suspect the panel is not independent: Contact a workers' comp attorney before signing Form C-42.
- You experience retaliation after filing: Consult an attorney immediately; anti-retaliation protections apply under Tennessee law.
Tennessee Workers' Comp: Your Doctor Rights at a Glance
| Situation | Your Rights Under Tennessee Law | Action to Take |
|---|---|---|
| Employer provides panel on time | Choose your ATP from 3+ doctors | Complete Form C-42 carefully |
| Employer delays panel beyond 3 business days | May seek your own doctor | Document the delay in writing; contact Bureau |
| You are unhappy with your ATP | May request a change with proper cause | File petition with Bureau; consult an attorney |
| Emergency injury requiring immediate care | Seek emergency treatment anywhere | Notify employer as soon as possible after |
| You believe panel doctors are not independent | Right to challenge the panel | Contact Tennessee Bureau of Workers' Compensation |
| You want a second opinion | Request a Medical Impairment Rating (MIR) exam | Ask your attorney to initiate the MIR process |
Can You Change Your Workers' Comp Doctor in Tennessee?
Changing your ATP after making your initial Form C-42 selection is possible, but it requires more than simply deciding you prefer a different doctor. Tennessee workers' comp law generally requires documented cause and, in many cases, a petition filed with the Tennessee Bureau of Workers' Compensation. Employer consent may also be required in certain circumstances.
Changing Your Authorized Treating Physician (ATP)
Common documented reasons that may support an ATP change include a lack of documented medical improvement, physician misconduct, or a genuine inability to access the selected doctor. Workers should keep detailed records of every appointment, every communication with the ATP, and all treatment outcomes. Those records become the foundation of any change request. Additionally, a pattern of dismissive or inadequate care is worth documenting carefully, because it supports your case for a legitimate change.
Emergency Care Exception
Workplace emergencies do not pause for paperwork. If your injury requires immediate emergency treatment, you can and should receive care at the nearest available facility. Tennessee workers' comp insurance should cover that emergency treatment. After your condition stabilizes, however, the standard panel process resumes for all ongoing and follow-up care. Notify your employer as soon as reasonably possible after receiving emergency treatment, and document that notification.
Getting a Second Opinion Through the MIR Process
Tennessee workers' comp includes a mechanism called the Medical Impairment Rating (MIR) examiner process. A state-appointed MIR examiner provides an independent assessment that is not controlled by your employer or their insurance carrier. This tool is especially valuable when your ATP's findings seem inconsistent with your actual condition or symptoms. An attorney can help you initiate the MIR process at the right stage of your claim.
"Changing doctors mid-claim is one of the most common questions we hear from injured workers in Knoxville. It is possible, but you have to follow the right process. Making the wrong move without legal guidance can hurt your claim significantly." - Knoxville attorney Tim Elrod
What to Do Right After a Work Injury in Tennessee
Taking the right steps immediately after a workplace injury protects both your health and your legal rights. Many injured workers in East Tennessee unknowingly weaken their claims in the first 24 to 48 hours simply because they didn't know what to do. Timothy G. Elrod has helped injured workers across East Tennessee navigate the workers' comp system for more than two decades, and the same basic steps apply in virtually every case.
Follow these steps to protect your claim from the start:
- Report the injury to your employer in writing immediately. Verbal reports are not enough; a written record creates a clear timeline.
- Request the panel of physicians in writing. This starts the three-business-day clock and creates documentation if there is a delay.
- Review all three panel doctors carefully before signing Form C-42. Do not rush this decision; your ATP will guide your entire medical recovery.
- Document all appointments, symptoms, and communications. Detailed records support every future decision in your claim.
- Do not give a recorded statement to the insurance company without consulting an attorney. Insurance adjusters are trained to minimize claim value.
- Contact a Knoxville workers' comp attorney early. Early legal guidance prevents the most common and costly mistakes injured workers make.
Why Choose OEB Law for Workers' Comp Claims
Workers' comp doctor disputes are not just bureaucratic headaches. They directly affect the quality of medical care you receive and the long-term value of your claim. OEB Law's experienced legal team has spent more than two decades helping injured workers in Knoxville and Knox County understand their rights under Tennessee law. The firm's attorneys have deep familiarity with Tennessee Bureau of Workers' Compensation procedures, local employer practices, and the physician panel realities that are specific to East Tennessee's healthcare market.
When an injured worker comes to OEB Law confused about their doctor rights, the firm's first step is always education. Clients learn what the panel process requires, whether their employer followed the rules, and what options are available going forward. That knowledge, combined with 50 years of combined legal experience and a genuine commitment to East Tennessee workers, is what sets OEB Law apart. The firm offers a free initial consultation and charges no attorney fees unless they win. There is no financial risk in getting the information you need.
Who is OEB Law and Why Are They Good for the Community?
Led by Managing Attorney Timothy G. Elrod and Our Experienced Legal Team
Founded in 2004 in Knoxville, Tennessee, OEB Law has grown over nearly two decades to now serve clients across multiple states. Tim Elrod established the firm with a simple but powerful mission: we care and we help people. Today, together with attorneys Michael Bernard, Billy Sivyer, Gena Lewis, and Logan Wade, our team brings over 50 years of combined experience representing clients throughout Tennessee and Kentucky in personal injury and criminal defense cases.
Our Legal Expertise
Our attorneys have built their reputation through:
- Successfully representing thousands of personal injury and criminal defense clients
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- Mastering the complexities of Tennessee's legal system through decades of practice
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At OEB Law, our reputation speaks for itself:
- Proven Results: We've recovered significant compensation for our clients through both settlements and courtroom verdicts
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- No Fee Unless We Win: You don't pay attorney fees unless we successfully secure compensation in your case
- Local Knowledge: As East Tennessee natives, we understand our community and care deeply about the people we serve
- Personalized Approach: We personalize each case to meet our clients' specific needs, ensuring you're never just another file number
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Our dedication extends beyond the courtroom. We proudly support:
- Local high school football programs through Rivalry Thursday sponsorships
- The Knoxville Ice Bears and community fundraising initiatives
- Numerous youth, student, and community organizations throughout East Tennessee
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