Occupational health referrals help employers make informed decisions about work capacity, fitness for duties, recovery, and return-to-work planning. When done properly, they support better outcomes for employees, employers, and workplace stakeholders.
Employee health concerns can affect attendance, performance, workplace safety, and long-term recovery. In many cases, employers need clear medical guidance to understand whether someone is fit to work, what duties are appropriate, and what support may be needed moving forward.
At Evaluate Health, occupational health referrals are designed to provide practical, work-focused medical advice. This may include guidance on fitness for work, functional restrictions, suitable duties, workplace adjustments, rehabilitation, and return-to-work planning. The goal is to support safe, sustainable work participation while helping employers make confident and informed decisions.
An occupational health referral is a formal request for an employee to be assessed by a qualified occupational health professional. It is usually made when a medical condition, injury, illness, or ongoing symptoms may be affecting the employee’s ability to perform their work safely or effectively.
The purpose of the referral is not simply to confirm a diagnosis. The main focus is on how the condition affects the employee’s function at work, whether they are fit for their role, whether restrictions or workplace adjustments are needed, and what steps may support recovery and return to work.
Common referral reasons include: prolonged absence, repeated sick leave, work-related injury, reduced work capacity, difficulty performing usual duties, concerns about workplace safety, or the need for clear return-to-work recommendations.
An employer should consider an occupational health referral when there is uncertainty about an employee’s fitness for work, ability to perform their duties, or capacity to safely remain at work. Early referral can reduce delays, improve workplace planning, and support better recovery outcomes.
A strong referral gives the assessing clinician the information needed to provide clear and practical advice. The more relevant the referral information, the more useful the assessment outcome will be.
1. Identify the Reason for Referral
Confirm the main concern. This may relate to work capacity, fitness for duties, safety, functional limitations, recovery progress, or the need for return-to-work advice.
2. Gather Relevant Information
Provide the employee’s job title, usual duties, physical and cognitive demands, workplace context, and any relevant health or injury information that supports the referral.
3. Ask Clear Referral Questions
Clearly state what advice is needed. For example: Is the employee fit for work? Are restrictions needed? What suitable duties are appropriate? What is the likely recovery timeframe?
4. Submit the Referral for Assessment
Once submitted, the referral can be reviewed and the most suitable assessment type can be arranged based on the clinical and workplace needs of the case.
Evaluate Health provides occupational health assessments, work capacity guidance, return-to-work support, and practical advice to help employers and workers move forward with clarity.
Clearer Fitness for Work Decisions
Helps employers understand whether an employee is fit for their role and what duties can be performed safely.
Better Return-to-Work Outcomes
Supports practical return-to-work planning based on function, restrictions, and recovery progress.
Reduced Workplace Uncertainty
Provides medical clarity where employers, HR teams, or stakeholders need guidance for next steps.
Improved Employee Support
Encourages a more supportive and structured workplace approach through suitable restrictions and recommendations.
Occupational health referrals are an important tool for supporting workplace health, improving return-to-work outcomes, and making informed decisions around fitness for work. When handled properly, they provide clarity for employers while ensuring employees receive appropriate support based on their functional needs. Evaluate Health is committed to delivering occupational health services that are practical, professional, and focused on real workplace outcomes.
Here are some common questions about occupational health referrals, fitness for work, and return-to-work support.
Who can make an occupational health referral?
What is included in an occupational health assessment report?
When should an employee be referred to occupational health?
Can occupational health help with return-to-work planning?
Why choose Evaluate Health for occupational health services?
