Lisa Irving - Clinical Psychologist
Work related PTSD courses

PTSD in the Workplace - Injured Workers 

 

Understanding psychological injury, recovery, and return to work

A practical course for workers experiencing psychological injury after a workplace incident.

Why This Matters Now

Experiencing a traumatic incident at work can change how you feel about your job, your safety, and your future. Many people find that once work, workers’ compensation, and return-to-work processes begin, things can quickly feel confusing or overwhelming.

PTSD and psychological injury are now recognised as workplace health and safety issues. This means recovery is influenced not only by treatment, but also by how workplaces and systems respond around you.

Understanding what is happening — and why — can make a significant difference to how steady and supported you feel during this process.

Common Challenges for Injured Workers

Many injured workers describe feeling unsure about what to expect after a psychological injury.

You may find yourself questioning:

  • Why your reactions feel so strong or unpredictable

  • Why work contact feels helpful one day and distressing the next

  • What your workplace or IMC expects from you

  • How return-to-work decisions are made

  • What is reasonable to ask for during recovery

Without clear information, it’s easy to feel blamed, pressured, or misunderstood — even when others are trying to help.

What This Course Provides

This course offers clear, practical education about PTSD in a workplace context.

It is designed to help you understand how psychological injury interacts with work, systems, and communication, so you can engage more confidently in recovery and return-to-work conversations — without being pushed beyond your capacity.

The focus is on understanding, not fixing.

 

Who This Course Is For

This course is suitable for:

  • Workers experiencing psychological injury after a workplace incident

  • Workers navigating workers’ compensation or return-to-work processes

  • Workers wanting to better understand what’s happening around them

No mental health or system knowledge is required.

No prior knowledge of mental health or psychology is required.

What Participants Will Gain

After completing this course, you may:

  • Better understand PTSD in a workplace context

  • Feel less confused by workplace and system responses

  • Have clearer expectations about recovery and work capacity

  • Feel more confident communicating with your employer or IMC

  • Feel more informed and less alone during recovery

 

Course Format

  • Self-paced online course

  • Short, structured modules

  • Can be completed gradually and revisited as needed

    Important Note

    This course is not therapy.

    It is workplace education designed to support psychologically safer responses following workplace trauma.

January Support Offer: Shared Understanding at No Extra Cost

To support injured workers navigating recovery and return to work early in the year, January enrolments in the PTSD in the Workplace – Injured Worker course include access to two additional courses at no extra cost.

This means your enrolment includes:

  • Your course as the injured worker, and

  • One course you may share with your employer or workplace representative, and

  • One course you may share with your Injury Management Consultant (IMC)

Sharing access is entirely optional and remains under your control.

Why This Can Be Helpful

Psychological injury recovery is often influenced by how well everyone involved understands what is happening and what is reasonable during recovery and return-to-work planning.

When employers and IMCs have access to the same clear, practical information:

  • Communication can feel calmer and more consistent

  • Expectations around recovery and work capacity are often more realistic

  • You may feel less pressure to explain or justify your experience

  • Return-to-work discussions can feel more collaborative and less confronting

This offer is designed to support shared understanding, not obligation.

Important to Know

  • Each enrolment is separate and confidential

  • No information is shared between participants

  • Your employer or IMC does not see your progress or responses

  • You decide whether, when, and with whom to share access

Access the January Offer

Enrol now to receive access to all three courses as part of the January support offer

Access Course
Call To Action

Understanding What’s Happening

This course explains PTSD in clear, everyday language.
It helps you understand common reactions after trauma and how these can affect work and capacity.
The focus is on normalising your experience rather than pathologising it.

Access course

Knowing What to Expect

Recovery often involves multiple people and systems.
This course helps clarify the roles of employers, IMCs, and workplaces, and what the WC system involves.
The emphasis is on reducing uncertainty and confusion.

Access course

Feeling More Confident to Engage

Clear information supports steadier communication.
This course helps you understand boundaries, expectations, and how to participate in discussions without over-explaining or over-extending yourself.
The focus is on supporting sustainable recovery and return-to-work pathways.

Access Course

 

About the Course Facilitator

This course is developed and delivered by Lisa Irving, Clinical Psychologist and founder of Revive Health and Happiness.

Over many years of clinical work, Lisa has supported individuals affected by workplace trauma, as well as workplaces navigating the complexities of psychological injury, recovery, and return to work. Through this work, she has seen firsthand how well-intentioned people can feel unsure, constrained, or fearful of getting things wrong — often at the very moments when clarity and steadiness matter most.

Much of Lisa’s writing and professional advocacy has focused on the gap between what workplaces intend and how experiences of psychological injury are actually lived. In particular, she has written about how systems, language, and responses — not just symptoms — shape recovery outcomes.

These courses were created in response to a recurring pattern Lisa observed across industries:
people at work wanting to do the right thing, but lacking a shared, practical understanding of PTSD and psychosocial risk in a workplace context.

Rather than positioning psychological injury as an individual problem to be managed behind closed doors, this course reflects Lisa’s belief that safer outcomes emerge when workplaces develop shared understanding, clear boundaries, and consistent responses.

The aim is not to turn workplaces into therapists, but to support people to act with confidence, care, and appropriate responsibility — in ways that support recovery while respecting roles, limits, and organisational realities.

 

Enroll now to gain immediate access to the course.

Suitable for individuals, teams, and organisations.

Access the course

Shared Understanding Supports Better Outcomes

Recovery is influenced not only by treatment, but by how well everyone involved understands what is happening.

When expectations are unclear or communication is misaligned, recovery and return-to-work processes can become more difficult. Shared understanding supports calmer communication, more realistic planning, and smoother progress over time.

This course is designed to support that shared foundation — while keeping your choice and control at the centre.

 

Click here for courses