Canada's workforce is getting older - and disability claims are reflecting that reality. As more Canadians work into their 50s, 60s, and beyond, the nature of disability claims is shifting.
Longer tenure means more complex health histories. Older workers often bring pre-existing conditions, more extensive medication profiles, and - in many cases - stronger motivation to return to meaningful work. But they also face longer recovery timelines, more complex comorbidities, and a labour market that doesn't always accommodate their needs.
For insurers, employers, and claims professionals, managing these files well requires a more sophisticated approach than standard protocols provide.
Statistics Canada data consistently shows that older workers are more likely to experience longer disability durations, higher claim costs, and more complicated return-to-work trajectories than their younger counterparts. This isn't because older workers recover more poorly - it's because their health picture is often more complex.
A 55-year-old with a lumbar strain may also be managing hypertension, diabetes, or early-stage osteoarthritis. A 60-year-old with a mental health claim may have a decades-long history of managed anxiety, a changing medication picture due to menopause, and a job that requires sustained concentration and decision-making. These are not exceptional cases - they are increasingly typical.
The core challenge in aging workforce disability claims is disentangling the injury from the baseline. When a pre-existing condition interacts with a new injury, the questions become:
These are precisely the questions that independent medical assessments are designed to answer - through objective, evidence-based evaluation that considers the whole person, not just the presenting complaint.
Return-to-work planning for older workers requires the same evidence-based foundation as any file - but with a more nuanced lens applied to:
Physical demands versus capacity: Older workers may have reduced tolerance for sustained physical load, repetitive movement, or environmental exposure. Functional Capacity Evaluations help establish what is realistic and safe.
Cognitive demands versus capacity: For roles requiring sustained concentration, memory, or decision-making, age-related cognitive changes - or the cognitive effects of chronic pain, medication, or sleep disruption - may need to be accounted for.
Workplace accommodation: Older workers are often highly experienced and motivated to return. Thoughtful accommodation planning - graduated return, modified duties, ergonomic adjustment - can significantly improve outcomes. Job Demands Analyses help align return-to-work plans with actual workplace requirements.
Psychosocial factors: Concerns about job security, identity, and future capacity can significantly affect recovery engagement in older workers. Mental health considerations should not be treated as secondary in complex aging workforce claims.
In complex aging workforce claims, objective medical evidence becomes even more important - precisely because the health picture is more layered and the risk of 'opinion drift' between stakeholders is higher.
An independent medical examination provides a structured, impartial assessment that:
This clarity doesn't just support better decisions - it supports better outcomes for everyone, including the worker.
Canada's older workforce isn't going anywhere. As the demographics of disability claims continue to evolve, the professionals managing these files need tools and partners equipped to handle the complexity.
At SOMA, we work with insurers, employers, and legal professionals across Canada to provide the kind of thorough, coordinated assessment that complex claims require. If aging workforce disability cases are becoming a more significant part of your caseload, we're here to help you navigate them well.