Adrienne Mallard v. Next Day Temps, Inc. and Accident Fund General Ins. Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 7, 2021
Docket0321214
StatusUnpublished

This text of Adrienne Mallard v. Next Day Temps, Inc. and Accident Fund General Ins. Co. (Adrienne Mallard v. Next Day Temps, Inc. and Accident Fund General Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adrienne Mallard v. Next Day Temps, Inc. and Accident Fund General Ins. Co., (Va. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges O’Brien, Callins and Senior Judge Annunziata

ADRIENNE MALLARD MEMORANDUM OPINION* v. Record No. 0321-21-4 PER CURIAM DECEMBER 7, 2021 NEXT DAY TEMPS, INC. AND ACCIDENT FUND GENERAL INS. CO.

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

(Adrienne Mallard, on brief), pro se.

(Amanda Tapscott Belliveau; McCandlish Holton, P.C., on brief), for appellees.

Adrienne Mallard (“claimant”), pro se, appeals a final order of the Workers’

Compensation Commission (“Commission”) denying her claims, inter alia, that appellees1 were

required to pay for ongoing treatment with Dr. Phillip Omohundro, had refused to fill her

prescription medications, and had engaged in improper medical management.

Upon reviewing the record and briefs of the parties, we conclude that this appeal is

without merit. Accordingly, we summarily affirm the decision of the Commission. See Rule

5A:27.

BACKGROUND

“On appeal from a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission, the evidence

and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from that evidence are viewed in the light most

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 Appellees are employer Next Day Temps, Inc. and insurer Accident Fund General Ins. Co. favorable to the party prevailing below.” Anderson v. Anderson, 65 Va. App. 354, 361 (2015)

(quoting Artis v. Ottenberg’s Bakers, Inc., 45 Va. App. 72, 83 (2005) (en banc)). This opinion

summarizes only the evidence applicable to the claims before this Court.

On June 6, 2014, claimant suffered injuries after falling down a set of stairs at work. She

began treatment with orthopedic surgeon Dr. Omohundro, who initially diagnosed her with a left

lateral malleolus fracture and a left ankle sprain, but later noted numerous other injuries

including but not limited to bilateral wrist pain, a right ankle sprain, and a left knee contusion.

Claimant treated with Dr. Omohundro’s office throughout 2014 and 2015. As relevant here, her

treatment included medications such as Fosamax, lidocaine patches, and gabapentin.

Beginning in December 2015, claimant filed several claims for medical benefits with the

Commission. In July 2016, Deputy Commissioner Dana Plunkett found that claimant suffered

compensable injuries to her left leg, left ankle, left foot, left knee, right ankle, and both wrists,

specifically a lateral malleolus fracture, left ankle sprain, foot pain, tibial tendinitis, Achilles

tendinitis, neuralgia, wrist contusions, and wrist pain resulting from the use of crutches. Deputy

Commissioner Plunkett denied claimant’s claims for injury to her left hip, right elbow, and for

reflex sympathetic dystrophy (“RSD”) to the left ankle.

Claimant continued to see Dr. Omohundro throughout 2016 with ongoing pain.

Following a January 2016 visit, Dr. Omohundro wrote that claimant “ha[d] a healed left lateral

malleolar fracture and persistent pain complaints in . . . both ankles, the left knee, left hip and

both hands” and that “[a]ll . . . studies ha[d] been normal except for the left ankle.” In May

2016, Dr. Omohundro noted “no structural damage” to claimant’s foot or ankle and wrote that

claimant “ha[d] many complaints for which no specific pathology [was] identified.” He

suspected that “nerve sensitivity” was causing claimant’s ongoing pain. In December 2016,

Dr. Omohundro wrote that claimant had bilateral wrist pain, bilateral knee pain, ankle pain, left -2- foot and ankle nerve pain, and depression, and opined that all of these ailments were causally

related to the June 2014 injury.

In October 2016, claimant filed another claim for benefits, asserting chronic regional pain

syndrome (“CRPS”) in her left ankle, left foot, left hip, left knee, and both wrists, neuralgia in

her right ankle, and a left leg fracture. Later that month, Dr. Omohundro referred claimant to

pain management specialist Dr. Levi Pearson to treat claimant’s neuralgia and neuritis.

Appellees deposed Dr. Omohundro in February 2017. He testified that claimant’s left ankle

fracture had completely healed, that there was likely some neurological basis for claimant’s

ongoing complaints, and that, although there were no objective findings to substantiate

claimant’s complaints, her complaints were consistent. Dr. John Daken conducted an

independent medical examination (“IME”) with claimant in March 2017 and completed a

psychiatric evaluation report. Claimant sent Deputy Commissioner William Kennard a letter in

April 2017 outlining various complaints with Dr. Daken’s report.

In June 2017, Deputy Commissioner Kennard awarded claimant medical benefits for left

leg osteopenia, left plantar fasciitis, left metatarsalgia, left tarsal tunnel syndrome, left equinus

gastrocnemius, left ankle contracture, sural nerve damage, and neuralgia. He denied claimant

medical benefits for a left hip injury, arthritis/degenerative joint disease, left knee

chondromalacia patella, left knee retinacular, radiculopathy, left shin splint, right knee injury,

major depressive disorder, and CRPS/RSD in the left foot and left leg. The full Commission

affirmed Deputy Commissioner Kennard’s ruling in December 2017. This Court affirmed the

Commission’s ruling on appeal. See Mallard v. Next Day Temps Inc., No. 0028-18-4

(Va. Ct. App. May 14, 2019).

In December 2017, Dr. Omohundro completed a questionnaire at appellees’ request,

opining that physical therapy should help claimant’s ankle improve and “may help [her] nerve -3- pain.” He agreed with appellees that gabapentin and lidocaine patches had not improved

claimant’s condition and recommended that her gabapentin dose be increased. Later that month,

appellees authorized claimant’s treatment with Dr. Pearson, as well as physical therapy, a TENs

unit, and all medications claimant requested except for an antidepressant. Appellees also

notified claimant that she was authorized for a podiatry/orthotics referral. In January 2018,

Deputy Commissioner Susan Cummins denied claimant’s request for an antidepressant but

authorized, pursuant to stipulation, pain management, physical therapy, a podiatrist, orthotics,

Fosamax, lidocaine patches, and gabapentin.

Dr. Omohundro next met with claimant in April 2018, writing that there was “[n]o active

orthopedic treatment at this time.” He prescribed Pennsaid—a diclofenac topical gel used to

treat knee pain—and noted that he had referred claimant to Dr. Pearson for pain management.

He did not schedule a follow-up appointment with claimant.

Claimant met with Dr. Pearson for the first and only time in June 2018. Claimant told

Dr. Pearson that her pain had not responded to medication, including gabapentin and lidocaine

patches. Dr. Pearson devised a treatment plan consisting of lumbar blocks to be followed

potentially by spinal cord stimulation. In October 2018, Dr. Pearson completed a questionnaire

at appellees’ request, stating that he had examined claimant and had recommended several

treatment options, but that she had not followed up with his office for further treatment. He

averred that he had not refused to see or treat claimant. He further opined that claimant’s

complaints of bilateral wrist pain were not related to the wrist contusions she suffered from the

2014 work accident. Claimant asserted later that month that she attempted to follow up with

Dr. Pearson but that appellees refused to return Dr.

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