Bednar, Jason v. Memorial Healthcare System d/b/a Memorial Hospital

2025 TN WC App. 14
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedApril 11, 2025
Docket2018-01-0218
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 TN WC App. 14 (Bednar, Jason v. Memorial Healthcare System d/b/a Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bednar, Jason v. Memorial Healthcare System d/b/a Memorial Hospital, 2025 TN WC App. 14 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

FILED Apr 11, 2025 02:46 PM(CT) TENNESSEE WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Jason Bednar ) Docket No. 2018-01-0218 ) v. ) State File No. 9290-2018 ) Memorial Healthcare System d/b/a ) Memorial Hospital, et al., ) ) and ) ) Troy Haley, Administrator of the ) Bureau of Workers’ Compensation ) Subsequent Injury and Vocational ) Recovery Fund ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Compensation Claims ) Audrey A. Headrick, Judge )

Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Remanded

In this appeal, the employee claims he is permanently and totally disabled due to a work incident that caused physical and mental injuries. The employer initially authorized medical treatment but later disputed compensability based primarily on the employee’s preexisting physical and mental conditions. Following the trial, the court concluded that the employee had not met his burden of proof in establishing a compensable physical or mental injury. Specifically, the court determined that because the employee failed to meet his burden of proving a compensable physical injury, he also could not prove that he sustained a compensable mental injury pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 50- 6-102(15). The employee has appealed. Upon careful consideration, we conclude the preponderance of the evidence supports a finding that the employee suffered a compensable temporary aggravation of a preexisting condition, and we therefore reverse the trial court’s finding that the employee did not prove a compensable physical injury. We remand the case for the trial court to address whether, in light of our holding with respect to the employee’s physical injuries, he suffered a compensable mental injury and if so, the extent of the employee’s psychiatric impairment and resulting permanent disability, if any.

1 Judge Pele I. Godkin delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board in which Presiding Judge Timothy W. Conner and Judge Meredith B. Weaver joined.

Carmen Y. Ware, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the employee-appellant, Jason Bednar

C. Douglas Dooley and Mickala J. Lewis, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the employer- appellee, Memorial Healthcare System d/b/a Memorial Hospital

Patrick Ruth, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tennessee Subsequent Injury and Vocational Recovery Fund

Factual and Procedural Background

Jason Bednar (“Employee”) began working as a registered nurse for Memorial Healthcare System d/b/a Memorial Hospital (“Employer”) in 2015. On January 30, 2018, Employee was assisting with the transfer of a patient when he allegedly felt a sharp pain in his back and legs. Employee reported the incident to Employer and was eventually authorized to see Dr. Richard Pearce, an orthopedic surgeon. After Employee received certain medical treatment, Employer elected to deny the claim and asserted that Employee’s complaints did not arise primarily out of the employment due to Employee’s preexisting physical and mental conditions.

Previous Relevant Medical Treatment

Employee has a lengthy history of receiving treatment for low back complaints. Following a car accident at the age of nineteen, Employee received chiropractic treatment for low back complaints. Several years later, in 2005, Employee reported low back pain while repositioning a patient at work. He received physical therapy and medication, and he reported his symptoms resolved in two to three weeks. Not long after, Employee was lifting stones at home when he injured his back again. Employee recalled minimal pain with no lower extremity issues and stated that his symptoms resolved quickly.

More significantly, in July 2006, while working for a previous employer, Employee was transferring a patient from a wheelchair to the bed when the patient fell, causing Employee to catch the patient under his arms and experience pain in his low back and legs. He reported the incident to his employer and submitted a workers’ compensation claim, which was accepted as compensable. He treated with Dr. David Lowry, who diagnosed him with degenerative disc disease at L4-5, a disc protrusion at L4-5, low back pain, spina bifida occulta at L5, and radiculitis in his right leg. Dr. Lowery placed Employee at maximum medical improvement in October 2006 and assigned a 5% impairment rating to the body as a whole. Employee settled his claim in 2007, retaining his entitlement to future medical benefits for the 2006 work injury.

2 In October 2008, Employee began seeing Dr. Stephen Musick on an ongoing basis for pain management for low back pain radiating into his left leg and foot. He described two prior back injuries: the motor vehicle accident when he was a teenager and the incident when he was moving stones. Throughout the course of his treatment, Dr. Musick prescribed medication, including gabapentin, oxycodone, fentanyl patches, and epidural steroid injections. In 2016, during a visit with Dr. Musick, Employee complained of severe pain that was only relieved by lying on his back and taking medication. During this visit, Employee’s wife requested a referral for a mental health care provider.

Thereafter, Employee was seen at Vanderbilt University Hospital’s emergency department with complaints of anxiety, depression, and “feeling out of control.” Employee reported an inability to focus or concentrate and constant sweating. The psychiatrist noted Employee reported “severe depression” that impacted his sleep and activities of daily living and diagnosed him with acute anxiety, acute-on-chronic depression, and musculoskeletal chest pain. Employee declined in-patient treatment. During his next visit with Dr. Musick, Employee discussed his treatment at Vanderbilt and requested amitriptyline for depression and anxiety. He also informed Dr. Musick that he had gone to Vanderbilt the previous day to have a skin cancer removed, which was more significant and painful than expected. Dr. Musick documented Employee’s increased stress due to his medical issues and adjusted his current narcotics prescriptions.

Shortly thereafter, Employee began therapy with a licensed social worker at Helen Ross McNabb Center with complaints of ongoing depression due to chronic back pain. The social worker initially diagnosed Employee with major recurrent moderate depression. However, during Employee’s next visit, the treating psychiatrist removed that social worker’s diagnosis, replacing it with a new diagnosis of generalized anxiety disorder (“GAD”). In subsequent visits, Employee described continuing depression and noted that Ativan, first prescribed by his primary care physician in 2009, was the only medicine that helped him.

Also in 2016, Dr. Musick referred Employee to Dr. Richard Pearce, an orthopedist, for treatment of his ongoing low back pain and right leg complaints from the 2006 work injury. During the evaluation, Employee complained to Dr. Pearce of worsening pain, anxiety, and depression. Dr. Pearce discussed various treatment options, including the possibility of a fusion at L4-5 and L5-S1, but Employee elected to continue with conservative treatment at that time.

In 2017, Dr. Musick referred employee to Dr. Gregory Ball for the assumption of pain management treatment. Employee first saw Dr. Ball in April 2017. Employee’s intake form revealed ongoing mental health complaints, and Dr. Ball noted that, although Employee continued to work full time as a nurse, he was unable to enjoy most outdoor activities. Employee described pain in his right low back, buttock, leg, and foot. Dr. Ball diagnosed Employee with, among other things, lumbosacral radiculopathy, chronic low

3 back pain, lumbar disc disease, lumbar spinal stenosis, inflammation of the right sacroiliac joint, and long-term prescription drug therapy, including opiates. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
2025 TN WC App. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bednar-jason-v-memorial-healthcare-system-dba-memorial-hospital-tennworkcompapp-2025.