Beene, Marshall v. Metro Services, Inc.

2016 TN WC 275
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedNovember 18, 2016
Docket2016-07-0264
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 TN WC 275 (Beene, Marshall v. Metro Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beene, Marshall v. Metro Services, Inc., 2016 TN WC 275 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

FILED Nov ember 18,2016

TN COURT OF W ORKERS' COMPINSATIO N CL\JMS

Tim.e 7: 15 .rn

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT CHATTANOOGA

MARSHALL BEENE, ) Docket No.: 2016-07-0264 Employee, ) v. ) METRO SERVICES, INC., ) State File Number: 66494-2014 Employer, ) And ) ACCIDENT FUND INS. CO., ) Judge Thomas Wyatt Insurance Carrier. )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER FOR ADDITIONAL MEDICAL AND TEMPORARY DISABILITY BENEFITS

This matter came before the undersigned Workers' Compensation Judge on November 3, 2016, upon the Request for Expedited Hearing filed by Marshall Beene pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-239 (2015). Mr. Beene seeks medical benefits, including authorization to see physicians to whom the authorized treating physician (ATP) referred him, as well as temporary disability benefits. Included among several issues the Court must decide are the work-relatedness of Mr. Beene's alleged cervical spine injury 1 and whether he has attained maximum medical improvement from his compensable injuries. For the fi llowing reasons the Court determines Mr. Beene is entitled to additional medical and temporary disability benefits?

History of Claim

Mr. Beene is a sixty-year-old resident of Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee, whom Metro Services employed to perform sheet metal work on a project to install a commercial HVAC system. (T.R. 1 at 1.) On August 21, 2014, Mr. Beene

1 Metro Services accepted the compensability of Mr. Beene's right elbow, rotator cuff and shoulder injuries. It, however, challenged the compensability of his alleged cervical spine injury. 2 The Court has attached a complete listing of the technical record and exhibits admitted at the Expedited Hearing to this Order as an appendix.

1 suffered injury when he fell from one of the top two rungs of an eight-foot ladder while installing ductwork. He testified he fell onto a slotted metal floor in such a manner that his "right elbow jammed into his neck." Metro Services and its carrier accepted Mr. Beene's injury as compensable.

After receiving emergent care, Mr. Beene saw orthopedic surgeon Dr. Brandon Cincere. (Ex. 5 at 15.) Dr. Cincere noted Mr. Beene complained primarily of right elbow pain. Dr. Cincere noted it was difficult to examine Mr. Beene's elbow because of the extreme level of pain with which he presented. /d. at 17.

Later, Dr. Cincere noted Mr. Beene reported a sharp burning pain from the right elbow to the neck in addition to severe right elbow pain. (Ex. 5 at 19.) He ordered testing and physical therapy. An MRI of the elbow revealed a tear of the superficial triceps tendon. An EMG of the right arm revealed moderate damage to the ulnar nerve and developing carpal tunnel syndrome. !d. at 2, 4.

In his November 18, 2014 note, Dr. Cincere recorded that Mr. Beene's physical therapist suggested cessation of therapy until Mr.Beene could obtain injections in his elbow. (Ex. 5 at 27.) Dr. Cincere referred Mr. Beene to Dr. Gregory Ball to "evaluate and treat for pain management." Injections performed by Dr. Ball reduced Mr. Beene's elbow pain, but did not improve the symptoms associated with his shoulder and rotator cuff injuries. 3 (Ex. 5 at 35 39.) Dr. Cincere ordered MRis of Mr. Beene's right shoulder and cervical spine. !d. at 29.

The MRI of the right shoulder showed multiple rotator cuff tears, moderate acromioclavicular arthropathy and mild rotator cuff impingement. (Ex. 5 at 10.) The cervical spine MRI revealed osteophytes causing canal and bilateral foramina! stenosis at the disc spaces between the C3 and C7 vertebrae. /d. at 11.

In June of 2015, Dr. Cincere surgically repaired Mr. Beene's rotator cuff tears, decompressed his right shoulder joint, and performed a suprascapular nerve block. /d. at 43. At the first post-op visit in August 2015, Mr. Beene reported improvement in his shoulder pain, but began reporting recurrence of significant right elbow pain. !d. at 52.

In September, Dr. Cincere noted Mr. Beene complained of sharp pain radiating down his right arm to his hand. (Ex. 5 at 55.) He noted that workers' compensation had stopped the physical therapy he ordered for Mr. Beene and stated that "unrealistic WC restrictions" had inhibited Mr. Beene's care. !d. at 56. Dr. Cincere referred Mr. Beene back to Dr. Ball for "ganglion injections ... and RSD treatment," and referred him to spine surgeon Dr. Todd Bonvallet for treatment of his cervical spine. /d. 3 Dr. Ball's initial treatment note of February 26, 2015, indicated he diagnosed Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy of the right-upper extremity. (Ex. 6 at 4.) Later in his notes, he referred to the diagnosis as Complex Regional Pain Syndrome. Id at 25. He appeared to use the diagnoses interchangeably.

2 During an October 2015 visit, Mr. Beene reported that workers' compensation had not approved the referrals to Drs. Ball and Bonvallet. (Ex. 5 at 58.) Dr. Cincere's response was, "WC carrier making it difficult to care for patient, interfering with my treatment, I have nothing left to offer the patient." !d. at 60. He referred Mr. Beene's ongoing care to Drs. Ball and Bonvallet. !d.

About the time Dr. Cincere declined to further treat Mr. Beene, the carrier for Metro Services obtained a records review IME from orthopedic surgeon Dr. Thomas Koenig. (Ex. 1.) Dr. Koenig issued a November 14, 2015 report that, among other opinions, stated Mr. Beene "does warrant the prescribed additional 2 to 3 stellate ganglion blocks that historically have provided 'great relief" !d. at 10. He also opined Mr. Beene would not attain maximum medical improvement until two to three months after the last stellate block. 4 !d.

Despite Dr. Koenig's and Dr. Cincere's treatment recommendations, Mr. Beene's treatment ground to a halt. On February 9, 2016, Dr. Cincere rated Mr. Beene's shoulder injury for impairment, setting the date of maximum medical improvement for the shoulder injury alone at January 19, 2016. 5 (Ex. 7.) Mr. Beene saw Dr. Ball on July 21, after more than a year's absence from his care. (Ex. 6 at 21, 23.) Dr. Ball opined that Mr. Beene needed another series of ganglion stellate blocks, accompanied by aggressive physical therapy, to treat the Complex Regional Pain Syndrome in his right-upper extremity. !d. at 23, 26. He stated Mr. Beene might attain maximum medical improvement in six to nine months from the date of the report "[w]ith cooperation with the work comp adjuster, and no delays in pursuing appropriate treatment options." !d. at 23.

Mr. Beene saw orthopedic surgeon Dr. Todd Bonvallet just once, in December 2015. (Ex. 2 at 1.) Upon review of the cervical-spine MRI, Dr. Bonvallet diagnosed Mr. Beene with degenerative and disc displacement conditions. He took Mr. Beene off work "until [the] next follow up appointment." !d. at 5-6. Mr. Beene, however, did not see Dr. Bonvallet again because Metro Services' carrier did not approve a follow-up appointment.

Mr. Beene filed his Petition for Benefit Determination on August 8, 2016, seeking a panel from which to select an ATP to replace Dr. Cincere; authorization to see Drs. Ball and Bonvallet; and additional temporary disability benefits. (T.R. 1 at 1.) After 4 Additionally, Dr. Koenig opined that, although he felt the diagnosis of Complex Regional Pain Syndrome in Mr. Beene's right-upper extremity was equivocal, the condition was work-related if Mr. Beene had it. (Ex. 1 at 8.) He stated the conditions in Mr. Beene's cervical spine and, possibly, his rotator cuff tear and right-shoulder arthrosis pre-existed Mr. Beene's fall at work. I d. 5 The records admitted into evidence do not establish that Dr. Cincere provided an impairment rating for Mr.

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2016 TN WC 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beene-marshall-v-metro-services-inc-tennworkcompcl-2016.