Blevins, Charity v. Southern Champion Tray, LP

2019 TN WC App. 28
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedJuly 11, 2019
Docket2018-01-0673
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 TN WC App. 28 (Blevins, Charity v. Southern Champion Tray, LP) 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
Blevins, Charity v. Southern Champion Tray, LP, 2019 TN WC App. 28 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

FILED Jul 11, 2019 11:30 AM(CT) TENNESSEE WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Charity Blevins ) Docket No. 2018-01-0673 ) v. ) State File No. 86761-2017 ) Southern Champion Tray, LP, et al. ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Compensation Claims ) Thomas L. Wyatt, Judge )

Affirmed and Remanded

In this interlocutory appeal, the employee alleges suffering a low back injury while performing her work duties. Based on the authorized physician’s opinion that the work incident aggravated the employee’s pre-existing condition but that greater than 51% of the cause was related to the employee’s degenerative pre-existing process, the employer denied the claim. The employee sought treatment from another physician whose responses to a questionnaire indicated the work incident more likely than not caused the employee’s need for medical treatment. Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court awarded medical benefits and ordered the employer to authorize further treatment with the physician sought out by the employee. The employer has appealed. While we disagree with certain determinations of the trial court, we affirm the trial court’s decision and remand the case.

Judge David F. Hensley delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board in which Presiding Judge Marshall L. Davidson, III, and Judge Timothy W. Conner joined.

Nicholas S. Akins, Nashville, Tennessee, for the employer-appellant, Southern Champion Tray, LP

R. Ethan Hargraves, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the employee-appellee, Charity Blevins

Factual and Procedural Background

Charity Blevins (“Employee”) worked for Southern Champion Tray, LP (“Employer”), as a machine operator. On November 10, 2017, she was in the process of clearing her machine of a jam, which was a routine part of her job. In clearing the jam,

1 she bent over and reached into the machine with a tool in one hand while pushing a button on top of the machine with her other hand. She reported that, while she was bent over, she felt a pop in her lower back accompanied by pain and spreading warmth over her low back. She was unable to stand up due to the pain, and she remained bent over until a co-worker noticed she was in distress. When the co-worker approached her, she was crying. Her supervisor was notified, and someone retrieved a wheelchair for her to sit in. She was taken to the breakroom where an accident report was completed. Because her symptoms worsened, her supervisor took her to the emergency room.

At the emergency room, Employee reported she had been bending over a machine when she felt a sudden pop and a warm sensation across her lower back. She denied a history of previous back problems. X-rays did not reveal evidence of an acute trauma, and she was discharged.

Due to Employee’s persistent symptoms, Employer instructed her to go to WorkForce Corporate Health where she was seen by Dr. Jayant Eldurkar three days after the incident. He noted she experienced the sudden onset of low back pain with a sharp pop while she was leaning over her machine. He diagnosed her with a lumbar strain, prescribed medication, and assigned work restrictions. He also ordered an MRI, which was completed on November 28 and interpreted by the radiologist as revealing a “central disc protrusion at L4-5, mildly compressing the L5 nerve root origins and creating moderate central canal stenosis.” When Employee returned to Dr. Eldurkar she reported she was no better and complained of tingling on her right side. At that visit, Dr. Eldurkar referred Employee for a spine consultation.

Employer subsequently provided Employee a panel of physicians from which she selected Dr. Rickey Hutcheson. She saw Dr. Hutcheson one time, and he diagnosed her with lumbar degenerative disc disease, a disc protrusion, and low back pain. In a section of his reported titled “Causation,” he included the following:

Based on recent literature of the AMA Guide to Evaluation of Disease and Injury Causation, Second Edition, in my opinion, I would have to say that greater than 51% of the causation is more related to her degenerative pre- existing process and not a work-related injury in that there was no event that occurred at work. I feel that she just has an aggravation of a pre- existing condition.

Addressing the MRI, Dr. Hutcheson disagreed with the radiologist’s impression of an L4- 5 central disc protrusion “creating moderate central canal stenosis,” stating the MRI

showed degenerative disc[s] at L4-5 and L5-S1 with disk protrusion at L4-5 without significant nerve root compression. It was read as moderate central stenosis but I disagree. I do not think there is moderate central stenosis.

2 Dr. Hutcheson’s report stated that he gave Employee steroids and “put her on medical restrictions,” adding that “[a]s far as workers’ comp is concerned, there are no restrictions, but as far as medical is concerned, I put her on medical restrictions.”

On December 13, 2017, Employer denied the claim. Employer subsequently sent Dr. Hutcheson a questionnaire on which he marked responses indicating Employee has “multilevel degenerative disc disease” that pre-existed the work incident, that her “low back pathology” is not primarily related to the November 10, 2017 incident at work, and that Employee did not suffer any anatomical change in the condition of her lumbar spine as a result of the incident at work.

Employee thereafter sought an evaluation with Dr. Paul Broadstone for complaints of low back pain that radiated into her right leg. She described bending over a machine at work and feeling her back pop, followed by a burning sensation in her low back. Dr. Broadstone diagnosed her with degenerative disc disease and ordered physical therapy. He also prescribed medications and assigned work restrictions. Employee testified she did not follow up with Dr. Broadstone because she lost her job and, with it, her medical insurance.

On June 28, 2018, Dr. Broadstone responded to a questionnaire sent by Employee, indicating that Employee’s back injury was “historically related to [the] bending incident,” and that the incident more likely than not caused her need for medical treatment. Dr. Broadstone noted on the questionnaire that Employee had “no history of previous back issues.” 1

At an expedited hearing, Employer asserted that Dr. Hutcheson was the authorized physician and that his causation opinion should be afforded a statutory presumption of correctness. In addition, Employer argued that Employee did not present sufficient proof to rebut the statutory presumption. Employee, on the other hand, asserted she had successfully rebutted the presumption. The trial court agreed with Employee, finding her testimony that she had not experienced significant back pain before the work incident to be credible. The trial court concluded that Employee injured her back as a result of the November 2017 incident and that the injury “significantly advanced the severity of her pre-existing degenerative disc disease, which was mostly asymptomatic before the injury occurred.” Thus, according to the trial court, the issue was “whether the medical evidence establishe[d] that [Employee] is likely to prove at trial that her back condition arose primarily out of and in the course and scope of [her] employment.” The court concluded that, when viewed with Employee’s credible testimony, “the medical evidence entitles [Employee] to medical benefits.”

1 At the expedited hearing, Employee testified that she had seen Dr. Broadstone again in October 2018. The notes from that visit are not contained in the record on appeal.

3 In reaching its decision, the trial court stated that it “gives limited weight to Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 TN WC App. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blevins-charity-v-southern-champion-tray-lp-tennworkcompapp-2019.