Bolieu v. Our Lady of Compassion Care Center

983 P.2d 1270, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 89, 1999 WL 553466
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1999
DocketS-8528
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 983 P.2d 1270 (Bolieu v. Our Lady of Compassion Care Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolieu v. Our Lady of Compassion Care Center, 983 P.2d 1270, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 89, 1999 WL 553466 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Gwen Bolieu and Bodhmati Oliver appeal the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board’s denial of benefits for treatment of rashes that they allegedly contracted while working at Our Lady of Compassion Care Center. The employees argue that the Board improperly limited its inquiry to whether they contracted staph A infections. Because we agree that the Board’s inquiry was too narrow, we vacate the Board’s ruling and remand for determination of whether the rashes, even if caused by a source other than staph A, were work related.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Gwen Bolieu and Bodhmati Oliver worked as nursing assistants at Our Lady of Compassion Care Center (Our Lady), an Anchorage care facility for long-term, seriously disabled individuals. Bolieu started working for Our Lady in 1988; Oliver began in 1989. Both employees were responsible for such tasks as bathing patients and rendering oral care.

In July and August of 1990 Bolieu, Oliver, and seven other employees at Our Lady developed skin rashes and filed workers’ compensation claims. The Director of Quality Management at Our Lady, Kathleen Lum, sent the employees to First Care Medical Clinic to see Dr. Scott Mackie. At no point did a physician come to Our Lady to investigate the employees’ rash complaints.

In March and April of 1991 Bolieu, Oliver, and fourteen other employees again filed claims based on skin rashes. 1 On May 21, 1991, Bolieu and Oliver filed occupational illness reports with Our Lady, both citing “skin rash” as the nature of their injury. As a result, Our Lady sent both Bolieu and Oliver to see Dr. Mackie, who diagnosed Bolieu as having a probable case of impetigo and Oliver as having noninfectious dermatitis. In the summer of 1991 Bolieu and Oliver saw their treating physician, Dr. Michael Beirne, who diagnosed them both with staph A infections. 2

Our Lady began paying Temporary Total Disability (TTD) benefits to Oliver in June 1991 and to Bolieu in July 1991. Oliver stopped receiving TTD benefits when she resigned from Our Lady in November 1991.

In January 1992 Bolieu was treated for an abscess on her breast. Dr. Danny Robinette of Elmendorf Hospital testified before the Board that the abscess was probably related to a staph infection 3 from which Bolieu suffered.

Our Lady then requested that both Bolieu and Oliver be referred to a series of infectious disease specialists for Independent Medical Evaluations (IMEs). In March 1992 Dr. Burton Janis confirmed that Bolieu tested positive for staph A but could not conclude whether or not the infection was work related. In July 1992 Dr. Janis stated that *1273 he did not believe Bolieu was ever medically unstable and that he did not think her lesions were work related. He noted that “up to 40% of normal people have staphylococcus aureus [staph A] in their nose.” In response to Dr. Janis’s report, Our Lady discontinued Bolieu’s TTD benefits on August 31, 1992.

Dr. Janis verified that Oliver had resigned from Our Lady because of her skin disorders. Dr. Janis diagnosed Oliver with an infection “probably associated [with a] sta-phylo[co]ecal species” and possible allergic condition. Dr. Janis stated his belief that Oliver’s skin condition was not work related and that she was medically stable on or before March 2,1992.

Based on Dr. Janis’s evaluations, Our Lady sent a controversion notice to Bolieu in September 1992 and to Oliver in December 1992 denying future benefits to both employees. In response, Bolieu and Oliver, through counsel, each filed an Application for Adjustment of Claim alleging that they contracted work-related staph infections. 4 Bolieu listed the nature of her injury in her Application for Adjustment of Claim as “staph infection”; Oliver listed hers as “skin rash.”

Bolieu and Oliver saw another specialist, Dr. Paul Roberts, for an IME in January 1994. Dr. Roberts reported that Bolieu suffered from “[r]ecurring crops of papular pruritus” that might be treatable by a dermatologist. He also stated that although he could not tell whether Bolieu was still suffering any ill effect from the staph infection, she had not received adequate therapy for it up until that point. Nevertheless, he found “no medical reason to restrict Ms. Bolieu from her prior employment as a nurse’s aide.” With respect to Oliver, Dr. Roberts stated that she was medically stable and that her lesions were gone.

The Board sent Bolieu and Oliver to Dr. Elaine Jong for a second independent medical examination 5 in June 1994. Dr. Jong stated that she did not believe Bolieu suffered from a recurrent staph A infection and that to determine whether Bolieu had a different work-related infectious condition “one would have to review other records relating to the health of patients [at Our Lady].” Dr. Jong concluded that Bolieu became medically stable as of January 13, 1992. Dr. Jong stated her opinion that Oliver was medically stable in November 1991, and that Oliver might have an allergic condition requiring future treatment. Dr. Jong did not believe that either employee’s condition was related to her employment at Our Lady.

In May 1995 Our Lady filed a petition to dismiss both employees’ claims on the grounds that the injuries were not work related. The Board conducted a hearing in December 1996. In its February 1997 decision, the Board framed the issue as “[whether the employee[s] contracted Staphylococcus aureus coagulase positive (Staph A) from [their] employment with the employer.” The Board denied both Bolieu’s and Oliver’s claims, finding that “the employee[s] did not contract Staph aureus while working for the employer.”

Bolieu and Oliver consolidated their cases in April 1997. In January 1998 the superior court affirmed the Board’s ruling, stating that “substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding that Bolieu and Oliver did not contract [staph A] at the Center.” Bo-lieu and Oliver appeal. 6

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

We independently review a Workers’ Compensation Board’s decision to deny or award benefits. “Because the superior court acted as an intermediate court of appeal, we give no deference to its decision.” 7

Generally, we will uphold the Board’s decision “if substantial evidence ex *1274 ists to support the Board’s findings of fact.” 8 We define substantial evidence as “that which a reasonable mind, viewing the record as a whole, might accept as adequate to support the Board’s decision.” 9

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Bluebook (online)
983 P.2d 1270, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 89, 1999 WL 553466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolieu-v-our-lady-of-compassion-care-center-alaska-1999.