Bubbenmoyer v. Cherry Hospital

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedApril 15, 2002
DocketI.C. NO. 812291.
StatusPublished

This text of Bubbenmoyer v. Cherry Hospital (Bubbenmoyer v. Cherry Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bubbenmoyer v. Cherry Hospital, (N.C. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

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The Full Commission has reviewed the Deputy Commissioner's Opinion and Award based on the record of the proceedings before the Deputy Commissioner. The appealing party has not shown good grounds to reconsider the evidence, receive further evidence, rehear the parties or their representatives, and having reviewed the competent evidence of record, the Full Commission hereby affirms the Opinion and Award with minor modifications.

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The following findings of fact and conclusions of law were entered into by the parties by Pretrial Agreement as:

STIPULATIONS
1. All parties are properly before the Commission and the Commission has jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter.

2. At all times relevant to this claim, an employer-employee relationship existed between Jeannette Bubbenmoyer and Cherry Hospital.

3. The employer is self-insured.

4. Defendant has denied liability and plaintiff has not received any disability benefits; nor has defendant paid for any medical treatment since the date of injury.

5. The parties stipulate to and submit nine (9) enumerated exhibits:

Plaintiff's recorded statement taken June 3, 1998

Plaintiff's deposition taken August 9, 2000

Records for patient Celia Lawrence from Cherry Hospital

Plaintiff's employment records

Industrial Commission Form 18 and additional employment records

Plaintiff's responses to defendant's interrogatories

Plaintiff's Social Security Disability Application and Records

6. Additional Stipulations by the Parties, including:

a. Jennette Bubbenmoyer (hereinafter "plaintiff") was attacked by a Cherry Hospital patient, Celia Lawrence, on or before May 1, 1995.

b. At the time of the attack, plaintiff was having depression problems for which she was being treated by multiple physicians.

c. Plaintiff took leave without pay from July 10, 1995, to September, 1995. Thereafter, she applied for and received short-term disability benefits.

d. Plaintiff returned to work on January 29, 1996. She worked until February 9, 1996. She has not returned to work in any capacity, since this date.

e. Plaintiff's average weekly wage was $360.00. Her compensation rate for the purpose of computing benefits is $240.00 per week.

Plaintiff's medical records from:

North Carolina Neuropsychiatry

Dr. Joseph Creech

Blue Ridge Family Practice

Alternatives

Dr. Asha Kohli

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The competent evidence of record engenders the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. Plaintiff initially worked for defendant from 1981 to 1985 as an Emergency Medical Technician. Plaintiff took other employment but returned to defendant beginning April 1, 1993, as a Health Care Technician (hereinafter "HCT") in the Behavior Modification Unit (hereinafter "BMU"), which houses violent patients.

2. On November 19, 1993, Dr. Joseph Jan Creech, an internist, noted that plaintiff suffered from anxiety and stress.

3. The parties stipulated that on or before May 1, 1995, a severely emotionally disturbed, but very strong female patient, attacked plaintiff. Defendant's records indicate that the attack was February 18, 1994.

4. The patient's attack startled plaintiff. The patient's attack consisted of grabbing plaintiff's hands, screaming and behaving violently. Plaintiff was undoubtedly frightened by this attack but she was physically uninjured to any appreciable degree.

5. Plaintiff sought treatment from Dr. Richard K. Torrey, Blue Ridge Family Practice, on May 3, 1994. Dr. Torrey diagnosed fatigue of an unknown etiology, anxiety, and depressed mood. He noted that plaintiff's stress at work was a factor in her condition.

6. Plaintiff continued to work in the BMU following her attack until July 10, 1995. Plaintiff left defendant on leave without pay from July 10, 1995, until September, 1995.

7. Between February 18, 1994, through July 10, 1995, plaintiff consulted with Dr. Creech on eight occasions and missed four scheduled appointments. One of the appointments was missed because plaintiff was working. On April 13, 1994, she reported "marked fatigue." On March 20, 1995, Dr. Creech recorded a one-year history of fatigue and malaise, and indicated that plaintiff questioned whether she was suffering from depression. Dr. Creech prescribed Prozac and ordered tests to rule out physical etiology of her symptoms. On April 5, 1995, plaintiff reported that she was not working at Hospital for some five weeks. She had not started the Prozac previously prescribed. A week later, plaintiff returned reporting fatigue, especially upon exertion. She did not undergo the physical tests previously ordered.

8. Plaintiff testified that for the seven months after leaving defendant in July 1995, she was unable to undertake a normal life and was limited to care for her essential human needs.

9. Dr. Creech's records indicate that after July 1995, through February 1996, plaintiff made five appointments with Dr. Creech and presented herself at four. During each of these visits Dr. Creech noted that she was experiencing stress at work. On August 9, 1995, she reported that she "did not like her job." At the time, plaintiff was out of work. Dr. Creech recommended a psychiatric consultation and removed plaintiff from work for one month.

10. On August 29, 1995, plaintiff saw B. Steven Bentsen, M.D., a psychiatrist, at the request of Dr. Creech. On that date, Dr. Bentsen reported that plaintiff's work conditions at defendant contributed to her major depression.

11. Under all of the circumstances, including plaintiff's own discussions with her doctors about her job stress, by August 29, 1995, if not sooner, plaintiff was informed and on notice that her condition was related, at least in part, to her employment with defendant-employer. Based on the medical records and plaintiff's testimony, it is a reasonable and fair assumption that Dr. Bentsen informed plaintiff that her job contributed to her depression.

12. Plaintiff participated in group therapy from September 6, 1995, until October 5, 1995. She did not follow up with Dr. Bentsen, and Dr. Creech certified plaintiff to return to work by January 30, 1996.

13. During her absence from work at defendant, plaintiff applied for and was granted short-term disability through her employment. Dr. Creech certified to the Retirement Systems Division of the State of North Carolina that plaintiff was disabled and unable to perform her regular job from July 19, 1995, until January 30, 1996.

14. Plaintiff returned to work with defendant in the BMU from January 29, 1996, until February 9, 1996.

15. Plaintiff's employment records reflect that defendant offered to change her work assignment to another unit of the hospital, and several alternative jobs were discussed. Notes of conversations between plaintiff and defendant-employer indicate that plaintiff considered these options, but plaintiff did not return to work.

16. Plaintiff has not returned to work since February 9, 1996, in any capacity.

17. Plaintiff returned to Dr. Torrey on February 7, 1996. He removed her from work at defendant until February 11, 1996. On this appointment, Dr. Bentsen again related plaintiff's emotional condition to the stress from her employment and family problems.

18.

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