Burwick, William v. Amazon.com, Inc.

2022 TN WC 87
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedDecember 12, 2022
Docket2021-01-0705
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 TN WC 87 (Burwick, William v. Amazon.com, 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
Burwick, William v. Amazon.com, Inc., 2022 TN WC 87 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2022).

Opinion

FILED Dec 12, 2022 12:43 PM(ET) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

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

William Burwick, ) Docket No.: 2021-01-0705 Employee, ) v. ) Amazon.com, Inc., ) State File No.: 47431-2021 Employer, ) And ) American Zurich Insurance Co., ) Judge Audrey Headrick Carrier. )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER

Mr. Burwick requested medical and temporary disability benefits for facial and neurological injuries. Amazon denied the claim, asserting his injury was idiopathic and did not arise out of his employment. For the reasons below, the Court holds Mr. Burwick is likely to prevail at trial in establishing his entitlement to the requested benefits.

History of Claim

On June 14, 2021, a hot day, Mr. Burwick loaded packages from Amazon’s warehouse into two unairconditioned trailers. Typically, he only loaded packages into one trailer. As he did so, he recalled sweating profusely and feeling lightheaded and slightly dizzy. He then lost consciousness and fell, sustaining facial and neurological injuries.

Mr. Burwick was transported by helicopter to the hospital. His wife told medical providers his history of brain surgeries and postoperative seizures controlled by Depakote. Dr. Daniel Sakaan stated: “Given story of patient collapsing while at work and patient later recalling that he felt hot and presyncopal [sic] I believe the patient likely had seizure induced by overexertion and heat exhaustion.”

Dr. Sakaan treated Mr. Burwick’s facial lacerations and diagnosed a closed-head injury and closed fractures around his right eye. He referred Mr. Burwick to a plastic surgeon, Dr. Todd Thurston, for the eye fractures and restricted him from operating motor vehicles or heavy machinery until cleared by a neurologist.

1 Later, Mr. Burwick completed an accident report at Amazon. In it, he stated he “had been loading two trailers and noted being very hot and having trouble breathing. [He] had begun to feel lightheaded and dizzy before falling.” Amazon gave Mr. Burwick a panel, from which he selected Dr. Natasha Ballard, an urgent care physician.

On June 18, Mr. Burwick told Dr. Ballard that he “passed out due to working in an under air-conditioned dock loading trucks.” Dr. Ballard reviewed Amazon notes describing “multiple employees helping [Mr. Burwick] at the time of his injury reported him being unresponsive, jerking, yelling.” She said Mr. Burwick needed to be cleared by a plastic surgeon and neurologist before returning to work and concluded causation was “[u]ndetermined.”

On the same day, Amazon completed a Notice of Denial and sent a letter to Mr. Burwick stating his claim did not qualify for workers’ compensation benefits. Amazon later told Mr. Burwick the denial was based on several witness statements.

After its denial, Amazon authorized Mr. Burwick to see Dr. Thurston for his eye fractures. Dr. Thurston recommended Mr. Burwick return to work on June 22 and, at a follow-up visit, released him from care to return as needed.

Mr. Burwick then sought unauthorized treatment with Dr. Michael Yu, a neurologist with whom he treated after his 2020 brain surgeries. Dr. Yu noted that Mr. Burwick’s last seizure was in October 2020. After Mr. Burwick described the June 14 incident, Dr. Yu believed it was “unlikely a seizure.” Dr. Yu concluded he “[m]ore likely [had a] syncopal event related to dehydration and excessive heat exposure.” Dr. Yu released Mr. Burwick to return to work on June 28 without restrictions.

Amazon terminated Mr. Burwick on June 26 for job abandonment.

Approximately a year later, Amazon sent Mr. Burwick for an independent medical evaluation with Dr. Paul Banick, a pulmonologist, due to his oxygen level at the time of his hospitalization. Dr. Banick concluded that pulmonary disease did not cause the June 14, 2021 syncopal episode and agreed with Dr. Yu’s opinion that the episode was caused by dehydration and heat exposure. Mr. Burwick then returned to Dr. Yu, who reiterated his opinion that the incident was not a seizure and “was likely [a] syncopal event related to dehydration and excessive heat exposure.”

After Dr. Banick’s evaluation, Dr. W.G. Strickland, a neurologist, performed a records review evaluation for Amazon. Dr Strickland disagreed with Dr. Sakaan’s opinion because Mr. Burwick’s temperature was 97.4 degrees at the time of the incident, and a witness statement said he did not appear to be having heat distress before the incident. He also disagreed with Dr. Yu’s diagnosis of a syncopal episode, noting Mr. Burwick

2 experienced combativeness and a prolonged alteration of consciousness. Dr. Strickland concluded that Mr. Burwick suffered a seizure “likely related to his seizure history secondary to brain tumor/surgery in 2020” and not to his work environment.

At the hearing, Mr. Burwick testified about his past seizures. He suffered one in August 2020 while recovering from craniotomies performed in March and June, and another one in October because he had not consistently taken his Depakote and drank too much caffeine. Mr. Burwick had no seizures after he began taking his medication as directed and reduced his caffeine intake.

Mr. Burwick also testified about his medical treatment and bills. He stated that, other than the visits with Drs. Ballard and Thurston, Amazon did not pay for any treatment he received for the work injury. Mr. Burwick submitted outstanding bills from the following providers: Bradley County Emergency Medical Services, Erlanger Medical Center, Med-Trans, The Plastic Surgery Group, PC, University Surgical Associates, LLC, Dr. Vicente Meja, Middle Tennessee Neurology, and Tennessee Interventional & Imaging Associates.

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

To recover benefits at an expedited hearing, Mr. Burwick must show he would likely prevail at a hearing on the merits. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(d)(1) (2022). The threshold issue is whether Mr. Burwick suffered an idiopathic injury or a work injury. An idiopathic injury has an “unexplained origin or cause, and generally does not arise out of the employment unless ‘some condition of the employment presents a peculiar or additional hazard.’” Frye v. Vincent Printing Co., 2016 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 34, at *11 (Aug. 2, 2016) (internal citation omitted). “Cause” in this context “means that the accident originated in the hazards to which the employee was exposed as a result of performing his or her job duties.” Id. at *12. For his part, Mr. Burwick presented undisputed testimony that he loaded packages into two unairconditioned trailers on a hot day and experienced lightheadedness, dizziness, and profuse sweating before losing consciousness and injuring himself when he fell. He also introduced medical opinions confirming that he likely suffered a syncopal episode due to his working conditions that day. Amazon asserted that it properly denied Mr. Burwick’s claim four days after the incident occurred based on witness statements suggesting he suffered a seizure. Over a year later, Amazon bolstered its denial with Dr. Strickland’s report that Mr. Burwick had a seizure due to his 2020 brain surgeries. Amazon also argued that “[t]here is no record” suggesting “the exterior conditions” constituted a peculiar hazard to the employment.

3 After considering the evidence, the Court finds that Mr. Burwick’s manual labor in unairconditioned trailers on a hot day constituted a specific hazard of his employment. Therefore, he is likely to prevail at trial in establishing his injury was not idiopathic. The Court now turns to whether Mr. Burwick is entitled to medical benefits.

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2022 TN WC 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burwick-william-v-amazoncom-inc-tennworkcompcl-2022.