Chester County Hospital v. E. Bangert (WCAB)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 29, 2024
Docket1345 C.D. 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Chester County Hospital v. E. Bangert (WCAB) (Chester County Hospital v. E. Bangert (WCAB)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chester County Hospital v. E. Bangert (WCAB), (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Chester County Hospital and : Babb Absence & Safety Integrated : Services (BASIS), Inc., : Petitioners : : v. : No. 1345 C.D. 2022 : Submitted: December 4, 2023 Eileen Bangert (Workers’ : Compensation Appeal Board), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE LEAVITT FILED: January 29, 2024

Chester County Hospital and Babb Absence & Safety Integrated Services (BASIS), Inc. (collectively, Employer) petition for review of an adjudication of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) granting compensation benefits to Eileen Bangert (Claimant) for her back injury and denying her penalty petition. In doing so, the Board affirmed the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ). On appeal, Employer argues that the Board erred because the WCJ credited an equivocal medical opinion; the WCJ capriciously disregarded evidence; and the WCJ did not issue a reasoned decision. For the reasons to follow, we affirm the Board’s decision. Claimant worked as a registered nurse for Employer. On March 23, 2021, while examining an infant, she injured her lower back. Employer sent Claimant for physical therapy, and on April 12, 2021, issued a notice of compensation denial. Claimant then filed a claim petition under the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act),1 alleging that on March 23, 2021, she sustained an aggravation to her prior work-related back injury. Claimant also filed a penalty petition alleging that Employer violated Section 406.1(a) of the Act, 77 P.S. §717.1(a),2 by not investigating her claim. The matter was assigned to a WCJ. Claimant testified by deposition and in person before the WCJ. She stated that she worked for Employer in a light-duty position in the hospital nursery because of an earlier work injury to her back. That injury occurred in 1994, while Claimant was lifting an electrocardiogram (EKG) machine. After physical therapy, injections, and medication, she underwent back surgery in June and October 1995. Although Claimant returned to work in December 1997, she never fully recovered from this injury. Claimant testified that on March 23, 2021, around 2:30 p.m., she placed a newborn infant in a crib for a head-to-toe assessment. When she turned the baby onto its stomach, she experienced a sharp pain in her lower back that left her “unable to straighten back up.” Claimant Depo. at 12; Reproduced Record at 84a (R.R. __).

1 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§1-1041.4, 2501-2710. 2 Section 406.1(a) of the Act, added by the Act of February 8, 1972, P.L. 25, states, in relevant part: The employer and insurer shall promptly investigate each injury reported or known to the employer and shall proceed promptly to commence the payment of compensation due either pursuant to an agreement upon the compensation payable or a notice of compensation payable as provided in section 407 or pursuant to a notice of temporary compensation payable as set forth in subsection (d), on forms prescribed by the department and furnished by the insurer. 77 P.S. §717.1(a).

2 As the pain dissipated, she was able to stand back up and finish her shift. However, on the ride home, Claimant experienced “stabbing pains down to [her] toes in both feet that was not letting up.” Claimant Depo. at 14; R.R. 86a. The following day, Claimant reported this injury to Employer. Claimant initially treated at Occupational Health, which prescribed exercises and pain medications. She then saw Ronald M. Lieberman, D.O., at the Injury Care Center, and he ordered a computed tomography (CT) scan and a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan. She also saw Joseph Richards, D.O., at the Injury Care Center for nerve root injections.3 Claimant testified that as a result of the incident on March 23, 2021, she suffers “pain that radiates [] into [] both legs.” Claimant Depo. at 19; R.R. 91a. Prior to this incident, this type of pain could be treated with ice. Now, it cannot. Claimant presented the deposition testimony of Dr. Lieberman, board- certified in physical medicine, rehabilitation and pain medicine. He first saw Claimant on April 12, 2021. Dr. Lieberman described Claimant’s “usual state of health” as having manageable, chronic back pain and being able to work. Lieberman Depo. at 8; R.R. 141a. Her chronic pain was caused by an L4-L5 disc herniation for which she underwent two hemilaminectomy procedures. Since the incident of March 23, 2021, which caused Claimant to freeze for a minute, Claimant has not returned to work. During Claimant’s physical examination, Dr. Lieberman found a “loss of light touch on the outside of both calves, weakness [in] . . . her ability to lift her foot up, or dorsiflexion weakness, on the left side and muscle spasms in the lumbar paraspinal muscles.” Lieberman Depo. at 10; R.R. 143a. Dr. Lieberman ordered

3 Claimant has received injections in the past, on average twice a year. WCJ Decision at 5, Finding of Fact (F.F.) No. 5.h.

3 several diagnostic tests. A CT scan showed a disc bulge at the L4-L5 segment and bilateral facet hypertrophy, which Dr. Lieberman described as enlarged joints in the spine caused by surgery. An MRI scan also showed a thickening of the joints and ligaments on the right side. He believed that Claimant suffered an aggravation of her prior back injury, explaining as follows: “[Claimant] is bending over the crib, taking care of a baby, she develops back pain, she’s frozen. She stands up . . . . The most likely situation to explain her symptoms was that she stood up and rotated to the left.” Lieberman Depo. at 15; R.R. 148a. The rotation compressed the L5 spinal nerve in the narrowed spinal canal. Dr. Lieberman acknowledged that there was no change between Claimant’s 2019 MRI and the current one. He explained that a change was not needed to demonstrate a new injury. The MRI showed that she was susceptible to irritation at that level in the spine, and this irritation was manifested by her subjective complaints. He testified that an electromyography (EMG) test of May 10, 2021, confirmed a recent irritation to Claimant’s L5 spinal nerve, i.e., an acute injury. Dr. Lieberman acknowledged that on March 22, 2021, the day before her work injury, Claimant was diagnosed with low back pain, lumbosacral radiculopathy, history of lumbar laminectomy, spinal stenosis in the lumbar region, and degenerative lumbar intervertebral disc. Those diagnoses are almost identical to her current diagnoses, except for her current diagnosis of lumbar radiculopathy. Lumbosacral radiculopathy implies irritation of the S1 spinal nerve. Lumbar radiculopathy, by contrast, implies irritation to all the nerves above the S1 point, including L5, L4, L3, L2 and L1.

4 Dr. Lieberman opined that Claimant sustained a work injury in the nature of an exacerbation of post-laminectomy syndrome, lumbar radiculopathy, and lower back pain. She has not fully recovered from this injury. Employer introduced the deposition testimony of Christian Fras, M.D., board certified in orthopedic surgery and a specialist in spinal surgery. He testified that Claimant had a long history of back problems. Her treatments included occupational treatment, prescription pain medication, and physical therapy. For a number of years, Claimant has received nerve root injections at the Injury Care Center. At his independent medical examination (IME) of Claimant, she reported low-back and tailbone pain. She also described bilateral buttock pain, pain in both groin regions, right more than the left, and perineal pain. Claimant fell in 2000, and again in 2013. Both incidents further worsened her back pain. In his physical examination, Dr. Fras found Claimant to have a normal gait and full strength in all muscle groups.

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Chester County Hospital v. E. Bangert (WCAB), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chester-county-hospital-v-e-bangert-wcab-pacommwct-2024.