Foster, Bessie v. Andy Frain Services, Inc.

2018 TN WC 186
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedNovember 20, 2018
Docket2018-08-0237
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 TN WC 186 (Foster, Bessie v. Andy Frain Services, 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
Foster, Bessie v. Andy Frain Services, Inc., 2018 TN WC 186 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2018).

Opinion

FILED Nov 20, 2018

01:39 PM(CT)

TENNESSEE COURT OF

CLAIMS

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

AT MEMPHIS BESSIE FOSTER, ) Docket No. 2018-08-0237 Employee, ) Vv. ) ANDY FRAIN SERVICES, INC., ) State File No. 1227-2017 Employer, ) ) And ) Judge Allen Phillips CONTINENTAL NATIONAL ) INDEMNITY CO., ) Carrier. )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER FOR MEDICAL BENEFITS

Ms. Foster requested medical benefits for an injury occurring on December 30, 2016. Specifically, she requested that Andy Frain Services, Inc. (Frain) pay for surgical revision of a knee replacement. The Court conducted an Expedited Hearing on November 7, 2018, and holds Ms. Foster is entitled to the requested surgery.

History of Claim

On December 30, 2016, Ms. Foster was working for Frain as a security guard when a golf cart ran over her right foot and knocked her to the ground. On that day, she went to Methodist Hospital and complained of right foot, right knee, right shoulder and neck pain. According to the radiologist, x-rays revealed implantation of a knee replacement but the findings were otherwise normal. On January 12, 2017, Ms. Foster received authorized care at Baptist Family Physicians where she complained of, among other things, “acute” right knee pain. At a follow-up visit, a provider recommended orthopedic evaluation.

Frain authorized Ms. Foster to see Dr. Apurva Dalal, an orthopedic surgeon. On

WORKERS' COMPENSATION March 15, Ms. Foster told Dr. Dalal of pain in her foot, neck, and shoulder.' X-rays of those body parts proved negative. However, Dr. Dalal’s primary concern was a possible deep vein thrombosis (DVT) given Ms. Foster’s complaints and his examination. Thus, he recommended an ultrasound of the right leg.

On March 22, Dr. Dalal noted the ultrasound was negative for DVT. But he also recorded that Ms. Foster said her right ankle, hip, and knee were twisted when the cart ran over her foot. An x-ray of the foot on that date revealed a fracture of Ms. Foster’s right third toe. On March 28, Dr. Dalal responded to Frain’s inquiry about the cause of Ms. Foster’s complaints in light of a report that Ms. Foster had fallen getting out of bed. Dr. Dalal attributed all of Ms. Foster’s problems to the December 30 incident despite the fall by explaining that she suffered weakness in her foot since the work event and that led to her fall at home.

Ms. Foster returned to Dr. Dalal on May 31 and said she had seen another orthopedist that provided her with an ankle brace. Further, Ms. Foster complained that her right knee and hip had hurt since the incident but “nobody has paid attention” to those body parts. On that date, Dr. Dalal found diminished motion of Ms. Foster’s right knee due to swelling and pain and said he was “convinced she had an injury to the right knee” due to the incident. He requested Frain approve treatment.

By June 7, Frain had approved treatment for the knee and Dr. Dalal found severe tenderness in the lateral compartment. An x-ray revealed a lateral patella subluxation, or tilt, which he said indicated a ligament tear. He recommended a CT scan which did not show “hardware dysfunction.” However, his clinical exam led him to believe a ligament tear was causing knee instability. Specifically, his examination demonstrated Ms. Foster’s knee “came out a lot more than it should” when he pulled it toward the front (anterior instability) and that her knee “gaped open a lot more than it should” when he torqued it inward (medial instability). Dr: Dalal’s continued findings of instability on subsequent examinations prompted him to recommend the revision of Ms. Foster’s knee replacement. He stated to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the need for surgery arose primarily from the December 30 incident.

Frain requested a medical record review by Dr. Riley Jones, an orthopedic surgeon. In a January 8, 2018 report, Dr. Jones recounted Ms. Foster’s treatment and concluded her “injury was a contusion of the right foot and a sprain to the right lower leg which was resolving when she injured herself at home. . . .” Namely, he attributed the fractured toe and sprained ankle to her fall getting out of bed and those injuries had “nothing to do with her original injury.” Further, he said the records contained only “intermittent” complaints of knee pain and the CT scan revealed no hardware

' Dr. Dalal clarified in his deposition that his initial note mistakenly listed the Jeff extremity but that Ms. Foster had complained of the right.

z dysfunction. Dr. Jones did not relate Ms. Foster’s complaints to the December 30 incident. Dr. Jones wrote this report before he examined Ms. Foster.

On March 6, Dr. Jones performed a physical examination of Ms. Foster. She complained of pain in both knees but had no difficulty moving about the examination room. Dr. Jones said he could not “reproduce the laxity that Dr. Dalal had found” and there was no “opening” of the joint in either flexion or extension “under x-ray.” He reviewed the December 30 x-rays taken at Methodist Hospital and said they showed “chronic” changes in the “patella button” placed during the knee replacement surgery. He believed placement of the patella button at an angle led to “grooving” of the patella bone, which in turn led to the patella shift noted by Dr. Dalal. He attributed no anatomic changes to the December 30 incident but requested a bone scan for completeness. After the scan revealed no abnormalities, he maintained his original opinion that the December 30 incident did not cause Ms. Foster’s complaints.

Dr. Dalal “disagreed totally” with Dr. Jones’s opinions. Specifically, he pointed to the “gross instability” of Ms. Foster’s knee that he found on several visits, in addition to swelling and the tilted patella. Further, Ms. Foster told him “repeatedly” that her knee “bothers her” and that it “gives out.” Dr. Dalal said “for some unknown reason” Dr. Jones did not “detect instability in the knee joint” and said surgery was unnecessary. He also noted Dr. Jones provided his initial causation opinion in a report generated before examining Ms. Foster. He testified Ms. Foster told him that she functioned without restriction at work and at home before the incident.

Based on this evidence, Ms. Foster claimed entitlement to the recommended surgery. She did not testify but instead argued from the medical records. She noted Dr. Dalal’s testimony that her need for surgery arose primarily out of the December 30 incident and that he focused on the clinical findings of ligament instability as opposed to Dr. Jones’s focus on the absence of hardware dysfunction. Also, she pointed to Frain’s misplaced focus on her later fall rather than the direct cause, the December 30 incident. Finally, she argued Dr. Dalal’s opinion is presumed correct because he is the authorized physician and that Frain did not rebut it by a preponderance of the evidence.

Frain countered that Dr. Jones had the benefit of reviewing all the medical records, including x-rays from Methodist Hospital. It argued Dr. Dalal did not see the hospital x-rays and was mistaken when he attributed any prosthetic dysfunction to the work incident. Frain asserted Dr. Dalal focused primarily on Ms. Foster’s ankle and foot and when he found nothing to treat, then found a knee problem. Frain contended the delayed observation of a knee issue coupled with Dr. Jones’s explanation of no objective findings attributable to the incident rebutted the presumption of correctness attached to Dr. Dalal’s opinion. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

At this interlocutory proceeding, Ms. Foster must show she would likely prevail at a hearing on the merits regarding her surgery request. Tenn. Code Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 TN WC 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-bessie-v-andy-frain-services-inc-tennworkcompcl-2018.