Frady v. Belding Corticelli Thread Company

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedMarch 6, 1998
DocketI.C. No. 355800
StatusPublished

This text of Frady v. Belding Corticelli Thread Company (Frady v. Belding Corticelli Thread Company) 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
Frady v. Belding Corticelli Thread Company, (N.C. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

The undersigned have reviewed the prior Opinion and Award based upon the record of the proceedings before Deputy Commissioner Hoag and the briefs and oral arguments before the Full Commission. The appealing party has not shown good ground to reconsider the evidence, receive further evidence, rehear the parties or their representatives, or amend the Opinion and Award, except with correction of a date in the Conclusion of Law.

***********
The undersigned finds as fact and concludes as matters of law the following, which were entered into by the parties at the hearing as:

STIPULATIONS
1. The parties are subject to and bound by the provisions of the North Carolina Workers' Compensation Act.

2. An employer-employee relationship existed between plaintiff and defendant-employer at all relevant times.

3. Sentry Insurance Company is the carrier on the risk.

4. The average weekly wage can be obtained from the Form 21 Agreement.

5. Plaintiff is currently receiving temporary total disability payments.

6. The following medical reports have been stipulated into the record:

a. Park Ridge Hospital Occupational Health (1 p.)

b. Dr. Guthrie's notes (2 pp.)

c. Notes of Dr. Kroll (1 p.)

d. Notes of Dr. Desmond (1 p.)

e. Notes of Dr. Eaton (2 pp.)

f. Notes of Dr. Moody and Radiology report (3 pp.)

g. Blue Ridge Rehabilitation Medicine (4 pp.)

h. All medical records included in the Industrial Commission file

i. The parties did not stipulate to the introduction of reports completed by occupational health and vocational rehabilitation specialists.

7. The issues for resolution are:

a. Did plaintiff unreasonably and unjustifiably refuse medical treatment to which he was ordered to submit by the Industrial Commission by refusing to complete work hardening and rehabilitation programs as well as medical examinations?

b. If so, are defendants entitled to suspend payment of temporary total disability compensation to plaintiff?

c. Is plaintiff entitled to implantation of a spinal cord stimulator?

d. Is plaintiff completely and totally disabled?

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The Full Commission adopts the Findings of Fact found by the Deputy Commissioner, with minor modifications, as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. Plaintiff, born on 16 February 1965, was thirty-one years of age at the time of the hearing. He worked for Belding Corticelli Thread Company when he sustained an admittedly compensable low back injury on 27 June 1993, while lifting a tray of thread weighing approximately twenty pounds.

2. Plaintiff presented to the emergency room of Park Ridge Hospital in Hendersonville, North Carolina, where he was given a myelogram. The myelogram was negative, although the procedure resulted in leakage of spinal fluid. Plaintiff was prescribed physical therapy treatments and was released to return to work on 28 June 1993 with the restrictions of no standing, walking, stooping or lifting, but he failed to do so. He was not satisfied with his medical treatment.

3. Plaintiff had only several physical therapy treatments at the Occupational Health Clinic of Park Ridge Hospital. He was referred, at his request, for an orthopaedic evaluation by Dr. Todd Guthrie on 27 July 1993.

4. Prior to plaintiff's initial consultation with Dr. Guthrie, he underwent a lumbar MRI scan which was reported as normal, except for slight scoliosis. Dr. Guthrie diagnosed a right sacroiliac sprain and recommend that plaintiff continue working light duty with the restrictions of no prolonged sitting, standing, walking, lifting, bending or stooping. Plaintiff was not satisfied with Dr. Guthrie's evaluation or recommendations. On the witness stand, plaintiff insisted that he was not given a diagnosis by Dr. Guthrie or others that his back condition was merely a strain. Further, he was unaware whether or not he had, in fact, sustained a lumbar or sacroiliac strain.

5. Plaintiff next consulted Dr. Larry Kroll, an orthopedist in Asheville, North Carolina on 11 August 1993. Dr. Kroll diagnosed plaintiff as having a lumbar strain and ordered him to continue with his therapy and keep a follow-up appointment with Dr. Guthrie.

6. Dr. Guthrie scheduled plaintiff for a lumbar myelogram and lumbar CT scan on 30 August 1993. The results showed a minimal posterior disc bulge at L3-4, with no evidence of disc herniation or free disc fragments.

7. Subsequent to his myelogram, plaintiff developed increasingly severe headaches over the next two days, necessitating a return to the Park Ridge Hospital Emergency Room on 1 September 1993.

8. Dr. Guthrie requested that an anesthetist, Dr. Martin K. Abbott, treat plaintiff upon his return to the emergency room. Dr. Abbott diagnosed plaintiff's headaches as having been caused by a spinal leak at L4-5 that failed to close following his myelogram. Dr. Abbott closed plaintiff's spinal leak with an epidural blood patch.

9. On 7 September and 23 September 1993, plaintiff again presented to Dr. Guthrie, while continuing his course of physical therapy and medication, where he was given an epidural steroid injection.

10. During the course of his physical therapy at the Park Ridge Hospital Occupational Health Clinic, plaintiff was placed in a traction machine and left unattended. The machine placed pressure on plaintiff's legs. The resulting pressure caused an exacerbation of plaintiff's low back and radicular pain.

11. Plaintiff petitioned the Industrial Commission to have his care transferred to Dr. Robert Eaton, an orthopaedic surgeon in Hendersonville, North Carolina.

12. On 5 January 1994, plaintiff presented to Dr. Mark Moody, a spinal surgical specialist in Asheville, North Carolina, who recommended plaintiff for evaluation at Blue Ridge Behavioral Medicine Clinic. Dr. Moody scheduled plaintiff for a diskogram and repeat CT scan of the lumbar spine. On 14 March 1994, plaintiff underwent the diskogram procedure and a post-diskogram CT scan. The results of these tests showed minimal degenerative changes at L4-5 and L5-S1, but no disc herniation or disc bulge at any level. With the findings of the diskogram and CT scan, Dr. Moody concluded that plaintiff was not a surgical candidate. Dr. Moody recommending that plaintiff enroll in a Blue Ridge Rehabilitation Medicine comprehensive pain management and work hardening program, due to his diagnosis of myofascial pain and his deconditioning.

13. Plaintiff was scheduled to be evaluated by Dr. Jon Silver, an Asheville, North Carolina, neurosurgeon, on two occasions in March 1994. Both appointments were canceled due to plaintiff's refusal to attend.

14. On 31 March 1994, plaintiff presented to Blue Ridge Rehabilitation Medicine for an initial evaluation and psychological consultation prior to entry to the pain management/work hardening program. At that time, psychological testing revealed clinically significant levels of somatization (99th percentile). Plaintiff's presentation included significant preoccupation with his symptomology and a certitude of disease or severe injury. It was recommended that plaintiff be admitted to an outpatient comprehensive functional restoration program that consisted of twenty outpatient visits that included medically supervised treatment to eliminate plaintiff's use of narcotic analgesics.

15. In November 1993, defendants retained the services of Comprehensive Rehabilitation Associates, Inc., to provide assistance in the medical management of this claim.

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Bluebook (online)
Frady v. Belding Corticelli Thread Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frady-v-belding-corticelli-thread-company-ncworkcompcom-1998.