H. Mazuruk v. WCAB (Gillin and Sons Contracting, Inc.)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 26, 2016
Docket1216 C.D. 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of H. Mazuruk v. WCAB (Gillin and Sons Contracting, Inc.) (H. Mazuruk v. WCAB (Gillin and Sons Contracting, Inc.)) 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
H. Mazuruk v. WCAB (Gillin and Sons Contracting, Inc.), (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Henry Mazuruk, : Petitioner : : No. 1216 C.D. 2015 v. : : Submitted: February 5, 2016 Workers’ Compensation Appeal : Board (Gillin and Sons Contracting, : Inc.), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH FILED: August 26, 2016

Henry Mazuruk (Claimant) petitions for review from the June 15, 2015 order of the Worker’s Compensation Appeal Board (Board), which affirmed a Workers’ Compensation Judge’s (WCJ) decision granting Gillin & Sons Contracting, Inc.’s (Employer) petition to modify Claimant’s compensation benefits from “temporary total” to “temporary partial” based on an impairment rating of 24% performed pursuant to section 306(a.2) of the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act).1

1 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §511.2, added by the Act of June 24, 1996, P.L. 350. In Protz v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Derry Area School District), 124 A.3d 406, 416 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (en banc), we held that section 306(a.2) of the Act was an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority because the General Assembly “proactively approved versions of the AMA Guides beyond the Fourth Edition without review.” (Emphasis in (Footnote continued on next page…) Facts and Procedural History On December 10, 2007, Claimant sustained a work-related injury when he fell from a ladder during the course of his employment. Employer issued a notice of compensation payable (NCP), accepting liability for his injuries consisting of a non-displaced fracture of the eleventh and twelfth ribs and awarding compensation benefits at a rate of $598.61 per week. On or about June 13, 2008, Employer filed a termination petition, alleging that Claimant had fully recovered from his work injury. On or about June 23, 2008, Claimant filed a review petition to amend the NCP to correct the description of injury to include a back injury, cervical spine injury with radiculopathy, lumbar radiculopathy, and left shoulder injury. By order dated May 22, 2009, a WCJ denied Employer’s termination petition concluding that Employer failed to meet its burden to prove that Claimant had fully recovered from his work- related injuries, granted Claimant’s review petition, and modified the NCP to include injuries to “Claimant’s neck, left shoulder, upper back, lower back, including, specifically, compression trauma to the thoracic and lumbar vertebrae, including an L4 vertebral fracture, lumbar radiculopathy at L5, lumbar sprain, cervical radiculopathy at C7-8 and disc herniations at C3 to C7, left shoulder sprain and posttraumatic myofascitis.” (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 125a.) Employer subsequently filed a request for designation of a physician to perform an impairment rating evaluation (IRE) and Dr. Lance Yarus was designated to perform the IRE. Dr. Yarus performed the IRE and determined that Claimant had an impairment rating of 24%. On May 11, 2012, Employer filed a petition to modify

(continued…)

original). On March 22, 2016, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court granted appeal to review. Protz v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Derry Area School District), 133 A.3d 733 (Pa. 2016).

2 Claimant’s compensation benefits, requesting that Claimant’s benefits be modified to “temporary partial” based on Dr. Yarus’s impairment rating. Claimant filed an answer denying the material allegations of Employer’s petition. (R.R. at 3a-4a, 94a- 96a.) In support of its petition to modify compensation benefits, Employer submitted the deposition testimony of Dr. Yarus, a board certified orthopedic surgeon with certifications in pain management, disability, impairment evaluation, and forensic examination. Dr. Yarus testified that he is designated by the Pennsylvania Bureau of Workers’ Compensation (Bureau) to perform IREs under the Sixth Edition of the American Medical Association Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Injuries (AMA Guides) and that he has met the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry’s certification standards to perform IREs because he took a Bureau-approved training course. Dr. Yarus noted that a revised version to the Sixth Edition of the AMA Guides exists; however, he stated that the training course he took was taught by the author of the first version of the Sixth Edition of the AMA Guides. (R.R. at 62a- 63a.) Dr. Yarus confirmed that he performed an IRE of Claimant on March 19, 2012, and testified that he reviewed Claimant’s medical records, conducted a physical examination, and generated a report containing the results. Dr. Yarus further testified that his report specified that the compensable injury involved the cervical and lumbar spine, as well as rib fractures, and explained the method for ascertaining an individual’s impairment rating:

[I]mpairment rating is for the diagnoses that were pertaining to an underlying process, that is, the injury itself. When that injury occurs, the diagnosis will be consistent with whatever part of the body the actual injury occurred. Once you have that, you have to determine what part of that

3 injury is still present and accounted for. And once you have a diagnosis, that drives the rest of the process, in this edition particularly, of how you would modify it, how would you interact with whether or not testing was considered applicable or not, because in some cases it wouldn’t be because it’s already incorporated into the diagnosis.

Then you come up with a mathematically designed number that reflects the whole person impairment. . . . You’re looking at a midline default number, and you’re going to go to the right or left of that number as you move along the process of determining what’s germane to the injury and what’s still present . . . . (R.R. at 66a.) Dr. Yarus testified that, after performing an IRE, the first determination that must be made is whether the individual has reached maximum medical improvement (MMI) and, pursuant to the Sixth Edition of the AMA Guides, MMI is defined as a point in time when the injured individual has reached a status where additional treatment will not improve his or her condition beyond the current state. He clarified that an individual may continue to exhibit symptoms and treatment for those symptoms may be available; however, the underlying impairment itself does not change. Dr. Yarus further testified that he believed Claimant had reached MMI when he saw him and concluded that, within the confines of the Sixth Edition of the AMA Guides, Claimant had a total impairment rating of 24%. He explained that:

I start out with the cervical spine. We come up with a diagnosis, which is the intervertebral disc herniations or documented Aomsi at a single or multiple level, medically documented findings, with or without surgery, with documented radiculopathy at the clinically appropriate level present at the time of the exam. It basically says that he had a disc problem, and we know that there was at C6, and the radiculopathy came along with that. . . .

4 The percentage of impairment for the cervical spine is 12 percent. Same thing for lumbar spine going through that whole process. . . .

We came up with 13 percent, because again, starting at 12, moving to the right we’re at 13. We talked about the fracture at L4 not being ratable. They were already considered in the diagnoses. The other thing that was part of the information is the rib fractured [sic]. They were healed.

And again, when you’re rating, you can’t rate just because somebody had something in the past.

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