Harrison v. Comprehensive Home Health Care

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedMay 17, 1995
DocketI.C. No. 147633
StatusPublished

This text of Harrison v. Comprehensive Home Health Care (Harrison v. Comprehensive Home Health Care) 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
Harrison v. Comprehensive Home Health Care, (N.C. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

The undersigned have reviewed the prior Opinion and Award based upon the record of the proceedings before Deputy Commissioner Shuping. 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.

The Full Commission adopts the findings of fact found by the Deputy Commissioner as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff is an unemployed, 42 year-old married female. She is a high school graduate and in 1972 completed her training as a registered nurse at Southeastern Community College, but has not since received any further formal education and/or vocational or technical training. Other than working in retail sales while in college and in tobacco, all her prior work experience has been in the nursing field providing or directing home health care services or working in hospitals or nursing homes.

2. When injured plaintiff was employed by defendant Comprehensive Home Health Care as an admission nurse and had worked there for approximately seven years both as an admission nurse and director of home health care services.

3. As an admission nurse plaintiff was responsible for performing the initial medical assessment of each home health care patient not only requiring her to complete the necessary paperwork; but among other physical activities associated with assessing these same patients required her to carry a 15 to 20 pound bag of medical equipment as well as scales to weigh the patients, deliver their needed supplies, lift or assist in lifting of the same patients and to drive for extended distances in reaching them, which involves the type of medium level work she can no longer do because of the permanent back injury sustained on May 28, 1991.

4. Although she had a long history of chronic back pain and resulting episodes thereof requiring her to be out of work, including one in January of 1991 when she was out of work for a month and continued to receive physical therapy until at least early April of that year and another less than a week before the involved back injury; plaintiff had always subsequently recovered from the same episodes enabling her to return to her regular medium level job as an admission nurse and had never experienced the type of incapacitating back and particularly right leg pain that she has since the injury she sustained on May 28, 1991 resulting in her being unable to return to her regular admissions nurse job or the type of medium level work she had done in performing it.

5. On May 28, 1991 plaintiff sustained the same back injury when a deer ran out in front of her vehicle, which (injury) materially aggravated her existing, but then non-incapacitating chronic back pain thereby proximately contributing to her ultimate disability and resulting in the incapacitating back and right leg pain she has since experienced.

6. On the same date plaintiff was treated at the Emergency Room of Columbus County Hospital, which provided medication and recommended she be seen by her family physician for follow-up, Dr. Hodgson. Two days later plaintiff came under the care of Dr. Hodgson, who similarly provided a continued conservative course of treatment consisting of medication as well as bedrest until ultimately referring her to a Wilmington neurosurgeon for evaluation, Dr. Sattler.

7. On August 8, 1991 plaintiff was seen by Dr. Sattler who not only recommended continued medication and a trial of physical therapy; but that she be treated locally by Dr. Hodgson because of her difficulty driving.

8. In the interim on July 29, 1991 at the request of the involved servicing agent plaintiff was seen for a one time evaluation by a Wilmington orthopedic surgeon, Dr. John A. Azzato, who similarly recommended a course of physical therapy for her incapacitating pain.

9. Plaintiff subsequently received physical therapy for the involved back injury locally and remained under the care of Dr. Hodgson, who continued to provide a conservative course of treatment for her disabling back and right leg pain until October 17, 1991. When Dr. Hodgson advised the rehabilitation involved, Beth Hunnicutt, of American Eagle Rehabilitation Services, that it would be at least three to six months before plaintiff could return to light work, she refused to authorize him to continue treating plaintiff and instead referred her to a neurosurgeon for evaluation, Dr. Daniel J. Miller of Wilmington.

10. On December 11, 1991 plaintiff was initially seen by Dr. Miller and he subsequently referred her for a diagnostic EMG to Dr. Fred Stowe, a Fayetteville neurologist, to determine whether she had a S1 radiculopathy when he saw her in follow-up in March of 1992. Dr. Miller recommended a diagnostic myelogram and CT scan because of the positive results of the EMG she had undergone; however, the same testing was not performed because a dispute arose between plaintiff and Dr. Miller over the course of treatment and he then terminated the physician-patient privilege on May 6, 1992 and as a result the further testing recommended was not done at the time.

11. When she returned to Dr. Hodgson on July 8, 1992 because of her incapacitating back and right leg pain he not only gave her a note indicating that it was his opinion that she was not ready to return to work, but recommended she attempt to obtain authorization from the rehabilitation nurse involved to be evaluated by Dr. David Kelly, the Winston-Salem neurosurgeon, who on February 20, 1992 he had suggested plaintiff see for a second opinion in the event Dr. Miller recommended surgery because of the S1 radiculopathy shown on EMG testing.

12. Although on one occasion in July of 1992 plaintiff attempted to return to work for defendant-employer; she was unable to because of her incapacitating back and right leg pain and was subsequently terminated from defendant's employ on July 23, 1992.

13. Ultimately on August 10, 1992 Dr. Hodgson specifically referred plaintiff to Dr. Kelly for evaluation and he initially saw her on August 28, 1992 and recommended conservative treatment as well as a diagnostic myelogram and CT scan that Dr. Miller earlier had, but had not been done.

14. In the interim two days earlier plaintiff was seen at defendant-employer's request by Dr. John T. Langley, a Kinston orthopedic surgeon, for a one time evaluation, who felt she should be able to return to light work. At that time, however, plaintiff had neither reached maximum medical improvement and/or the end of the healing period from and following her May 28, 1991 back injury nor was she able to return to her regular medium level admissions nurse's job — much less to light work; but rather, remained totally incapacitated by the same injury. Even assuming arguendo, however, that she had sufficiently recovered from the involved back injury so as to be capable of light duty work; defendant-employer never offered to provide her with the same work during the healing period; but rather, had terminated her from its employ a month earlier.

15. Plaintiff ultimately reached maximum medical improvement and/or the end of the healing period from and following her May 28, 1991 back injury on or about March 19, 1993 when Dr. Kelly rated her for permanent-partial disability, at which time she retained a five (5) percent permanent-partial disability of the back as a result of the same injury and because of her permanent back injury is unable to return to her regular admissions nurse's job or similar medium level work; but rather, only to light to sedentary work not inconsistent with the limitations described in the stipulated Estimated Functional Capacity Form filled out by Dr. Kelly on January 30, 1993 at the request of the rehabilitation nurse involved.

16.

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Harrison v. Comprehensive Home Health Care, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-comprehensive-home-health-care-ncworkcompcom-1995.