Hcr Manorcare v. Wcab (Bollman)
This text of 951 A.2d 1242 (Hcr Manorcare v. Wcab (Bollman)) 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.
Opinion
HCR MANORCARE, Petitioner
v.
WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEAL BOARD (BOLLMAN), Respondent.
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.
*1243 Harry J. Klucher, Pittsburgh, for petitioner.
Peter J. Gough, Greensburg, for respondent.
BEFORE: McGINLEY, Judge, PELLEGRINI, Judge, and COHN JUBELIRER, Judge.
OPINION BY Judge PELLEGRINI.
HCR ManorCare (Employer) appeals an order of the Workers' Compensation Appeal Board (Board) affirming the Workers' Compensation Judge's (WCJ) decision to reassign Employer's request for a Utilization Review Determination of Barbara Bollman's (Claimant) medical treatment by Mark LoDico, M.D. (Dr. LoDico) to a Utilization Review Organization (URO). We affirm because it was within the WCJ's jurisdiction to order the reassignment of this case to the URO.
Claimant sustained a work-related back injury on November 13, 2001, while working for Employer for which she received medical treatment from Dr. LoDico. Employer filed a request for Utilization Review of all office visits, all treatments, prescriptions, operative procedures and diagnostic testing provided to Claimant by Dr. LoDico for the period of August 31, 2005, and forward. The Bureau of Workers' Compensation (Bureau) assigned the request to the URO, C.A.B. Medical Consultants, which obtained Dr. LoDico's records. Because the required Verification Form[1] did not accompany the records, *1244 the URO did not forward Dr. LoDico's records to John Johnson, M.D. (Dr. Johnson), who was to perform the Utilization Review. Because he received no medical records from Dr. LoDico which could be reviewed, Dr. Johnson issued a Utilization Review Determination on December 13, 2005, concluding that the treatment by Dr. LoDico was neither reasonable nor necessary. Claimant then filed a petition for review of the Utilization Review Determination requesting a hearing to determine the reasonableness or necessity of her treatment by Dr. LoDico for her work injury.
At the hearing before the WCJ, Claimant offered into evidence deposition testimony from Toni Sinkiewicz (Sinkiewicz), the URO's Utilization Review Coordinator. She stated that she received the request from the Bureau on October 24, 2005, and had assigned the Utilization Review to Dr. Johnson after determining that he had the same Board certifications as Dr. LoDico. She testified that to the best of her knowledge, a Certification Form was sent out with the letter she mailed to Dr. LoDico's office on October 24, 2005, requesting the records, and she sent the letter by certified mail with return receipt requested. In the letter, she informed Dr. LoDico that his records had to be submitted within 30 days of the date of the letter and stated that his records were due by November 18, 2005. She called his office this same date to notify him of the request and spoke to his office manager, Amy Barkley. Ms. Sinkiewicz stated that because she did not receive Dr. LoDico's records and the Verification Form, she again requested them by a letter and phone call on November 14, 2005, and again by phone call on November 18, 2005. She stated that she received the medical records on November 22, 2005, but did not forward them to Dr. Johnson because there was no signed Verification Form. Instead, she returned the medical records to Dr. LoDico that same date. She admitted on cross-examination that she miscounted the 30 days from the date of her letter, and Dr. LoDico would have had time to submit a Verification Form had he been informed.
Also offered into evidence without objection was a letter to Claimant's counsel dated January 13, 2006, from Dr. LoDico's physician assistant, Jason Fantini, stating: "Records were requested from our office for utilization review on Barbara Bollman. Those records were mailed on November 17, 2005. They were returned to our office stating they needed a verification page. Our medical records specialist called and requested a verification page and one was never sent. Our office manager is currently looking into the issue." A second letter offered into evidence dated February 8, 2006, also without objection, was from Dr. LoDico's case manager, Cheryl Gilmore, R.N., stating: "Please find enclosed a copy of the letter that we received from C.A.B. Medical Consultants dated November 30, 2005, stating they were returning the records we had sent as there was not a signed verification accompanying them. We had requested the verification page upon submitting the medical record at the onset. Both our office manager and medical records specialist had called them to request a verification page so that we could resend the records. They were told it was too late to resubmit the records and a verification page would not be forthcoming."
After accepting these letters into evidence, the WCJ found Ms. Sinkiewicz credible that she sent the Notification Form to Dr. LoDico's office, but he also *1245 found that Dr. LoDico did not receive the Notification Form. Nonetheless, the WCJ made the following finding of fact:
8. Dr. Lodico's office should have requested the verification form by a telephone call or by fax when the requested record was mailed on November 17, 2005, one day before the requested due date and six days before the expiration of the 30-day period. Ms. Sinkiewicz could have contacted Dr. Lodico's office by telephone, as she had three times previously, when she received Dr. Lodico's records on November 2, 2005, within the 30-day period but without the verification form. She may have accepted the November 18, 2005 date which she stated in her letter of October 24, 2005 as the end of the 30-day period. In any event she elected to return Dr. Lodico's records on the same date that she elected to assign the review to Dr. Johnson, November 22, 2005.
The WCJ then concluded that there should be an order for another Utilization Review of Dr. LoDico's injury treatment as requested by Employer and issued an order assigning the request for a Utilization Review Determination to the URO. Both parties appealed to the Board, which affirmed the WCJ, and this appeal by Employer followed.[2]
On appeal, Employer contends that the Board erred by affirming the WCJ's order directing reassignment of Claimant's Utilization Review request because the WCJ made no specific findings regarding issues over which the WCJ had jurisdiction. What jurisdiction a WCJ has to hear an appeal from the URO determination where medical treatment was found to be unnecessary based on the failure of the provider to properly transmit its medical records is set forth in Gazzola v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board (Ikon Office Solutions), 911 A.2d 662 (Pa.Cmwlth.2006).
In Gazzola, the issue on appeal was whether the physician/provider timely provided the claimant's medical records to the URO in accordance with the URO's request when they were received two days after the 30-day time period. Relying on County of Allegheny v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board (Geisler), 875 A.2d 1222 (Pa.Cmwlth.2005), for the proposition that a WCJ does not have jurisdiction to determine the reasonableness of medical treatment unless a report is issued, and that 34 Pa.Code § 127.464(b)(1)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
951 A.2d 1242, 2008 WL 2596652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hcr-manorcare-v-wcab-bollman-pacommwct-2008.