Hill v. Iasis Glenwood Regional Medical

195 So. 3d 536, 2016 WL 2899251, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 994
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 18, 2016
DocketNo. 50,531-WCA
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 195 So. 3d 536 (Hill v. Iasis Glenwood Regional Medical) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Iasis Glenwood Regional Medical, 195 So. 3d 536, 2016 WL 2899251, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 994 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

MOORE, J,

hlASIS Glenwood Regional Medical Center (“Glenwood”) appeals a judgment of the Office of Workers’ Compensation finding that Lisa Hill, a registered nurse, sustained a work-related injury and was entitled to temporary total disability (“TTD”) benefits from the last day she worked and to medical services, including a back surgery. We affirm.

Factual Background

Ms. Hill had been employed by Glen-wood as an RN on the cardiac floor since October 2012, at an average weekly wage of $1,024.83. She testified that about 5:30 pm on April -30, 2013, she was trying to reposition a large patient from the right to the left side of her bed, when she (Ms. Hill) felt a sudden pain in her neck and back. Aside from the patient, no one else witnessed the incident. Ms. Hill completed her shift, but the' next day, May 1, she reported the incident to her supervisor and then-went'to her family doctor, Dr. Yar-brough, and .was actually seen by a nurse practitioner, Matilda Stephens.

On the May 1 visit, Nurse Stephens detected some sciatic nerve damage and ordered X-rays which showed bilateral L5 spondylolysis with Grade 1 spondylolisthe-sis; she took Ms, Hill off work, gave her some pain medications and muscle relaxers and ordered an MRI. Glenwood began paying her TTD benefits of $605 a week, effective May 14.

On referral from Dr. Yarbrough’s office, Ms. Hill went, to a neurosurgeon, Dr. Jorge Alvernia, on June 17. She reported a sudden onset of pain from lifting a patient, describing it as “dull and gnawing” but with no radiating effects. The MRI, taken May 16, showed L5/S1 Grade 1 | gspondylolisthesis, for which Dr. Alvernia recommended physical therapy. He also released Ms. Hill to return to light-duty work and ordered a functional capacity evaluation (“FCE”), Ms. Hill testified that she attended therapy for about six weeks and returned to work at Glenwood, in the “chart audits” office and at her normal pay. She also admitted that after seeing Dr. Alvernia, she called Dr. Yarbrough’s office and tried to get a referral to a different neurosurgeon, but they never gave- her an answer 5

Ms. Hill took the FCE on August 23; the report is not in the record, but Dr, Alvernia testified that it showed she could “tolerate the physical demands of the medical work load.” Despite the spondylolis-thesis at L5/S1 and the appearance of “new symptoms,” he felt she could work. Ms. Hill, however, testified that the exertion of the FCE increased her pain level and caused a new pain, radiating down her right leg. Ms. Hill saw Dr. Alvernia’s colleague, Dr. Baker, three times in October through December, always complaining of this radiating pain, sometimes into the left leg. Dr, Alvernia testified that as of December 18, he could make no objee-[539]*539tive findings and would recommend treatment at a pain clinic. He released her to full-duty work on December 9;

At Glenwood’s request, Ms. Hill submitted to an examination by its choice of neurosurgeon, Dr. Jorge Martinez, on January 2, 2014. Glenwood did not offer Dr. Martinez’s report into evidence or call him as a witness.

Ms. Hill testified that she worked without restrictions for a while, but the pain got worse, radiating all the way down to her left foot and even making her unstable. She kept at the job until January 22, 2014, when she |squit and moved to the Dallas area to live with her boyfriend.

Once in Dallas she requested, and the OWC approved, treatment with a.new doctor, Dr. Shaad Bidiwala, at. Texas Neurosurgery. ■ Based on’ his examination, a new MRI and the history provided by Ms. Hill, Dr. Bidiwala found an aggravation of spon-dylolisthesis, caused or contributed to by the accident at Glenwood on April 30, 2013. He recommended surgery to correct the problem, took her off work as of February 28, 2014, and projected that she could not return to work until post-surgery. , He admitted there was no. published scientific literature stating that trauma can induce spondylolisthesis, but was firm in his opinion that the accident Ms. Hill described aggravated, it and made it symptomatic.

Procedural History

On March 3, 2014, Ms. Hill sent a demand letter to Glenwood for the surgery recommended by Dr. Bidiwala. Glenwood did not respond; Ms. Hill filed the instant contested claim on July 1,2014.,

Glenwood admitted only Ms. Hill’s former employment status, average weekly wage and compensation rate. It denied that any accident occurred, as it was not reported until the next day, and that she was currently disabled, as Dr. Alvernia had twice released her to'return to work. Mostly, however, it alleged that the “incident” of April 30, 2013, neither caused nor contributed to her current medical condition. It produced a sheaf of medical records showing an array of prior complaints of back pain, including (1) a November 1999 visit to West Carroll. Health System for back and body pain, with a diagnosis of bilateral spondylolysis at L5 but , no Insignificant spondylolisthesis; (2) three treatments with Dr. Dan Holt, a chiropractor in Monroe, in April and'May 2012, for a pinched nerve'in her right shoulder and neck, and low back pain; and (3) nine treatments at “The Joint,” a chiropractic clinic in Monroe, from July to September 2012, for essentially the same complaints. Glenwood also argued that Ms. Hill omitted to mention these prior issues to Drs. Alvernia and Bidiwala; on cross-examination, counsel got Dr. Bidiwala to admit, “I’m not contending that the spondylolis-thesis was caused by her lifting the pa-tientfj”

. At trial, in January 2015, the only live witness was Ms. Hill, who described the accident, her course of medical treatment and her gradually worsening pain. ■ Glen-wood attempted to impeach her with her pretrial deposition, in which she did not recall many details of her prior medical issues. She responded that most of those prior issues were in the neck and shoulder, which she ascribed to picking up babies and carseats in her prior work as a sitter, but said they were never really disabling, like -the current pain. She also showed that she promptly supplemented her deposition to include a- full list of doctors and treatment.

Ms. Hill also offered OWC documents relating to her claim, and her amended answers to interrogatories admitting her prior medical treatment.

[540]*540Glenwood offered hospital records from West Carroll Health System and from its own physicians, Drs. Alvernia and Baker, and office records from the chiropractors. The parties jointly offered the depositions of Drs. Alvernia and Bidiwala, and of Nurse Stephens.

| ¡¡Roughly four months after trial, the WCJ ruled from the bench. After recapping the facts, she stated that she “put great emphasis on this change in condition” in reaching her conclusion, especially that the MRI ordered by Dr. Bidiwala showed “more encroachment on the nerves than what appeared in the earlier MRI.” She accepted Dr. Bidiwala’s opinion that Ms. Hill’s spondylolisthesis probably predated the accident but was not symptomatic until after it. The WCJ cited the prior treatment for neck and shoulder pain, but applied the presumption of causation to find that the accident caused Ms. Hill’s current condition. She therefore awarded TTD of $605 a week, effective February 28, 2014, until Ms. Hill was released to return to work, and ordered Glenwood to provide medical treatment, including the surgery recommended by Dr. Bidiwala. Finally, the court cited Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 3d 536, 2016 WL 2899251, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-iasis-glenwood-regional-medical-lactapp-2016.