KY. EMPLOYERS SAFETY v. Lexington
This text of 291 S.W.3d 683 (KY. EMPLOYERS SAFETY v. Lexington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
KENTUCKY EMPLOYERS SAFETY ASSOCIATION, Appellant,
v.
LEXINGTON DIAGNOSTIC CENTER; Lee Kirkland; Honorable John B. Coleman, Administrative Law Judge; and Workers' Compensation Board, Appellees.
Supreme Court of Kentucky.
Thomas L. Ferreri, Ferreri & Fogle, Louisville, KY, Gregory Lonzo Little, Ferreri & Fogle, Lexington, KY, Counsel for Appellant, Kentucky Employers Safety Association.
Kevin Wayne Weaver, Sturgill, Turner, Barker & Moloney, PLLC, Lexington, KY, Counsel for Appellee, Lexington Diagnostic Center.
OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal results from a medical fee dispute between an employer and its workers' compensation insurance carrier.[1] At issue is whether a healthcare worker who was splattered in the face and eye with blood sustained a compensable injury and, as a consequence, whether the employer or the insurance carrier bears liability for the expense of OSHA-required prophylactic testing. Affirming a decision by the Workers' Compensation Board, the Court of Appeals determined that the worker sustained a compensable injury and, thus, that the carrier was liable. We affirm but our reasoning differs.
Being splattered in the face and eye with foreign blood or other potentially infectious material is a traumatic event for the purposes of KRS 342.0011(1). The presence of blood in the eye constitutes an *684 exposure as defined in 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1030(b), which shows a harmful change in the human organism, i.e., the introduction of foreign blood or potentially infectious material into the worker's body.
KRS 342.0011(1) provides as follows:
"Injury" means any work-related traumatic event or series of traumatic events, including cumulative trauma, arising out of and in the course of employment which is the proximate cause producing a harmful change in the human organism evidenced by objective medical findings. "Injury" does not include... any communicable disease unless the risk of contracting the disease is increased by the nature of the employment. "Injury" when used generally, unless the context indicates otherwise, shall include an occupational disease ... but shall not include a psychological, psychiatric, or stress-related change in the human organism, unless it is a direct result of a physical injury[.]
The worker was splattered in the face and eye with blood and saline while flushing a patient's I.V. line. He notified the employer and sought medical treatment immediately after the incident occurred, at which point the applicable post-exposure protocol was initiated. It required a series of five office visits that included tests for bloodborne pathogens, for a total cost of about $700.00. The carrier paid for the first two visits and part of the third but resisted further payment, stating that its policy was to pay for an initial test and one follow-up "as a matter of custom and practice and a courtesy to its members." The carrier asserted that an exposure has the potential to harm but does not constitute an injury until such time as objective medical findings show that it produced a harmful change in the human organism.
The carrier supported its position with testimony from Dr. Wolens, who stated that OSHA requires an employer to provide post-exposure prophylaxis for workers who are exposed to blood and certain body fluids. Although he opined that an exposure to the risk of infection is not synonymous with an injury, he did not state that the protocol at issue was unreasonable or unnecessary treatment when foreign blood is spattered into the eye. Likening the present exposure to an exposure to coal dust, he stated that employers pay for tests to determine if employees have developed pneumoconiosis but that the workers' compensation carrier does not become liable until the exposure produces a harmful change that is shown with objective medical findings.
Affirming decisions by the Board and the ALJ, the Court of Appeals relied on authority that concerned psychological harm and held that contact with blood and other body fluids constitutes a "physical injury" under KRS 342.0011(1);[2] that blood spattered into the worker's eye caused a temporary change in the human *685 organism; and that the purpose of the protocol was to determine if a permanent change occurred.
Appealing, the carrier continues to assert that the employer failed to meet its burden of proof. The carrier argues that the Court of Appeals equated mere contact with blood and other body fluids with a physical injury, thereby extending the definition of injury to include a mere exposure to a potentially hazardous substance without regard to whether the exposure produced a harmful change shown by objective medical findings. Stating that the expanded definition would have far reaching impact on Kentucky employers and insurers, the carrier questions whether it would become liable for medical monitoring to determine whether workers' exposure to potentially hazardous substances or to repetitive motion has, in fact, produced a harmful change.
Neither an occupational disease, nor a gradual injury, nor any other harmful change in the human organism becomes compensable until it is shown by objective medical findings to exist. Chapter 342 views a sudden, accidental exposure to a substance that produces a harmful change as being an injury.[3] The present case concerns a single traumatic event. The carrier asserts that no objective medical evidence showed a harmful change in the human organism but does not dispute that blood splattered onto the worker's face and into his eye. Contrary to its assertion, the traumatic event produced a harmful change (the introduction of foreign blood into the worker's eye), regardless of whether subsequent objective medical findings showed the presence of an infection or other harmful change.
29 C.F.R. § 1910.1030 requires employers to protect all workers whose job duties may be reasonably anticipated to bring them into contact with blood and other potentially infectious materials.[4] When a worker is exposed to such materials, the regulation requires post-exposure prophylaxis as indicated by United States Public Health Service recommendations. 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1030(b) defines an exposure as being "a specific eye, mouth, other mucous membrane, non-intact skin, or parenteral contact with blood or other potentially infectious materials." Parenteral contact means "piercing mucous membranes or the skin barrier through such events as needlesticks, human bites, cuts, and abrasions." Thus, mere contact with blood or other potentially infectious materials may or may not constitute an exposure.
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291 S.W.3d 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ky-employers-safety-v-lexington-ky-2009.