Leidelmeijen v. Ferncrest Manor Nursing Home Luba Workers' Comp.

191 So. 3d 38, 2015 La.App. 4 Cir. 1216, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 516, 2016 WL 1061061
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 16, 2016
DocketNo. 2015-CA-1216
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 So. 3d 38 (Leidelmeijen v. Ferncrest Manor Nursing Home Luba Workers' Comp.) 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
Leidelmeijen v. Ferncrest Manor Nursing Home Luba Workers' Comp., 191 So. 3d 38, 2015 La.App. 4 Cir. 1216, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 516, 2016 WL 1061061 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

ROSEMARY LEDET, Judge.

| tThis is a workers’ compensation case. Remco Leidelmeijen filed a disputed claim for compensation against his former employer, Ferncrest Manor Nursing Home (“Ferncrest”), and Ferncrest’s workers’ compensation carrier, LUBA Workers’ Comp. (“LUBA”) (collectively “Defendants”). The- parties, settled Mr. Leidel-meijen’s claim for indemnity benefits and tried his claim for medfcal benefits.

The Workers’ Compensation Judge (“WCJ”) adopted the expert opinion of two neuropsychologists who diagnosed Mr. Leidelmeijen. with malingering. Based on the malingering diagnosis, the WCJ found that Mr. Leidelmeijen failed to meet his burden of proof, as to entitlement to medical benefits-and that-any and all entitlement to benefits in this matter was terminated as of May 29, 2013 — the date on which he first underwent neuropsychological testing with Defendants’ choice of neu-ropsychologist, Dr. Megan Ciota., From that decision, Mr. Leidelmeijen appeals. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I {.FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This matter arises out of an unwitnessed accident that occurred on November 11, 2008. On that date, Mr. Leidelmeijen was yrorking for Ferncrest. as a licensed practical nurse. According to Mr. Leidelmei-jen, he went into a patient’s bathroom to empty a catheter bag and slipped on water that was on the floor. He fell forward, hitting his face and jaw on the sink. He then fell backwards, hitting the back of his head on the floor. As a result, Mr. Leidel-meijen allegedly injured his head and his mouth (teeth). He declined a request to eall an ambulance; instead, he went home from work that day with a family member. ■Later that day, he went to the emergency room', where he was treated and released. According to the emergency room records, he was treated for a head trauma at work. He denied loss of consciousness, and it was [42]*42noted that his front teeth were loose.1

About one week after the accident, Mr. Leidelmeijen was taken to the hospital by-ambulance for a seizure. He was treated in the emergency room and released. Thereafter, he allegedly continued to experience seizures. During such seizures, he allegedly injured, among other things, his teeth. For his teeth, Mr.' Leidelmeijen was treated by David Hildebrandt, D!D.S., a dentist. For his seizures, Mr. Leidelme-ijen was treated by Dr. Michael Mitchell, a neurologist. Both Dr. |sMitchell and Dr. Hildebrandt treated Mr. Leidelmeijen on a regular basis from 2008 through the date of the trial.

During the years after the accident, Mr. Leidelmeijen has attributed multiple physical and mental problems to the accident. For these problems, Mr. Leidelmeijen has seen a myriad of doctors who have prescribed a myriad of medications. Mr. Lei-delmeijen has not returned to work. Defendants have paid him both indemnity and medical benefits.

On September 4, 2013, Mr. Leidelmeijen first filed a disputed claim for compensation against Defendants based on their failure to authorize dental work recommended by Dr. Hildebrandt. Ón Séptem-ber 17, 2013, Mr. Leidelmeijen filed an amended disputed claim based on Defendants’ denial of a MRI and blood work recomttiended by Dr. James Denney, his treating' psychiatrist, and Dr. Paul Hub-bell, his pain management doctor.2 On March 16, 2105, Mr. Leidelmeijen filed a second amended disputed claim based on Defendants’ “[f]ailure to pay the Injured Workers’ Pharmacy (ÍWP).” In all of his petitions, he requested penalties and attorneys’ fees. Defendants answered the petitions generally denying the allegations and asserting various defenses, including the $750.00 cap on unauthorized, nonemergen-cy care provided for in La. R.S. 23:1142(B).

|4In December 2013, the trial court approved a joint compromise between the parties, which settled Mr. Leidelmeijen’s claims for indemnity benefits and reserved “all claims for medical benefits .stemming from the subject accident.”3

In- June 2014, Defendants filed a Motion to Compel Second Medical -Opinion (“SMO”) in the field of, neurology. Defendants, argued that the SMO was necessary because Mr. Leidelmeijen “maintains that he is experiencing seizures related to the subject work accident despite the fact that there is little or no objective evidence of claimant experiencing any. seizures.” In support, Defendants noted that they had Mr. Leidelmeijen evaluated by a neuropsy-chologist of their choice, Dr. Ciota, and that Dr. Ciota stated the following in her report:

There is no objective evidence that Mr. Leidelméijen has a seizure disorder other thhn his self-reported episodes allegedly witnessed by his daughter. Furthermore, records reference that EEG examinations have been .negative. Development of seizures is not a typical outcome- following a mild head injury. [43]*43There is a strong indication of psychological overlay with regard to physical symptom presentation to the extent that somatic malingering is strongly suggested. .

Given that Dr. Ciota was not a neurologist, Defendants requested a SMO by a-neurologist of their choosing, Dr. Daniel Trahant. In July 2014, the trial court granted Dé-fendant’s Motion to Compel Second SMO and ordered that' Mr. Leidelmeijen be examined by Dr. Trahant. • ’

In his July 2014 report, Dr.- Trahant stated h'is finding of his examination -as follows:

The exact nature of his [Mr. Leidel-meijen’s] head injury is unclear, though I do suspect a psychogenic component at play here, Rbased on his affect, overall presentation in the office, and .mode 'of performance during the interview-and examination. Certainly, in this instance, neuro-psychological testing would be of extreme importance in qualifying and quantifying any organic residual from a head injury from that on. a psychogenic or emotional basis.
He also possibly has seizures, though I do not have results of any MRI of the brain or EEG studies_
This is a quite difficult case to assess.

In a subsequent report dated September 2014, Dr. Trahant, based on his review of Dr. Mitchell’s deposition and Dr. Andrews’4 and Dr. Ciota’s reports, further stated:

[I]t is my opinion that more likely than not Mr. Leidelmeijen is having psychogenic seizures. I do not believe the type of head injury he experienced is sufficient enough to cause a seizure disorder. His neuropsychological testing per Dr. Megan Ciota is of the opinion that Mr. Leidelmeijen is malingering. ¡.■.(The opinion of Dr. Susan Andrews stresses “an. overall context of psychiatric problems, which are exacerbating the situation.” In addition, he has had two - EEGs with [sic] did not reveal any epi-leptogenic discharges.
I do agree with Dr. Michael Mitchell filthat inpatient EEG monitoring would be the gold standard in such a case, but it is my understanding that Mr. Leidelmei-jen has refused such testing.

In October 2014, Defendants filed the •following two motions: '■(i)-a Motion to Compel Inpatient Multi-Day Electroencephalogram (“EEG”) Testing; and (ii) a Motion' to Appoint IME in the field of neuropsychology. The purpose of the inpatient EEG testing was to determine the cause of the alleged seizures.5 The purpose of the IME was to obtain an opinion ■regarding whether Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
191 So. 3d 38, 2015 La.App. 4 Cir. 1216, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 516, 2016 WL 1061061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leidelmeijen-v-ferncrest-manor-nursing-home-luba-workers-comp-lactapp-2016.