LEMAIRE, BELINDA v. LOWES INVESTMENT CORPORATION

2024 TN WC 64
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedSeptember 9, 2024
Docket2021-05-0969
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 TN WC 64 (LEMAIRE, BELINDA v. LOWES INVESTMENT CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LEMAIRE, BELINDA v. LOWES INVESTMENT CORPORATION, 2024 TN WC 64 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

FILED Sep 09, 2024 02:18 PM(ET) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION IN THE COURT OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS AT MURFREESBORO

BELINDA LEMAIRE, ) Docket No.: 2021-05-0969 Employee, ) v. ) LOWES INVESTMENT ) State File No.: 45689-2020 CORPORATION, ) Self-Insured Employer. ) Judge Thomas Wyatt

COMPENSATION ORDER

On August 28, 2024, the Court heard Belinda Lemaire’s petition for medical benefits awarded in an earlier compensation hearing. Specifically, she alleged that Lowes has not provided her a new panel of physicians to replace Dr Jeffrey Hazlewood, who discharged her from his care.

Lowes argued that Ms. Lemaire’s conduct at her most recent visit justified Dr. Hazlewood’s discharge of her as a patient. It alleged that she attended the visit with the intent to verbally abuse him so that he would discharge her, thus enabling her to select another treating physician. For that reason, Lowe’s contended that the Court should permanently suspend her right to future medical benefits or require her to return to a previously-authorized physician.

For the reasons below, the Court holds that Ms. Lemaire is entitled to another panel.

History of Claim

After a June 6, 2023 compensation hearing, Ms. Lemaire was awarded future medical benefits for her work-related complex regional pain syndrome. In that hearing, she asked to change authorized treating physicians. However, she established no basis under the law justifying a new panel.

Ms. Lemaire’s first visit with Dr. Hazlewood after the compensation hearing

1 occurred on December 18, 2023. She and the doctor mostly argued during this visit. Dr. Hazlewood exited the room, signed a letter discharging Ms. Lemaire as a patient, and instructed his office staff to present the letter to her for signature. The document stated in part: “The purpose of this letter is to inform you that I will no longer be able to serve your chronic pain needs . . . and: I am discharging you as a patient.” The document contained a handwritten notation stating that the reason for the discharge was, “[d]emeaning behavior toward treating physician. There is no remaining doctor/patient relationship.” Ms. Lemaire refused to sign the document.

What exactly transpired during the December 18 visit is unclear. However, Dr. Hazlewood’s office note and Ms. Lemaire’s testimony suggests they interacted during that visit much like they did at Dr. Hazlewood’s deposition. There, Ms. Lemaire’s cross- examination deteriorated into an argument in which she and the doctor leveled charges against each other. Both responded with long, ardent self-defenses.

Dr. Hazlewood’s December 18 office note stated that Ms. Lemaire attacked his integrity “throughout the whole visit.” Yet Dr. Hazlewood also wrote that Ms. Lemaire provided a standard medical history to “my nurse before I walked into the room.” That history included no improvement in her symptoms, including temperature, color, skin, and toenail changes, swelling and clawing in her toes, and foot spasms. Ms. Lemaire’s history also included a report of bunions and her use of a telephone app to obtain cognitive therapy similar to that which Dr. Hazlewood had suggested for her.

Dr. Hazlewood also noted that Ms. Lemaire said the workers’ compensation system had “frauded her,” causing her to be unable to trust anyone. He added, “I asked her then if I was one of the ones that she felt had frauded her, and . . . she says, ‘You have documented untruths on purpose.’” Ms. Lemaire explained she responded that way because Dr. Hazlewood twice documented in his records that she reported symptoms in the foot that was not injured. She also stated that Dr. Hazlewood wrote in his records that he reviewed pictures of her injured foot when he did not do so.

Dr. Hazlewood continued in his report, “I then asked her why she comes back today if she has no trust in me whatsoever, and she says, ‘she was made to by the judge.’” Ms. Lemaire testified that she actually said she returned to him because the judge ordered that he was the physician authorized to treat her work injury.

Dr. Hazlewood also documented that he had treated her pain in the past and that Ms. Lemaire had declined some of the treatment he offered. She explained that she tried acupuncture and H-wave therapy ordered by Dr. Hazlewood but they made her pain worse. She declined nerve blocks because Dr. Hazlewood could not identify the actual medications that would be administered. She claimed she needed to know the medications to make sure she was not allergic to them. She also testified that, in the past, she asked Dr.

2 Hazlewood about cognitive therapy.1 Dr. Hazlewood told her that might help, but he did not know of practitioners in the Nashville area who offered it. She stated she found local practitioners who would provide the therapy, but Dr. Hazlewood still did not order it.

During cross-examination at the hearing, Lowes accused Ms. Lemaire of exhibiting a pattern of refusing to let physicians examine and/or treat her. She responded that she refused to let the authorized foot doctor she saw before Dr. Hazlewood touch her again because he had manipulated her foot in a manner that caused extreme pain. She asked for a new treating physician after that incident, and Lowe’s gave her a new panel.

Counsel questioned Ms. Lemaire about refusing to see physicians for employer’s examinations in previous litigation. She responded that she would not see those doctors because both had fish tanks in their offices. She explained that she has fish allergies that could lead to life-threatening reactions from exposure to fish odors. In fact, she had a serious reaction in one of the physician’s offices just by being in the same room with a fish tank.

Lowe’s also asked her whether she refused to allow Dr. Hazlewood to examine her. Ms. Lemaire denied this allegation and, to the contrary, stated she wanted him to more thoroughly examine her. When asked why she had returned to Court for medical benefits, Ms. Lemaire testified that she needs treatment for her complex regional pain syndrome until additional treatment options become available.

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-204(g)(2)(A) (2023) states that the Court of Workers’ Compensation Claims has jurisdiction to decide issues about medical benefits awarded by judgment after a compensation hearing. A hearing to consider a medical- benefits issue is conducted “in accordance with § 50-6-239(c).” Id. In this hearing, the employee must prove her entitlement to the benefits requested by a preponderance of the evidence. Id. at -239(c)(6).

The statutory obligations between an employer and employee regarding the provision of medical benefits is clear. Section 50-6-204(a)(1)(A) states, “The employer . . . shall furnish, free of charge to the employee, such medical and surgical treatment . . . made reasonably necessary by [the] accident[.]” Concurrently, “The injured employee shall accept the medical benefits afforded under this section provided . . . [that] the employer shall designate a group of three (3) or more independent reputable physicians . . . from which the employee shall select one (1) to be the treating physician.” Id. at - 204(a)(3)(A)(i).

1 The use of the phone app she reported was in an effort to obtain cognitive therapy of the nature recommended by Dr. Hazlewood. 3 Dr. Hazlewood’s discharge of Ms. Lemaire as a patient leaves her without a physician authorized to treat her work-related condition. She requested a new panel of physicians qualified to treat her. Lowes countered that it should not be put to the trouble and expense of giving another panel when Ms. Lemaire will decline treatment from, and make unfounded charges against, the physician she selects.

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2024 TN WC 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemaire-belinda-v-lowes-investment-corporation-tennworkcompcl-2024.