Lewallen, Denise v. Home Healthcare of East Tennessee, Inc.

2021 TN WC 232
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
Docket2019-01-0366
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 TN WC 232 (Lewallen, Denise v. Home Healthcare of East Tennessee, Inc.) 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
Lewallen, Denise v. Home Healthcare of East Tennessee, Inc., 2021 TN WC 232 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2021).

Opinion

FILED Sep 29, 2021 01:51 PM(ET) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

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

Denise R. Lewallen, ) Docket No. 2019-01-0366 Employee, ) v. ) Home Healthcare of East Tennessee, ) State File No. 14833-2018 Inc., ) Employer, ) And ) Judge Audrey A. Headrick United Wisconsin Ins. Co., ) Insurance Carrier. )

COMPENSATION ORDER

Ms. Lewallen requested that the Court award her permanent total disability benefits or, alternatively, extraordinary relief. If she is not entitled to those benefits, the Court must determine the applicable permanent medical impairment rating and the extent of her permanent disability. Home Healthcare disputed her entitlement to permanent total disability benefits or extraordinary relief and asserted she is limited to permanent partial disability benefits. It also disputed the compensability of her hernia and alleged mental injury, and her entitlement to additional temporary disability benefits. It further asserted a credit for temporary disability benefits it paid her after she resigned. After a September 13, 2021 Compensation Hearing, the Court holds Ms. Lewallen is entitled to permanent total disability benefits but denies the requested treatment for her hernia and alleged mental injury.

History of Claim

While working for Home Healthcare, Ms. Lewallen sustained multiple physical injuries in a February 10, 2018 motor vehicle accident, which are undisputed, to both feet and ankles, her left clavicle and right arm, as well as multiple cervical disc herniations with radiculopathy. She also alleged hernia and PTSD claims, which Home Healthcare disputed, but it authorized medical treatment for all other injuries. Medical Treatment

Dr. Scott Smith, a board-certified orthopedic surgeon, performed emergency surgery and three additional surgeries in the seven months that followed, installing hardware for Ms. Lewallen’s injuries. He repaired the fractures in both feet and ankles, as well as the left-clavicle and right-arm fractures. Notably, the second surgery on her right arm, foot, and ankle required taking a bone graft from her iliac crest.

At Ms. Lewallen’s request, Dr. Smith released her to full-duty work without restrictions on January 28, 2019.

Two months later, she returned complaining of right-ankle pain when driving or standing and said she had resigned from her position because she “[was] afraid for her safety and not able to perform the duties without significant pain.” During this March visit, Dr. Smith observed that her right arm was infected and anticipated hardware removal if it did not improve. He decided Ms. Lewallen was “disabled from being [a] home health care worker at this time” due to her inability to remain on her feet all day or to walk on uneven ground based on “the severity of her injury and her subtalar arthrodesis.”

Despite this, Dr. Smith assigned no restrictions, placed her at maximum medical improvement, and assigned a medical impairment rating of six percent to the whole person. However, a month later, he performed another surgery on Ms. Lewallen’s right arm to remove the hardware due to her continued infection.

Dr. Smith’s testimony suggested that, in hindsight, he prematurely placed Ms. Lewallen at maximum medical improvement and should have assigned her permanent restrictions. He described it as “curious” that he did an impairment rating while treating an active problem with her right arm. He clarified that Ms. Lewallen had not been at maximum medical improvement. Further, he adopted the functional capacity evaluation findings of permanent restrictions in the light-duty category and noted Ms. Lewallen was unsuccessful at working in the medium-duty category as a certified nursing assistant.1 He described the light-duty category as working exclusively in a sedentary job sitting ninety- nine percent of the time. After his deposition, Dr. Smith signed a Physician Certification Form stating that Ms. Lewallen “no longer has the ability to perform the employee’s pre- injury occupation” due to permanent restrictions from the injury.

During his deposition, Dr. Smith testified regarding the independent medical evaluation of Dr. William Kennedy, also a board-certified orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Smith

1 Home Healthcare objected to the functional capacity evaluation, an exhibit to Dr. Smith’s deposition, asserting lack of authenticity and hearsay. However, it is unnecessary for the Court to rule on the objection because Dr. Smith reviewed the functional capacity evaluation and adopted the findings as his own. Tenn. R. Evid. 703. reviewed and adopted Dr. Kennedy’s conclusions regarding Ms. Lewallen’s permanent impairment.2 Specifically, Dr. Smith noted that Dr. Kennedy’s ratings included “all of the injuries,” whereas his rating did not, and he candidly admitted that his March 11, 2019 impairment rating “is not valid at all.”

Turning to the independent medical examination, Dr. Kennedy assigned individual, whole-person impairment ratings for Ms. Lewallen’s injuries. His ratings included: ten percent for the right foot and ankle; eight percent for the left foot and ankle; two percent for the right arm; and two percent for the left clavicle.

Ms. Lewallen also received authorized treatment from Dr. Paul Johnson, a board- certified orthopedic surgeon, for her cervical injury. He diagnosed a disc herniation and nerve compression at C4-C5, C5-C6, and C6-C7. He performed an anterior cervical discectomy fusion at those levels. Dr. Johnson placed Ms. Lewallen at maximum medical improvement on September 29, 2020, and assigned a six-percent impairment to the whole person. He released Ms. Lewallen without restrictions, since she did not have a job, and stated she “should work based on her perception of her capabilities.” Dr. Johnson stated she could return to some type of employment “[i]f she felt she was able to,” and he acknowledged that returning to work is beneficial mentally, physically, and socially.

In addition, Ms. Lewallen received authorized follow-up care for her injuries from Katy Tilley, FNP.3 The records reflect that Ms. Tilley prescribed pain medication and treated her for PTSD. In February 2019, Ms. Lewallen reported she “had to quit her home nursing job d/t pain from MVA accident . . . [s]he was unable to tolerate the pain when driving or assisting patients and anxious to drive, too.” Ms. Tilley diagnosed Ms. Lewallen with “PTSD from [MVA],” prescribed an antidepressant, and referred her for counseling, which Home Healthcare denied.

As for Ms. Lewallen’s unauthorized treatment, Dr. Thomas Layman saw her beginning on July 20, 2020, when she presented with pain from a right-sided hernia that developed in 2018. The office note said she stated it “now hurts.” Ms. Lewallen described the hernia as “[s]lowly enlarging since MVA injury in 2018,” and she believed her seatbelt caused the injury.

Dr. Layman testified about the primary cause of the hernia, which he related to the motor vehicle accident. He believed the bone graft of the iliac crest “weakened the abdominal wall that then led to her getting the hernia and then having to fix that,” and it

2 Home Healthcare objected to Dr. Kennedy’s independent medical examination report, an exhibit to Dr. Smith’s deposition, asserting lack of authenticity and hearsay. However, it is unnecessary for the Court to rule on the objection because Dr. Smith reviewed the independent medical examination report and adopted Dr. Kennedy’s findings as his own. Tenn. R. Evid. 703. 3 Before the accident, other providers prescribed Ms. Lewallen medication for anxiety and stomach problems. “probably started getting bigger right after her iliac crest bone graft and then slowly weakened from there.” Dr.

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2021 TN WC 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewallen-denise-v-home-healthcare-of-east-tennessee-inc-tennworkcompcl-2021.