McGarry v. State Accident Insurance Fund

547 P.2d 654, 24 Or. App. 883, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2471
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 29, 1976
Docket419-736, CA 5330
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 547 P.2d 654 (McGarry v. State Accident Insurance Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGarry v. State Accident Insurance Fund, 547 P.2d 654, 24 Or. App. 883, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2471 (Or. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinions

[885]*885FOLEY, J.

The sole issue in this case is whether claimant is entitled to additional medical expenses for specialized treatment of a physically disabling condition resulting from a compensable injury, as provided by ORS 656.245(1).1

Claimant initially sought workmen’s compensation benefits in July 1968 after sustaining a compensable industrial injury while moving a water heater during his employment as a plumber. As a result of this injury, claimant was awarded 64 degrees for an unscheduled neck disability and 19 degrees for partial loss of use of his left arm.

Claimant initiated this claim for additional benefits in July 1974. After hearing, a referee of the Workmen’s Compensation Board determined that claimant’s present condition resulted from his compensable injury and that the treatment claimant was receiving from Dr. Robert E. Rinehart was medical services which the State Accident Insurance Fund had an obligation to provide under the provisions of ORS 656.245(1). The Fund appealed and the Workmen’s Compensation Board reversed on the ground that claimant was not entitled to medical expenses for the specific treatment recommended by Dr. Rinehart. The circuit court affirmed and claimant appeals. We reverse.

The following statement of facts from the referee’s opinion and order adequately sets forth the nature of claimant’s condition as well as the specific treatment program recommended by Dr. Rinehart:

[886]*886"Claimant testified that about six months subsequent to surgery Dr. White released him for light work, but he became bedridden with severe shooting pains in the left chest and continued severely disabled, largely bedfast, with muscle cramps in the left arm and down the left chest, low back pain, and pain in the left hip and legs up to the time he was seen by Dr. Rinehart in June 1974. He presently continues to have symptoms similar to those he had prior to receiving treatment from Dr. Rinehart but the symptoms have lessened; whereas he could not turn his neck prior to seeing Dr. Rinehart, he now has good rotation of the neck; he has substantially less headache than he had prior to being seen, and less severe pain in the low back, neck, hip and legs. He considers himself much better after starting treatment with Dr. Rinehart both physically and emotionally.
"Claimant’s wife testified to marked improvement in claimant’s physical and emotional health since beginning treatment with Dr. Rinehart.
"Dr. Rinehart is a rheumatologist, specializing in the diagnosis and non-surgical treatment of diseases of the muscles, bones and joints. Following internship at Multnomah Hospital he had a year and a quarter of study at the Mayo Clinic. He is an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Oregon Medical School where he has been a faculty member for 20 years. He testified that when claimant was seen in June 1974 his complaints were aching numbness and weakness of the left arm and shoulder, cramps of the upper left chest and left arm, pain in the hip joints, pain down both legs and pain in the elbows and knees. Claimant indicated that he was unable to hold a job, that he had severe aching when he moved about, cramping of the muscles which kept him awake and that he had been 'fatigued out’ for over four years. Dr. Rinehart found claimant’s muscles hard and full of lumps in varying degrees, rotation of the neck severely diminished, and grating in the left shoulder on movement; X-rays showed damage to the bones and joints to be present, but he considered this not to be of sufficient significance to explain claimant’s symptoms.
"* * * Dr. Rinehart advised that he * * * had reviewed the reports of five orthopedic and neurological [887]*887specialists who had previously seen him. On the basis of the reports, claimant’s history, and his own examination, Dr. Rinehart concluded * * * that injuries sustained by claimant prior to 1968 had contributed to his continuing disability but 'his present total disability is largely a result of the injury he described as occurring on July 10, 1968’. * * *
"Dr. Rinehart diagnosed 'fatigue spasm of the muscles’. He opined that the injury had caused inflammation with automatic involuntary bracing of the muscles to restrict movement in the area of the injury, and that a habit pattern of muscle tension with continuous bracing and spasm of the muscles and resultant fatigue had ensued. He opined that this is an instinctive reaction to the injury and to the uncertainty generated by the symptomatology. He instituted treatment in July 1974 to break the disabling habit pattern. The program of treatment aims to correct the muscular bracing habit pattern phenomena by establishing a supervening habit pattern. The program consists of instructing the patient for better understanding of his neurological, biochemical, and psychological makeup and training him in new patterns of muscular relaxation under the supervision of a physical therapist, with continuing practice by the patient of new habit patterns for a period of time estimated to extend for 12 to 36 months. Dr. Rinehart opined that completion of the regimen would offer a 75%- probability that claimant would return to work and a 95%- probability that he would be made comfortable. He noted that during the period of treatment up to the time of the hearing claimant had been made considerably more comfortable and was gradually improving.
"Dr. Rinehart acknowledged that the muscle bracing syndrome is not recognized by a majority of physicians or generally accepted by members of the medical profession in the State of Oregon. It does appear that many aspects of his treatment regimen are used by psychiatrists and other medical practitioners. The whole range of treatment, however, is virtually unique to his own practice although it has been followed successfully by a few physicians in Oregon.

[888]*888Under the provisions of ORS 656.245(1), a claimant is entitled to medical expenses "for such period as the nature of the injury or the process of the recovery requires” if he proves by a preponderance of the evidence that his deleterious condition resulted from a compensable injury. Bowser v. Evans Product Company, 270 Or 841, 530 P2d 44 (1974); see also Francoeur v. SAIF, 17 Or App 37, 520 P2d 477, Sup Ct review denied (1974). We have held that the medical expenses contemplated by the statute are those which are "necessarily and reasonably incurred in the continued treatment of the injury” for which the claimant has received workmen’s compensation benefits. Wait v. Montgomery Ward, Inc., 10 Or App 333, 338, 499 P2d 1340, Sup Ct review denied (1972).

Upon a review of the record, we agree with the referee that claimant’s present condition for which he seeks additional medical expenses did result from his industrial injury.

The more difficult issue is whether Dr. Rinehart’s particular method of treatment is necessary and reasonable toward the improvement of claimant’s disabling condition. As required by Wait v. Montgomery Ward, Inc.,

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McGarry v. State Accident Insurance Fund
547 P.2d 654 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
547 P.2d 654, 24 Or. App. 883, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgarry-v-state-accident-insurance-fund-orctapp-1976.