McGraw v. The Prudential Ins

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1998
Docket97-6064
StatusPublished

This text of McGraw v. The Prudential Ins (McGraw v. The Prudential Ins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGraw v. The Prudential Ins, (10th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

F I L E D United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit PUBLISH MAR 6 1998 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS PATRICK FISHER Clerk TENTH CIRCUIT

LINDA MCGRAW,

Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE No. 97-6064 COMPANY OF AMERICA, a corporation,

Defendant-Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA (D.C. No. CIV-95-1076-T)

Glen Mullins, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Arlen E. Fielden, Crowe & Dunlevy, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Defendant-Appellee.

Before PORFILIO, ANDERSON, and BALDOCK, Circuit Judges.

PORFILIO, Circuit Judge. Linda McGraw appeals three adverse orders resulting in the denial of her claims

for medical insurance benefits for physical therapy and home nursing care prescribed to

treat her multiple sclerosis. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Disease

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease of the central nervous system.

That is, it is believed, deficiencies or abnormalities in the immune system trigger immune

cells to attack myelin, the insulating sheath surrounding nerve cell processes located in

the central nervous system. The damaged myelin cannot transmit electrical impulses

along the nerve fiber pathways in the brain and spinal cord causing the individual to lose

strength, coordination, and balance; to have problems with balance and bladder control;

and to experience numbness, tingling, and blurred or double vision.1 Most commonly,

MS occurs in a relapsing/remitting form in which exacerbations or relapses, periods of

symptom flare-ups, are interrupted by remissions, times when no new symptoms occur or

symptoms improve. Much less common is a chronic progressive form in which spinal

cord and cerebellar dysfunction predominate. Despite these two broad categorizations,

1 Numerous articles found in the Appellant’s Appendix, Volume V, provide the basis for this summary. See, e.g., Galen Mitchell, M.D., Update on Multiple Sclerosis Therapy, 77 Contemporary Clinical Neurology 231 (January 1993); Multiple Sclerosis Handbook, UCSF - Mount Zion Medical Center (1995) [hereinafter Multiple Sclerosis Handbook].

-2- the course of MS is unpredictable.2 Because the cause of MS remains unknown, there is

no prevention or cure. Instead, an armamentarium of treatments for MS-related

symptoms, drugs that may modify the course of the disease, and rehabilitative and

maintenance therapies to promote and improve functionality and independence are

accepted approaches in the present symptomatic management of MS.3

B. Plaintiff’s Medical History

In 1983, Dr. Sherman Lawton, a board certified neurologist in Oklahoma City,

diagnosed Linda McGraw, then age twenty-eight, with MS. By the spring of 1990, Ms.

McGraw used a walker to stabilize her gait and relied on a wheelchair for longer

distances. In 1991, Dr. John H. Noseworthy, a neurologist at the Mayo Clinic in

Rochester, Minnesota, performed a comprehensive evaluation of Ms. McGraw and the

progression of her MS and recommended an inpatient evaluation at St. Mary’s Hospital of

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Unit to more comprehensively address her

problems with mobility.4 Physically too weak to travel back to Mayo, Ms. McGraw was

Susan B. O’Sullivan, EdD, PT, and Thomas J. Schmitz, PhD, PT, Physical 2

Rehabilitation: Assessment and Treatment, Chapter 22, Multiple Sclerosis 451 (3d ed. 1994). 3 Multiple Sclerosis Handbook, at 1674. 4 Dr. Noseworthy later summarized his evaluation in a December 17, 1992 letter, stating,

She has relapsing-progressive multiple sclerosis and is markedly disabled. At that time, she was unable to walk more than a few steps with assistance (continued...)

-3- referred to Dr. Donald L. Landstrom, another board certified neurologist in Oklahoma

City, who examined her and confirmed Dr. Noseworthy’s recommendation for inpatient

rehabilitation. Dr. Landstrom then admitted Ms. McGraw to the HealthSouth

Rehabilitation Center on January 13, 1992, for twice daily physical and occupational

therapy5 which was completed on February 1, 1992.

On another front, Dr. David R. Rittenhouse, a urologist, was treating Ms.

McGraw’s recurrent urinary tract infections, another manifestation of the course of MS.

Indeed, as immobility increases so do urinary tract infections unless the patient readily

transfers to a commode or is catheterized. Although Gary McGraw, Linda’s husband,

was able to catheterize his wife in the early morning, Dr. Rittenhouse ordered home

nursing visits to perform the additional catheterizations, the numbness in Ms. McGraw’s

hands and her immobility making self-catheterizations daunting. A nurse then would visit

daily to monitor her bladder function as well as record vital signs and assist with some

physical therapy.6

(...continued) 4

and required two assistants to climb onto the examining table. She was, in addition, disabled by emotional incontinence, cerebellar dysarthria, rotatory nystagmus, and visual loss .... In addition, she was troubled by sciatica.

The record indicates physical therapy addresses problems with gait and balance in 5

the lower extremities, while occupational therapy targets a patient’s dexterity and upper body coordination. 6 Dr. Rittenhouse wrote, “Her inability to evacuate her bladder, when necessary, by transferring to a commode does put her at a higher risk of further problems with recurrent (continued...)

-4- Thus, to combat these two fronts, the interrelationship of functionality and the

prevention of bladder infection, Dr. Lawton ordered additional outpatient physical

therapy through Baptist HomeCare with the goal of improving Ms. McGraw’s endurance,

strength, and mobility. Explaining this treatment, Dr. Lawton wrote her medical insurer,

the Prudential Insurance Company of America,

Beginning in April of 1992 it was necessary to resume physical therapy for Linda in her home. She is unable to obtain this therapy outside of her home because of marked limitations. For the patient to be seen outside the home it would be necessary for her to be carried to a wheelchair and then be carried into a facility.

The following May 1993, noting Ms. McGraw “had lost much of her ability for selfcare,”

Dr. Lawton again sought precertification for inpatient care at Baptist Medical Center,

explaining, “her case is amenable to intensive physical and occupational therapy, which is

clearly indicated in an attempt to improve the quality of this patient’s life.”

This second in-patient stay was followed by home physical therapy and skilled

nursing services provided by Hillcrest Home Health Care and Hillcrest Health Center to

help Ms. McGraw maintain functionality and assist in her catheterizations. Dr.

Rittenhouse and Dr. Gena Gardiner, a family practitioner, ordered this care.

C. The Conflict

For each of these episodes of care, HealthSouth Rehabilitation Center, Baptist

Care Advantage, Baptist Medical Center, Hillcrest Home Healthcare, and Hillcrest Health

6 (...continued) urinary tract infections or progressive injury to her bladder.”

-5- Center, Gary McGraw submitted claims for reimbursement totaling about $47,000 from

his medical insurance plan, Prudential Plus, a policy offered by Prudential (the Plan)

which his employer, Lifefleet, Inc., purchased. Prudential denied each claim under the

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