Nam Le v. Armour Eckrich Meats

364 P.3d 571, 52 Kan. App. 2d 189, 2014 Kan. App. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedOctober 24, 2014
DocketNo. 110,761
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 364 P.3d 571 (Nam Le v. Armour Eckrich Meats) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nam Le v. Armour Eckrich Meats, 364 P.3d 571, 52 Kan. App. 2d 189, 2014 Kan. App. LEXIS 102 (kanctapp 2014).

Opinion

McAnany, J.:

Nam Le, who had preexisting but asymptomatic osteoporosis, fell at work and suffered a vertebral fracture at the T-10 level. The fracture healed, but Le continued to suffer pain which prevented her from returning to work. The administrative law judge (ALJ) found Le was permanently and totally disabled and entitled to future medical benefits on account of her injury, including pain management care for her chronic pain. On appeal, the Workers Compensation Board set aside the finding that Le was permanently and totally disabled and limited her award to a 15% permanent partial general disability and authorized future medical treatment only for tire fracture. Le appeals the Board’s decision.

Facts

Le has a high school education. She came to the United States from Vietnam in 1991. She speaks very little English and is unable to read or write English. She worked for Armour for almost 12 years doing line food production packing. On August 8, 2011, [191]*191Le slipped and fell on a concrete floor, injuring her back. We need not recount here the facts surrounding her accident, her preexisting osteoporotic condition, or the medical treatment that followed. Those facts are well known to the parties and are set forth in detail in the findings of the ALJ and the Board.

Three medical doctors testified about Les condition.

Dr. David Johnson, Les family doctor since November 2009, •treated Le both before and after the accident. He testified about Les preexisting osteoporosis and the treatments she received for it. He characterized Le’s preexisting osteoporosis as severe but asymptomatic. He stated that osteoporosis is inherently asymptomatic and only becomes symptomatic with an injury. Dr. Johnson has not observed anything that would lead him to believe that Le has suffered a new fracture since her work accident. He does not challenge the conclusion that Le’s fracture from the accident has healed. But Le was fully capable of working before the accident, and but for the accident she would still be working. The pain Le has experienced since the accident was caused by the fall and the resulting fracture, and her inability to work has been caused by her chronic pain.

Dr. Pedro Murati examined Le twice but did not treat her. He testified that Le’s osteoporosis is not itself painful and her pain was associated with her compression fracture. He diagnosed Le with a greater than 50% thoracic compression fracture and low back pain with radiculopathy. He assigned her a 24% whole person impairment rating. He opined that she suffered an 86% task loss and was essentially and realistically unemployable because of her chronic pain. In his opinion, it was Le’s compression fracture, not her osteoporosis, that prevented her from returning to the labor market. Dr. Murati testified Le would need pain medication as a result of her injury for the rest of her life.

Dr. John Ciccarelli first saw Le a month after her fall. He found that the fracture was caused by Le’s fall, although her osteoporosis was a significant contributing factor. He suspected Le’s bones were very brittle and predisposed her to the fracture she experienced, but tire prevailing factor causing the fracture was her work accident. According to Dr. Ciccarelli, Le should not return to work [192]*192due to her osteoporosis. She continued to complain of pain and her pain was real, but Dr. Ciccarelli did not take that into account in deciding not to issue work restrictions because the fracture had healed and “structurally the spine [was] capable.” Les fracture, once healed, did not require any permanent work restrictions. He stated, “I make the recommendations for restrictions more based on what I feel structurally the spine is capable [of] and not necessarily just pain complaints.”

When he last saw Le in January 2012, about 5 months after her fall, Dr. Ciccarelli did not believe Les fracture would require future treatment. But he reported he was “writing for her a separate prescription that would keep her out of her job secondaiy to her underlying osteoporosis and not based upon her previous work injury.” When he last saw Le, she complained of pain and, though she tried to work, she could not make it through the day. He was of the opinion that Le’s pain was real.

Dr. Ciccarelli stated he would expect a fracture patient who suffers a minimal loss of height in the fracture of a vertebral body “to be sore up to a year following these types of fractures.” But he acknowledged that here, Le suffered a 50% loss in height of the vertebral space, which was the result of “a significant fracture.” In any event, Dr. Ciccarelli stated that Le had advance stage osteoporosis, and “a very common complaint of someone with osteoporosis is chronic pain” without evidence of a specific trauma or identifiable fracture. He acknowledged, however, that he had no indication she suffered from chronic pain before the work accident.

In Dr. Ciccarellis opinion Le sustained a 20% functional impairment, but 5% was due to her osteoporosis, leaving her with a permanent partial impairment rating of 15%. Considering only the healed fracture and disregarding her ongoing pain, Dr. Ciccarelli was of the opinion that she did not suffer any task loss. He opined that Le was not in need of future medical care for her fracture but needed ongoing care for her osteoporosis which, if untreated, could cause chronic pain.

The ALJ noted that prior to the accident, Le was able to work full time without limitations despite her osteoporosis, but after the accident she was severely limited in what she could do on account [193]*193of her pain. Based on Le’s personal background, her chronic pain, and the opinions of Drs. Johnson and Murati, she determined that Le was not capable of substantial gainful employment and was entitled to benefits for being permanently and totally disabled. Further, Le was entitled to future medical benefits, including pain management care.

On appeal, the Board adopted Dr. Ciccarelli’s impairment opinion and determined that Le suffered a 15% permanent partial whole person functional impairment. The Board found that Le’s inability to return to work was not caused by her fracture but rather by her osteoporosis. The Board disregarded Dr. Murati’s impairment rating regarding Le’s lower back pain and radiculopathy because these symptoms were not a result of her fracture. The Board limited Le’s future medical treatment to treatment for her vertebral fracture. Le appeals.

Appellate Review

As directed by K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 44-556(a), we review the Board’s order pursuant to the Kansas Judicial Review Act (KJRA), K.S.A. 77-601 et seq., to determine if the Boards findings are supported by substantial evidence based on the record as a whole. K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 77-621(c)(7). In doing so, we do not reweigh the evidence or engage in de novo review. K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 77-621(d).

We have unlimited review of questions involving the interpretation or construction of a statute, owing “ ‘no significant deference’ ” to the Board’s interpretation or construction. Ft. Hays St. Univ. v. University Ch., Am.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
364 P.3d 571, 52 Kan. App. 2d 189, 2014 Kan. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nam-le-v-armour-eckrich-meats-kanctapp-2014.