Petty, Thomas v. Convention Production Rigging

2016 TN WC App. 72
CourtTennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
DecidedDecember 29, 2016
Docket2016-06-0841
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 TN WC App. 72 (Petty, Thomas v. Convention Production Rigging) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Workers' Compensation Appeals Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petty, Thomas v. Convention Production Rigging, 2016 TN WC App. 72 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD

Thomas Petty ) Docket No. 2016-06-0841 ) v. ) State File No. 20550-2015 ) Convention Production Rigging, et al. ) ) ) Appeal from the Court of Workers’ ) Compensation Claims ) Joshua D. Baker, Judge )

Affirmed and Remanded - Filed December 29, 2016

The employee alleges suffering injuries to multiple parts of his body when a stanchion and heavy draping fell on him while he was helping disassemble a stage. The claim was accepted as compensable, but after multiple evaluations by authorized physicians resulted in no recommendations for further treatment, the employer denied the employee’s requests for further evaluation. Following an expedited hearing, the trial court found that the employee had not presented sufficient evidence that he would likely prevail at a trial on the merits in establishing a need for additional treatment and denied the employee’s requests for additional evaluations. The employee has appealed. Having carefully reviewed the record, we affirm the trial court’s decision and remand the case for further proceedings as may be necessary.

Judge David F. Hensley delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board in which Presiding Judge Marshall L. Davidson, III, and Judge Timothy W. Conner joined.

D. Andrew Saulters, Nashville, Tennessee, for the employee-appellant, Thomas Petty

Michael L. Haynie, Nashville, Tennessee, for the employer-appellee, Convention Production Rigging

Factual and Procedural Background

On March 7, 2015, Thomas Petty (“Employee”) was injured when a stanchion and heavy draping fell approximately twenty feet and struck him on the head and right

1 shoulder while he was helping disassemble a stage at the Opryland Hotel. Convention Production Rigging (“Employer”) accepted the claim as compensable and provided medical and temporary disability benefits. Employee was initially seen at a Concentra medical facility on March 10, 2015 with complaints of a head injury, reporting that he was injured when a “pipe and drape fell and hit [his] head.” He was diagnosed with “[f]ace/scalp contusion” and “[m]astoid air space contusion.”

Employee returned to Concentra on March 12, 2015 for a recheck, reporting that he had been working full duty and taking his medications, but had “no relief in pain.” He complained of headaches caused by elevation in blood pressure or strenuous activity, which he claimed caused him to leave work early to return to Concentra “with persistence/progression of symptoms.” Because of his complaints and the assessment of a concussion, Employee was instructed by Dr. Joseph E. Benson at Concentra to proceed to an emergency room. At Summit Medical Center emergency room, Employee reported suffering a head injury and experiencing nausea that was exacerbated by movement. He complained of a headache and being dizzy. A CT scan of his cervical spine revealed degenerative changes, and a CT scan of his head revealed no acute intracranial findings.

Employer provided a panel of neurosurgeons from which Employee chose Dr. Jason Hubbard in August 2015. He first saw Dr. Hubbard on September 11, 2015, complaining of continued headaches, neck pain, and right shoulder pain. He also complained of numbness and tingling in his arms if he turned his head a certain way and he reported significant pain with passive range of motion of the right shoulder. Based on these reports, Dr. Hubbard suspected Employee’s complaints could be originating in his shoulder. He ordered a cervical MRI and indicated in his report that he thought Employee “needs to be seen by orthopedics to have his [right] shoulder joint evaluated.” Employer provided a panel of orthopedics for Employee to select an orthopedic physician.

Employee returned to Dr. Hubbard on October 14, 2015. Dr. Hubbard noted that the MRI showed Employee had some mild bulging discs, but stated in his report that “I do not see anything here that needs to be surgically addressed.” He recommended physical therapy and cervical epidural blocks.

On October 20, 2015, Employee saw Dr. David Moore, an orthopedist selected from a panel, for his right shoulder complaints. Dr. Moore noted that Employee reported pain in his shoulder and that he experienced increased symptoms with overhead activity, lifting, and shoulder elevation. He also noted that Employee was treating with another physician “for his cervical spine.” Dr. Moore diagnosed Employee with right shoulder pain and ordered an MRI to rule out a rotator cuff tear. Based on X-rays, Dr. Moore determined that Employee had a “type 2 acromion with moderate AC joint degenerative changes,” and he concluded that “at a minimum [Employee] appears to be struggling with traumatic impingement syndrome to his right shoulder.”

2 Employee began physical therapy on November 9, 2015, as recommended by Dr. Hubbard, and he also received a cervical epidural block, which Dr. Hubbard also prescribed. Following his epidural block, Employee reported constant headaches that began very quickly following the block. Based on Employee’s reports, Dr. Hubbard ordered a CT scan and MRI of his head, which were interpreted as “normal.” Dr. Hubbard noted in a November 13, 2015 report that Employee’s headaches “are certainly not the typical low-pressure headaches [and] I am unsure why he is having these headaches.” Because of Employee’s reports, Dr. Hubbard referred him “to [n]eurology to have him further evaluated.” On November 30, 2015, Employee selected Dr. Steven Graham from a panel of neurologists.

Employee was initially seen by Dr. Graham for his ongoing neurological complaints on December 22, 2015. He complained of memory problems, light sensitivity, difficulty wearing hats dues to scalp pain, daily headaches, difficulty swallowing, low energy, and poor sleep. He also reported occasional stuttering and slurred speech. Dr. Graham noted that Employee’s clinical presentation was “most consistent with mild grade 1 concussion in March 2015.” He also observed that it was “difficult to explain why he continues to have ongoing numerous symptoms” and recommended a full neuropsychological evaluation because of Employee’s “ongoing memory and cognitive complaints.”

Employee continued to follow up with Dr. Graham monthly while the neuropsychological evaluation was being arranged. At a March 4, 2016 follow-up visit with Dr. Graham, Employee reported he had been using a high frequency ultrasonic device to help train his new dog and that the device caused him to go into a daze that took him five days “to get over.” On March 7, 2016, Employee saw a clinical neuropsychologist, James S. Walker, for the recommended neuropsychological evaluation. Dr. Walker observed that Employee’s chief complaint was headache, noting that Employee had unusual reactions to certain noises. In particular, he noted Employee’s report that using the ultrasonic dog training device had put him into a “fog for five days,” causing him to become disoriented.

The neuropsychological evaluation with Dr. Walker included numerous tests including “performance validity testing.” Based on the performance validity tests, Dr. Walker concluded Employee was “consciously feigning the presence of difficulties,” reporting the following concerning the ultrasonic dog training device:

Mr. Petty brought the ultrasonic dog training device to the session that he said had caused him so many problems when he used it a few days ago. During the course of his examination, one of the examiners surreptitiously carried the device while turned on into the room where Mr. Petty was undergoing evaluation. We actually brought the device within 2 feet of his head on one occasion, and walked back and forth on several occasions in

3 his presence with the device turned on.

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Bluebook (online)
2016 TN WC App. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petty-thomas-v-convention-production-rigging-tennworkcompapp-2016.