Petty, Thomas v. Convention Production Rigging

2016 TN WC 276
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedNovember 18, 2016
Docket2016-06-0841
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 TN WC 276 (Petty, Thomas v. Convention Production Rigging) 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
Petty, Thomas v. Convention Production Rigging, 2016 TN WC 276 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

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

THOMAS PETTY, ) Docket No. 2016-06-0841 Employee, ) v. ) State File No. 20550-2015 CONVENTION PRODUCTION ) RIGGING, ) Judge Joshua Davis Baker Employer, ) and ) AUTO OWNERS INSURANCE, ) Carrier. ) )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER DENYING MEDICAL BENEFITS

This matter came before the Court on November 2, 2016, on the Request for Expedited Hearing (REH) filed by Thomas Petty pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-239 (2015). At issue is Mr. Petty’s entitlement to a second opinion concerning his right-shoulder injury and to a panel of physicians for treatment of a foot injury. Alternatively, Mr. Petty asked that the Court order further treatment for his shoulder injury. Convention Production Rigging declined to provide both the second opinion and the panel of physicians due to several doctors’ statements indicating Mr. Petty was malingering and/or intentionally magnifying his symptoms. Based on the proof presented at this time, the Court holds Mr. Petty is not entitled to a second opinion on the necessity of surgery for his right-shoulder condition, or to a panel of physicians for treatment of his foot.1

History of Claim

Mr. Petty worked as an audiovisual technician for Convention Production. His duties included installing and removing audiovisual equipment from convention hall stages. According to his testimony, Mr. Petty was helping strike a convention stage at the Opryland Hotel on March 7, 2015, when the stanchion holding the stage curtain broke 1 A complete listing of the technical record and exhibits admitted at the Expedited Hearing is attached to this Order as an appendix. and the drape and pipe fell approximately twenty feet, striking Mr. Petty in the head, shoulder and elbow. Mr. Petty stated he hurt his right foot and left knee while trying to avoid the drape and pipe. The parties do not dispute that the accident occurred or that Mr. Petty suffered injuries from the accident. The extent of his injuries and need for additional treatment are the disputed issues.

Mr. Petty went to Concentra the day of the accident. According to the medical records, Mr. Petty stated only that the “pipe and drape fell and hit my head.” (Ex. 1 at 1.) Concentra providers diagnosed a face/scalp contusion and mastoid air space contusion. When he returned to Concentra a few days later, the provider updated the diagnosis to include a concussion.

The medical note from Concentra mentioned neither a foot nor a knee injury. When asked about this at trial, Mr. Petty stated he told the provider at Concentra about his foot and knee injury, but the provider stated they would “take care of that later.” The First Report of Injury also does not include a foot or knee injury, stating only that the falling drape and pipe hit Mr. Petty on the head, back and side. (Ex. 4.)

After his last visit with Concentra, Mr. Petty received no additional treatment for several months. Then, on August 7, Mr. Petty selected Dr. Jason Hubbard, a neurosurgeon at the Howell-Allen Clinic, from a panel of physicians provided by Convention Production. (Ex. 5.)

At the first visit, Dr. Hubbard noted that Mr. Petty complained of headaches, neck and right-shoulder pain, as well as “numbness and tingling down into his arms” when he turned his head in a certain direction. The notes do not mention a foot or knee injury. Dr. Hubbard believed Mr. Petty’s complaints stemmed chiefly from his right shoulder. He ordered a cervical-spine MRI to rule out a compression issue. The MRI revealed mild, broad-based, disc bulges at C4-5, C5-6, and C6-7, with positional cord impingement at each level. (Ex. 1 at 18.) Dr. Hubbard recommended physical therapy and epidural blocks, but no surgery to treat these conditions.

Dr. Hubbard also ordered an MRI of Mr. Petty’s brain. The results were normal. Id. at 27. Dr. Hubbard, however, noted that Mr. Petty complained of headaches that developed “very quickly” after receiving epidural blocks in his cervical spine. Dr. Hubbard could not explain the cause of the headaches, so he referred Mr. Petty for a neurological consultation.

Convention Production provided Mr. Petty a panel of neurologists from which he chose Dr. Steven Graham. (Ex. 5.) Dr. Graham saw Mr. Petty five times over a period of a little greater than three months. At the initial visit, Mr. Petty complained of various problems, including dizziness, light-sensitivity, stuttering and slurred speech. His most prominent complaint, however, concerned headaches. Dr. Graham tried several different

2 medications to curb Mr. Petty’s headache complaints, which pervaded throughout his treatment. He could not explain the cause of the headaches, and the medications seemed to have little curative effect. He recommended Mr. Petty undergo neuropsychological testing.

Dr. James Walker, a neuropsychologist, administered Mr. Petty’s neuropsychological test. At the test, Mr. Petty continued to complain of headaches and specifically complained that low-frequency noises put him into a “daze.” (Ex. 1 at 49.) Mr. Petty discussed using an “ultrasonic dog training device” and stated that, after turning it on, the sound “put me into a fog for five days.” Id. at 50. He brought the device to the test and, unbeknownst to Mr. Petty, several persons in the office turned the device on while in the room. Mr. Petty did not react. Later during the testing, however, when Dr. Walker activated the device in front of Mr. Petty, the report indicated he complained “vociferously of tremendous distress.” Id. at 53.

At the hearing, Mr. Petty denied he reacted strongly when Dr. Walker turned on the dog-training device. He also complained that the testing was long and difficult, and that he was tired after he completed it. He described the testing process as “cruel.”

Dr. Walker concluded Mr. Petty had no neuropsychological problems. He found that Mr. Petty did not suffer a serious head injury on March 8, 2015, and further found that Mr. Petty gave poor effort during testing; he stated, “It is my impression that Mr. Petty is consciously feigning the presence of difficulties.” Id. at 55. He opined Mr. Petty had no serious cognitive or psychiatric impairment and stated he could perform any job for which he was qualified.

After the neuropsychological exam, Mr. Petty returned to Dr. Graham’s office for follow-up. At the conclusion of the appointment, Dr. Graham determined Mr. Petty had no neuropsychological problems, assigned Mr. Petty a zero-percent impairment rating, and released him from care. In his medical notes, Dr. Graham wrote that Mr. Petty’s “clinical presentation is consistent with malingering.” Id. at 65-66.

During the period of time Mr. Petty was undergoing neurological treatment and testing, he was also seeing an orthopedic specialist. Upon referral from Dr. Hubbard, Convention Production gave Mr. Petty a panel of orthopedic specialists; he selected Dr. David Moore. (Ex. 5.)

At the initial visit with Dr. Moore, Mr. Petty complained of pain in the anterior and posterior areas of his right shoulder that intensified with overhead work, heavy lifting and examination of the shoulder. Dr. Moore believed Mr. Petty was struggling with “traumatic impingement syndrome” and recommended an MRI to “further evaluate the integrity of his rotator cuff.” (Ex. 1 at 25.) He recommended that Mr. Petty perform light-duty work pending the results of the MRI. Unfortunately, Mr. Petty did not undergo

3 the MRI until April 2016, approximately thirteen months after the accident occurred. The MRI showed labral tears on both the inferior and posterior portions of the shoulder as well as a “large paralabral cyst.” Id. at 68.

After the MRI, Mr. Petty returned to Dr. Moore’s office. Upon review of the MRI, Dr.

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Related

§ 50-6-102
Tennessee § 50-6-102(14)(D)
§ 50-6-204
Tennessee § 50-6-204(a)(l)(A)
§ 50-6-239
Tennessee § 50-6-239(c)(6)

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Bluebook (online)
2016 TN WC 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petty-thomas-v-convention-production-rigging-tennworkcompcl-2016.