Pond, Kayla v. DARDEN RESTAURANTS, INC.

2024 TN WC 43
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedMay 28, 2024
Docket023-07-6858
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 TN WC 43 (Pond, Kayla v. DARDEN RESTAURANTS, INC.) 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
Pond, Kayla v. DARDEN RESTAURANTS, INC., 2024 TN WC 43 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

FILED May 28, 2024 03:13 PM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

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

KAYLA POND, ) Docket No. 2023-07-6858 Employee, ) v. ) ) DARDEN RESTAURANTS, INC., ) State File No. 94215-2021 Employer, ) ) And ) Judge Robert Durham ) INDEMNITY INS. CO. OF N.A., ) Insurance Carrier. )

COMPENSATION ORDER GRANTING BENEFITS

The Court held a Compensation Hearing on May 16, 2024, to determine the appropriate impairment rating for Ms. Pond’s left-shoulder injury. 1 The Court holds that Darden overcame the statutory presumption afforded the treating physician and the appropriate rating is 2% based on the evaluating physician’s impairment.

History of Claim

On October 25, 2021, Ms. Pond suffered an injury to her left shoulder while trying to hold up a tilting prep table. She testified that she never had problems with her shoulder before this injury. Ms. Pond selected orthopedist David Pearce as her treating physician.

Dr. Pearce diagnosed Ms. Pond with a severe labral tear and a full-thickness rotator cuff tear as well as some “significant arthritic changes” and bone spurring in the acromioclavicular joint. In his deposition, Dr. Pearce said he believed the tears were more than 50% related to the injury but acknowledged that the arthritic changes were more likely

1 The parties agreed that Ms. Pond’s compensation rate is $917.08 and that she returned to work at her preinjury wage at the end of her compensation period. 1 than not preexisting. Dr. Pearce surgically repaired the tears. During the surgery, he also cleared out “debris” that he described as part of the distal clavicle and resected part of the clavicle, so it “doesn’t impinge and cause pain.” 2

When he first determined Ms. Pond’s impairment, Dr. Pearce said her treatment was a labral repair, a rotator cuff repair, and a distal clavicle resection. He noted that her “main disability” was mild loss of range of motion from her distal clavicle, and he assessed a 7% impairment, which he later reduced to 6%.

In his deposition, he admitted that he did not always agree with the AMA Guides, and he believed the totality of Ms. Pond’s injury deserved a greater impairment than the Guides would allow. 3 He said he knew the rating was not accurate, but he had to “inflate her rating” to get to what he felt she deserved.

Dr. Pearce further said that Ms. Pond’s “causally related diagnosis” was a rotator cuff tear and a labral tear. He agreed that under the AMA Guides, if two significant diagnoses exist, the doctor should only use the higher of the causally-related impairments in determining the impairment rating. He also admitted that the AMA Guides say that if a doctor is rating rotator cuff tears or glenohumeral pathology, an “incidental” distal clavicle resection should not be considered. 4

He agreed that if he is doing surgery under workers’ compensation and sees a problem that is not work-related, he will go ahead and fix it. In Ms. Pond’s case, he believed that the need for the resection was multifactorial.

On examination by Ms. Pond’s counsel, Dr. Pearce said that the “debris” he found in the AC joint “can be” due to trauma. He said that the extent of Ms. Pond’s arthritis was “really” unusual given her age, and that if she were asymptomatic before the injury, it would suggest an aggravation or exacerbation of her underlying arthritis. He believed the meniscal fragments in her AC joint were more than basic degenerative arthritis, and that trauma “could be” a cause for the fragments. However, he could not say that to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the arthritic condition was more likely than not due to her work injury.

However, upon further questioning by Ms. Pond’s attorney, he qualified this

2 Dr. David Lochemes, the records review physician, described a distal clavicle resection as the removal of the end of the clavicle so that it no longer rubs against the acromion, thus alleviating any pain caused by two bones rubbing together. 3 At his deposition, Dr. Pearce was first examined by Darden’s counsel and then “cross-examined” by Ms. Pond’s attorney. 4 Dr. Pearce objected to the word “incidental”: however, his objection was that the word implied that the procedure was unnecessary to treat Ms. Pond’s shoulder condition, not that the resection was due to the work injury. 2 opinion. He said that if Ms. Pond had an asymptomatic shoulder without a history of earlier trauma, then the meniscal “debris” was more likely than not due to the work-related injury, given that it would be unusual to see that without trauma in someone Ms. Pond’s age.

Dr. Pearce went on to say that since he changed Ms. Pond’s anatomy through surgery, he believed the 6% rating was appropriate. He recognized that he “went a little out of bounds” but believed that all of Ms. Pond’s problems—“the rotator cuff, superior labrum, biceps moving, AC joint” —merited a larger impairment than 2%.

On redirect, Dr. Pearce again qualified his causation opinion by saying that Ms. Pond’s AC arthritis was not more than 50% related to the work accident. He felt comfortable saying Ms. Pond’s injury was an “AC joint sprain with tear to the discoid meniscus, a rotator cuff tear, and a superior labrum tear with an extension into the biceps.” He further said that if he took a “hard line stance” on impairment under the AMA Guides, he should probably not include an AC joint impairment. He admitted that he used the AC joint impairment because he felt it did the “best justice” to all her shoulder pathology, and at the end of the deposition he stood by his 6% rating.

In response to Dr. Pearce’s rating, Darden sent Ms. Pond’s records to Dr. David Lochemes for an impairment opinion. Dr. Lochemes is a board-certified orthopedist who is also certified through the Bureau’s Physician Certification Program and has been a member of the Bureau’s Medical Impairment Rating Registry since 2005.

Dr. Lochemes testified that, based on Ms. Pond’s history, he believed that she suffered a work-related tendon tear as well as a full-thickness rotator cuff tear, and that Dr. Pearce’s treatment for these injuries was reasonable and necessary.

As for the AC joint, Dr. Lochemes said that he was not sure what Dr. Pearce saw when he described “debris,” but he could have been referring to loose cartilage in the AC joint. If so, he would attribute that to a chronic condition rather than an acute injury. He felt that in Ms. Pond’s case, the “debris” removal and the distal clavicle resection were likely done to be “complete with the surgery and address all the pathology,” but “the ticket to the operating room” was the labral and rotator cuff tears.

Dr. Lochemes noted that Dr. Pearce’s impairment was based on the resection. And while that might be an appropriate rating for Ms. Pond’s shoulder condition, it does not accurately reflect her impairment for injuries primarily caused by her work-related injury. Dr. Lochemes testified that the problems causally related to the work injury were the tendon tear and the rotator cuff tear, and those were the conditions that should be rated.

Dr. Lochemes referred to page 387 of the AMA Guides, which states that when more than one diagnosis for the shoulder exists, the doctor should use the diagnosis “with the highest causally related impairment in calculation.” The Guides go on to say that the

3 “incidental resection of the arthroplasty is not rated.” He testified that Dr. Pearce’s impairment rating, by his own admission, did not follow this directive. He said Dr. Pierce’s calculation was unacceptable and did not adhere to the Guides, given that the “AC joint is an incidental thing done at the time of surgery, and that is specifically not to be ranked.”

According to Dr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

§ 50-6-102
Tennessee § 50-6-102(12)(A)
§ 50-6-239
Tennessee § 50-6-239(d)(3)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 TN WC 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pond-kayla-v-darden-restaurants-inc-tennworkcompcl-2024.