Poole v. Tammy Lynn Center

566 S.E.2d 839, 151 N.C. App. 668, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 902
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 6, 2002
DocketCOA01-1178
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 566 S.E.2d 839 (Poole v. Tammy Lynn Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poole v. Tammy Lynn Center, 566 S.E.2d 839, 151 N.C. App. 668, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 902 (N.C. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

Plaintiff appeals from an opinion and award of the North Carolina Industrial Commission, rejecting her claim for workers’ compensation benefits as a result of her contracting the hepatitis C virus. The evidence presented to the deputy commissioner and reviewed by the Full Commission tended to show that plaintiff was employed by Tammy Lynn Center (“Center” or “defendant-employer”) from October 1989 until February 1995. The Center is a residential facility serving persons with severe and profound developmental disabilities and mental retardation. Plaintiff initially worked as an habilitation aide; as part of these duties, plaintiff assisted patients with “bathing, feeding, brushing teeth, shaving, clothes washing, and other activities related to personal hygiene.” Plaintiff worked in this capacity for one year, when she was transferred to a classroom setting at the Center as a teacher’s aide. Although she was not required to bathe or shave residents in her new job capacity, she was called upon to clean residents when they soiled themselves due to vomiting, menstruation, or bowel movements. She also fed them and assisted them with brushing their teeth.

In 1991, the Center implemented a plan to protect employees from exposure to blood, which included wearing protective gloves when undertaking a task which could expose residents or employees to blood and/or infection. Plaintiff followed this new procedure during part of her employment at the Center.

Plaintiff was diagnosed with the hepatitis C virus in 1994. Thereafter, plaintiff filed a claim for workers’ compensation benefits, contending she contracted hepatitis C while employed at the Center. Plaintiff testified that she was exposed to the blood of residents while employed at the Center. She stated that she understood exposure to blood to be when “someone else’s blood entered into a scratch or something or the other [sic] of my body, and it actually got in my body.” Plaintiff identified the following residents as those to whose *670 blood she may have been exposed: Jeff B., Tim A., Terry R., Kristen C., Jimmy M., Deborah C., Lauren E, Tim C., Steven E., Lindsey W., Lisa W., Haley C., June N., Alicia D., Melissa E., and Eric P. Plaintiff testified that she recalled working with several other residents, but that she could not remember whether she could have been exposed to the blood of these individuals.

After plaintiff brought her claim for workers’ compensation benefits, defendant-employer attempted to determine whether any resident of the Center carried the virus which could have infected plaintiff. Defendant-employer reviewed its Employee Accident/Incident Reports involving plaintiff, as well as the Client Accident/Incident Reports which directly or indirectly involved plaintiff. In addition, defendant-employer reviewed every incident report involving the residents to whose blood plaintiff claimed to have been exposed during her employment at the Center. Further, defendant-employer searched its personnel records and safety committee records. Jan Pope, director of nursing at the Tammy Lynn Center, testified that out of four incidents which plaintiff reported in written form during her employment at the Center, only one incident involved a patient biting plaintiff which could have exposed her to blood infected with the hepatitis C virus. This particular patient, Tim A., died in 1997, and an autopsy performed on him revealed no liver disease. Further, during his last hospitalization prior to his death, Tim A. tested negative for all strains of hepatitis. Plaintiff eventually identified fifteen residents to whose blood she may have been exposed while employed at the Center; thereafter, defendant-employer attempted to have the blood tested of each of these individuals. Consensual testing of ten of the individuals was completed; none were found to be positive for the hepatitis virus. Two patients refused to have the test taken because their parents believed the presence of the virus was not medically indicated; the parent of one patient refused because of the trauma of the blood draw; one patient died in 1993 and no autopsy had been performed, and one patient could not be located. Nevertheless, none of the medical records from these five patients who would not or could not be tested indicated the presence of the hepatitis C virus, and plaintiff provided no evidence at the hearing of any direct blood-to-blood contact with any of these five patients whose hepatitis C status was not known. Jan Pope testified that her staff found “nothing to indicate that anyone that had been there [a resident at the Center] ever had hepatitis C.”

*671 Plaintiff testified that she had never received a blood transfusion prior to 1994, never had a tattoo, never shared intravenous needles, never shared intra-nasal devices, and never engaged in sex with multiple sexual partners. Plaintiff had been married twice; although her current husband tested negative for hepatitis C, plaintiff did not know whether her first husband had been tested for the virus. Plaintiff’s daughter also tested negative for hepatitis C.

The parties have stipulated that plaintiff has been totally disabled since she quit work on 23 February 1995 because of her hepatitis C infection. The Full Commission made the following findings of fact:

24. Of those residents with whose blood plaintiff most likely came into contact the majority were proven to not have hepatitis C. There is no evidence of record that plaintiff came into contact with blood infected with the hepatitis C virus while employed by defendant-employer. Further, there is no evidence of record that the hepatitis C virus was ever present in plaintiffs work environment while she was employed by defendant-employer.
26. The greater weight of the evidence shows only that plaintiffs employment exposed her to the blood of other persons and that this exposure to blood placed her at an increased risk of contracting hepatitis C as compared to persons not so employed.
27. There is insufficient evidence of record to prove that plaintiff was exposed to or contracted hepatitis C virus while employed by defendant.

Based on these findings, the Commission concluded that plaintiff was not entitled to compensation under G.S. § 97-53(13). Plaintiffs motion for reconsideration of the opinion and award was denied by the Industrial Commission. Plaintiff appeals.

By two arguments in support of eight assignments of error, plaintiff contends on appeal that the Commission erred “in finding that plaintiff was not exposed to hepatitis C at work” and “in concluding that plaintiffs hepatitis C infection was not caused by her employment.” We note at the outset that the Full Commission made no finding “that plaintiff was not exposed to hepatitis C at work”; rather, the Commission found that insufficient evidence was presented to prove that plaintiff was exposed to or contracted the hepatitis C virus while employed by defendant-employer.

*672 When reviewing an opinion and award of the Industrial Commission, this Court is limited to a determination of “(1) whether the findings of fact are supported by competent evidence, and (2) whether the conclusions of law are supported by the findings.” Barham v. Food World, Inc., 300 N.C.

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566 S.E.2d 839, 151 N.C. App. 668, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poole-v-tammy-lynn-center-ncctapp-2002.