Radiator USA v. WCAB CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 2015
DocketB255839
StatusUnpublished

This text of Radiator USA v. WCAB CA2/8 (Radiator USA v. WCAB CA2/8) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radiator USA v. WCAB CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 2/18/15 Radiator USA v. WCAB CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

RADIATOR USA et al., B255839

Petitioners, (WCAB No. ADJ7750590)

v.

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD etc., et al.,

Respondents.

PROCEEDING to review a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board. Anne J. Horelly, Workers’ Compensation Administrative Law Judge. Annulled and remanded with directions.

Floyd, Skeren & Kelly, David L. Zimmerman and Phillip Scuderi for Petitioners.

Solov and Teitell, James A. Teitell and John Reff for Respondent Am Kang.

__________________________ Petitioners seek a writ of review after the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board denied reconsideration of the decision of the workers’ compensation judge (WCJ) finding industrial causation of a psychiatric injury and sleep disorder.1 The issue presented is whether there is competent medical evidence to support industrial causation of the psychiatric injury and sleep disorder. We hold that the medical evidence on the cause of the psychiatric injury and sleep disorder is not substantial evidence because it is based on an inadequate medical history. We remand the case for further development of the record on the industrial nature of the cause of the psychiatric injury and sleep disorder.

FACTS

A. The Employee’s Injury

The employee, Am Kang (Kang), sustained an admitted injury to his back on December 24, 2010 while working as a driver for Radiator USA. Kang additionally claimed to have sustained injury to his psyche in the form of a sleep disorder.

B. The Medical Reports

On February 28, 2012, the agreed medical evaluator (AME) in orthopedics, David B. Pechman, M.D., noted compression fractures in Kang’s vertebrae that appeared old. Dr. Pechman thought that most of Kang’s pain related to the compression fractures. Dr. Pechman opined Kang was permanent and stationary from an orthopedic standpoint on the date of his examination. However, he requested an EMG and nerve conduction study to determine how many of the fractures were radicular and a bone scan to evaluate the cause of Kang’s collapsing bones. Dr. Pechman apportioned 50 percent of the orthopedic injury to nonindustrial preexisting metabolic bone disease.

1 The Petitioners are Radiator USA, the employer; Start Insurance Company, the insurer; and Illinois Midwest Insurance Company, the adjuster. For ease of reference, we will refer to petitioners as Radiator USA.

2 On July 2, 2012, Rodney Bluestone, MB, FRCP, the qualified medical evaluator of rheumatology, confirmed Kang had metabolic bone disease (osteopenia and osteoporosis) but could not determine a cause. Although Dr. Bluestone requested additional testing to determine the cause of the metabolic bone disease, there was no supplemental report that addressed causation. Dr. Bluestone had a “strong impression that this patient [was] suffering from significant depression, which probably lower[ed] his pain threshold and which [might] impact the quality of his sleep, resulting in greater fatigue and a sleep-and-arousal disorder.” In this report of August 25, 2012, Dr. Pechman acknowledged Dr. Bluestone’s report but did not change his opinion on apportionment. Ana L. Nogales, Ph.D., ABPS, FACFE evaluated Kang as a secondary treating physician in psychology. As reflected in her September 14, 2012 report, Dr. Nogales obtained a history of the injury, history of the treatment, and physical and emotional complaints exclusively from Kang. Dr. Nogales explicitly noted that she did not receive medical or employment records for review.2 On the issue of causation, Dr. Nogales found that, as a “consequence of his industrial accident, Mr. Kang developed anxiety that increased with the passage of time and deteriorated at the end of 2011 when he saw that his condition is not improving.” Dr. Nogales opined that the “percentage of total causation of Mr. Kang’s current mental disorder is estimated at a higher level than the legal threshold of industrial causation of 50 [percent].” She specifically noted a nonindustrial causal factor of a dog bite in 2005 requiring stitches. Dr. Nogales concluded Kang’s condition was not stabilized to the point where residual permanent disability was evident. She found Kang totally and temporarily disabled and unable to return to regular or modified work. Dr. Nogales made no mention of Dr. Pechman’s orthopedic diagnosis or his apportionment to the preexisting bone disease.

2 Kang does not contend otherwise.

3 Significantly, Dr. Nogales deferred apportionment to the time of the permanent and stationery report “after I have the opportunity to review previous medical, psychiatric and employment records.”

C. Facts Adduced at the Hearing

The matter was heard on September 26, 2013. Four of Dr. Pechman’s reports were admitted into evidence. Five of Dr. Nogales’s progress reports and the September 14, 2012 report were submitted by Kang and admitted with no apparent objection from Radiator USA. Radiator USA submitted Dr. Bluestone’s July 2, 2012 report. Kang was the only witness who testified at the hearing. Kang stated he saw Dr. Nogales because he was nervous, had feelings of dread, and could not sleep. He told Dr. Nogales he could not sleep, he was nervous, and sometimes he wanted to die. Dr. Nogales told him her diagnosis was “deep depression.” Kang told Dr. Nogales about a dog bite requiring stitches in 2005 but he did not recall telling Dr. Nogales that he was bothered by images of his accident or that he was reliving the traffic accident. Kang divorced in 1996, which had an emotional impact. Kang felt it would be harder to raise his children as he was the one taking care of them.3 He was unable to see two of his grandchildren because of his finances but continued to hope that he would. Kang did not recall if he discussed grandchildren with Dr. Nogales. At the time of the hearing, Kang continued to have trouble sleeping. His difficulty sleeping began after his injury because he claimed to have received no treatment for four months after the accident.

3 At the time of his deposition on July 25, 2011, his children were aged 45, 40 and 38. Accordingly, in 1996, his children were approximately 30, 25 and 23, all adults.

4 D. The Rulings of the WCJ and the Appeals Board

On December 26, 2013, the WCJ issued findings of fact concluding Kang sustained industrial injury to his back, to his psyche, and in the form of a sleep disorder. The WCJ found Kang reached maximum medical improvement for his physical injury on February 28, 2012, but was still temporarily disabled from the psychiatric injury. The WCJ relied on the doctors’ reports as well as the “credible testimony” of Kang. Radiator USA petitioned for reconsideration. Reconsideration was sought based “upon a lack of medical evidence to support this finding.” Radiator USA claimed Dr. Bluestone was a rheumatologist, not a psychologist/psychiatrist or sleep specialist, and his impression of Kang’s depression and sleep problems was not substantial evidence. Similarly, Dr. Pechman was an AME in orthopedics, not a psychologist/psychiatrist or sleep specialist. As to the psychologist’s opinions, Radiator USA criticized Dr. Nogales’s failure to acknowledge Kang’s nonindustrial metabolic bone disease as a cause of the pain and sleep disorder, the inconsistency between Dr.

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Radiator USA v. WCAB CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radiator-usa-v-wcab-ca28-calctapp-2015.