Reed, Kimberlee v. CRITICAL NURSE STAFFING, LLC

2025 TN WC 37
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedJune 18, 2025
Docket2024-40-5803
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 TN WC 37 (Reed, Kimberlee v. CRITICAL NURSE STAFFING, LLC) 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
Reed, Kimberlee v. CRITICAL NURSE STAFFING, LLC, 2025 TN WC 37 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

FILED Jun 18, 2025 10:45 AM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

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

KIMBERLY REED, ) Docket No.: 2024-40-5803 Employee, ) v. ) State File No.: 844947-2024 CRITICAL NURSE STAFFING, LLC, ) Employer, ) Judge Robert V. Durham And ) TECHNOLOGY INS. CO., ) Carrier, ) And ) TROY HALEY, Administrator, ) Tennessee Subsequent Injury and ) Vocational Recovery Fund. )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER GRANTING BENEFITS (DECISION ON THE RECORD)

Ms. Reed asked the Court to order Critical Nurse Staffing to authorize a second opinion on whether surgery is reasonable and necessary to treat her shoulder injury and to furnish treatment for her jaw and ear symptoms. For the following reasons, the Court orders CNS to provide a second opinion for her shoulder injury and a panel of specialists for treatment of any face or head symptoms caused by Ms. Reed’s work injury.

History of Claim

Ms. Reed’s request asserted injuries to separate body parts, and she treated simultaneously for both. For that reason, the medical history summary is separated as to each body part.

Treatment for left shoulder and neck

According to her Rule 72 statement, Ms. Reed suffered a work-related injury on June 17, 2024. CNS authorized treatment at an urgent care clinic the next day. The clinic

1 note stated that Ms. Reed said the injury occurred “when she stumbled and had to grab a railing next to her. As she was grabbing the railing, she twisted her arm and immediately felt a burning, sharp pain going from the middle of her left upper arm to her neck.” The note does not describe Ms. Reed falling, striking her face or head, or suffering face, head, or ear symptoms.

CNS authorized orthopedist Dr. Kyle Achors to treat Ms. Reed’s left shoulder. Dr. Achors’s notes do not refer to any complaints of face or ear symptoms. He diagnosed her with a full-thickness left-rotator cuff tear but said she “was not a surgical candidate due to her weight.” He prescribed conservative care, including physical therapy. A September physical therapy record described Ms. Reed’s injury as occurring when she was holding onto a handrail and got “twisted up.” It did not mention Ms. Reed falling, striking her head or face, or suffering from face and ear symptoms.

In December, Ms. Reed saw orthopedist Dr. Patrick Bolt for her continuing neck pain. She described her accident as occurring when “she twisted on a patient’s rug rotating her body around. She felt a cracking sensation at the base of her skull[.]” She also reported “some jaw and facial pain on the right side.” He prescribed a cervical MRI and physical therapy.

Ms. Reed returned to Dr. Achors in February and reported that her symptoms were unchanged with conservative care. He still did not consider her to be a “reasonable surgical candidate” due to her weight. He ordered a functional capacity evaluation with the goal of placing her at maximum medical improvement. He also noted that Ms. Reed requested a second opinion on surgery, which he thought was reasonable. However, he suspected that a second opinion would “yield a similar treatment plan.”

Ms. Reed also returned to Dr. Bolt in February. She still complained of neck pain as well as “ringing in the ears, facial and ear pain, tremors, and dizziness.” Dr. Bolt diagnosed her with a cervical strain/sprain and said he was “unsure what to make of her nonorthopedic [sic] complaints.” He recommended additional physical therapy for her cervical spine.

At her functional capacity evaluation, Ms. Reed gave a detailed account of her work accident. She said she was:

leaving the [client’s] home to step outside and tripped over a carpet runner. She grabbed the door frame with her left hand, placing a traction force to the left upper extremity and twisted her body toward the wall, hitting the right side of her head on the wall, injuring the side of her head, neck and her jaw.

As for the second surgical opinion, CNS agreed to authorize Dr. William Hovis to evaluate Ms. Reed. After reviewing her medical records, Dr. Hovis declined to see her.

2 When the nurse case manager asked why in an email, Dr. Hovis’s practice manager responded that, “interestingly enough, he just declined to do surgery on a very good patient of ours in a similar situation and said that he would have nothing to add to this particular case.” Ms. Reed objected to the admission of the email chain based on hearsay, which the Court sustained.

Treatment for face and ear

Ten days after her work injury, Ms. Reed visited her primary care physician for swelling and “oozing” in her right ear that she said had been going on for a week and a half. The doctor diagnosed a right-ear infection and prescribed antibiotics.

Ms. Reed returned in November for right-ear pain and discharge from her ear, nose, and eye since the accident. An exam revealed “mild bulging with no redness” along the right “TM.” She also had slight dermatitis on the outside of the right ear and slight swelling in the right ear canal. Ms. Reed claimed these symptoms began after her accident. The nurse practitioner recommended that she see an otolaryngologist. Ms. Reed requested a panel, which CNS denied.

After CNS’s refusal, Ms. Reed began treatment in December with otolaryngologist Dr. William Horton. The note describes the work injury as “pt was leaving her house and fell and had a pain that went from her neck to her arm.” Ms. Reed said she suffered from drainage in her right ear in July and August that worsened so that by November it had spread to her eye and nose on the right side along with swelling. She also described pain at the base of her head.

Dr. Horton’s nurse practitioner did not see any drainage or deformity in Ms. Reed’s right ear. The nurse practitioner diagnosed right-ear eczema and prescribed ear drops. She also ordered a maxillofacial CT scan to rule out cerebrospinal fluid leak.

Dr. Horton’s next record from March notes that he saw Ms. Reed in December, but the record is not in the file. However, the March record summarized the visit by stating that Ms. Reed showed no evidence of chronic ear infections. Dr. Horton believed the ineffectiveness of antibiotics to relieve her symptoms and her physical exam suggested temporomandibular joint disorder.

The March 25 note goes on to report that Ms. Reed’s work injury occurred when she “was coming out [of] a house on the front door and foot got caught, she fell and tore rotator cuff. Since then [sic] has felt like vacuum in her ear, neck pain, and unilateral face swelling.” On exam, Dr. Horton noted bilateral TMJ crepitus and tenderness as well as left-malar cheek tenderness. He recommended a TMJ MRI and physical therapy, which her insurance company denied.

3 In response to a causation letter, Dr. Horton stated Ms. Reed’s temporomandibular joint disorder primarily arose from her June 17 “trip and fall work accident.”

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

To obtain her requested treatment, Ms. Reed must show a likelihood of prevailing at a hearing on the merits. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(d)(1) (2024).

Second opinion for shoulder surgery

Ms. Reed’s undisputed evidence establishes she is likely to prove she suffered a left- shoulder rotator cuff tear caused by her work injury. The issue is whether CNS must authorize a second medical opinion to consider whether surgery is reasonable and necessary to treat this injury.

Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-204(a)(3)(H) states that “[a]ny treatment recommended by a physician . . . selected pursuant to this subdivision (a)(3) . . .

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Related

§ 50-6-239
Tennessee § 50-6-239(d)(1)

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Bluebook (online)
2025 TN WC 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-kimberlee-v-critical-nurse-staffing-llc-tennworkcompcl-2025.