Rockingham County School Board v. Sharon Rohrbaugh

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 27, 2024
Docket1193232
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rockingham County School Board v. Sharon Rohrbaugh (Rockingham County School Board v. Sharon Rohrbaugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockingham County School Board v. Sharon Rohrbaugh, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Beales, AtLee and Malveaux Argued at Richmond, Virginia

ROCKINGHAM COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD, ET AL. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1193-23-2 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES AUGUST 27, 2024 SHARON ROHRBAUGH

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

Amanda Tapscott Belliveau (McCandlish Holton, P.C., on briefs), for appellants.

Michael L. Ritchie (Ritchie Law Firm, P.L.C., on brief), for appellee.

Rockingham County School Board and Graphic Arts Mutual Ins. Co. (collectively, the

“Rockingham School Board”) appeal from a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission.

The Commission found that inpatient residential care at an assisted living facility was reasonable

and necessary medical care for the claimant, Sharon Rohrbaugh – and that such care was causally

related to her work accident. On appeal, the Rockingham School Board argues that the Commission

erred in finding “that the requested inpatient residential care is ‘medical treatment,’” and argues that

such care was not necessary or causally related to Rohrbaugh’s workplace accident.

I. BACKGROUND

Sharon Rohrbaugh was employed as a teacher’s aide with the Rockingham County

School Board. In March 1987, she suffered a compensable injury by accident when she tripped

over a mop handle and fell down a flight of stairs, resulting in a traumatic brain injury.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). Rohrbaugh suffered “Post Traumatic supraorbital neur[a]lgia,” and the Commission entered an

agreed order awarding Rohrbaugh medical benefits and temporary total disability benefits.

Rohrbaugh’s medical condition has gradually deteriorated over the ensuing decades. In 2001,

the Commission stated that Rohrbaugh’s medical records establish that she suffered from a brain

injury, and it determined that her “hydrocephalus . . . was aggravated by the fall” and that

Rohrbaugh’s “psychological overlay and seizure disorder are directly related to the fall at work

in 1987.” The Commission also noted Rohrbaugh’s testimony that she was becoming

progressively weaker and that she needed assistance to walk. The Commission further found

that Rohrbaugh was unable to return to gainful employment, and it awarded her permanent total

disability benefits. Later, in 2005, the Commission entered a stipulated order for the

Rockingham County School Board to provide Rohrbaugh a Hoveround brand wheelchair. More

recently, in 2018, the Commission noted Rohrbaugh’s decreased mobility, and it entered an order

instructing the School Board to provide Rohrbaugh with Xarelto medication to prevent blood

clots.

Rohrbaugh lived in her home with her husband until 2020, when her husband moved out

of the home. That summer, a home health aide began helping care for Rohrbaugh, but she still

experienced several falls and had multiple visits to the emergency department. On June 29,

2020, Rohrbaugh visited the hospital emergency room at RNH Medical Center after she lost her

balance and fell in the bathroom, bruising her right ribs against the bathtub. The medical records

from that visit also reflect that Rohrbaugh lived “at home by herself and has frequent falls.”

Rohrbaugh again visited the emergency department on July 9, 2020, with rib pain and bruising

on the back of her right arm. In the clinical notes section of her medical records, it was noted

that Rohrbaugh was experiencing excruciating pain and vomiting. The treating nurse stated that

-2- Rohrbaugh “has a history of falls and is not safe at home. [She] needs 24/7 care and nursing

home placement.”

On July 27, 2020, Rohrbaugh returned to the emergency department after experiencing

suicidal ideation, and she noted that she was “tired and lonely and unable to care for herself

anymore.” The emergency department physician noted in her records that Rohrbaugh should be

admitted to the hospital for observation until she could be placed in a skilled nursing facility. On

August 15, 2020, Rohrbaugh presented to the emergency department with seizures. On August

21, 2020, Rohrbaugh again visited the emergency department with multiple bruises from recent

falls.

In September 2020, Rohrbaugh began residing with her daughter, Amy Crews. When

this living arrangement became unsustainable in December 2020, Rohrbaugh then began residing

with her friend, Sandra Rohr, and then with Rohr’s sister, Connie Clem, but neither of them was

able to host Rohrbaugh long-term. During this time Rohrbaugh continued to experience falls.

At Rohr’s residence, Rohrbaugh suffered falls down steps and while in the shower. While

staying with Clem, Rohrbaugh fell and struck her head, resulting in a laceration that required

sutures. At the end of January 2021, Rohrbaugh moved into Willow Estates, a licensed assisted

living facility.

On September 13, 2021, Rohrbaugh visited her primary care physician, Christian Iudica,

M.D. Dr. Iudica assessed Rohrbaugh, and in his record of that visit he noted, “She is now in

Willow Estates and is mostly taken care of [by] the doctor there,” and also noted that Rohrbaugh

“cannot live alone or to care for herself due to her chronic medical issues.” That same day,

Dr. Iudica completed a questionnaire provided to him by counsel for Rohrbaugh. In his answers,

Dr. Iudica agreed that as a result of Rohrbaugh’s workplace injury “she is unable to safely live

-3- alone,” “she requires more care and supervision than a home health service can provide,” and

“she requires the care and supervision provided by an assisted living facility.”

In February 2022, occupational therapist Amy Homan DePoy evaluated Rohrbaugh and

presented her findings in a report dated March 16, 2022. In her report, DePoy concluded, “The

opinion of this clinician, based on all assessments indicated in this report, is that Ms. Rohrbaugh

is best served by living in an assisted living facility due to the nature of her physical and

cognitive abilities.”

On April 5, 2022, counsel for both parties deposed Dr. Iudica. During the deposition,

Dr. Iudica agreed that being left alone for long stretches of the day would be inadequate care for

Rohrbaugh. Dr. Iudica also noted that Rohrbaugh needed someone to supervise her both during

the day and at night and to assist her if she fell. Finally, Dr. Iudica concurred with occupational

therapist DePoy’s report, and he stated that in his professional medical opinion, DePoy’s

recommendations should be followed.

On May 4, 2022, Marshall Crespin, a certified physician’s assistant, completed a

questionnaire provided to him by counsel for Rockingham County. Based on the medical

records then available to him, Crespin indicated that Rohrbaugh did “not require in patient

medical care at this time.” However, Crespin’s opinion changed after he physically examined

Rohrbaugh two days later on May 6, 2022. Crespin then authored a letter opining that

Rohrbaugh’s “physical and cognitive deficits do seem more significant than what I extrapolated

from reviewing her previous records available in our electronic medical record system and the

functional assessment with Ms. DePo[y].” Crespin then completed a questionnaire agreeing that

Rohrbaugh suffers from instability and falls due to her workplace accident. He also indicated

that Rohrbaugh requires twenty-four hour monitoring to reduce her risk of falls and to help her

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