Rosas v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board

16 Cal. App. 4th 1692, 20 Cal. Rptr. 2d 778
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 1993
DocketDocket Nos. C014083, C014491
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 Cal. App. 4th 1692 (Rosas v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board) 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
Rosas v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, 16 Cal. App. 4th 1692, 20 Cal. Rptr. 2d 778 (Cal. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Opinion

PUGLIA, P. J.

In consolidated petitions for writ of review, the petitioners challenge the denial of workers’ compensation benefits for a waste water treatment worker who contracted hepatitis B. We have concluded substantial evidence does not support the decision of the respondent, Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board (Board), denying reconsideration of the order denying benefits. We shall therefore annul the Board’s decision.

I

Petitioner Manuel Rosas (Rosas) filed an application for adjudication of his claim for workers’ compensation benefits on December 17, 1987, alleging he suffered injury to his back, leg and internal organs when exposed to sewage on September 4, 1987, while employed as an instrument repair technician with real party in interest, the City of Stockton (City), permissibly self-insured. Subsequently, Rosas amended his application to allege he sustained injury to his internal organs, legs, arms and multiple parts of his body from exposure to hepatitis from raw sewage during the period from *1695 September 4, 1986, to September 4, 1987. The City answered the application, denying Rosas suffered injury arising out of or in the course of his employment and denying liability for workers’ compensation benefits. 1

Rosas was the sole witness at the initial hearing before the Board’s workers’ compensation judge (WCJ) on April 16, 1990. Rosas testified without contradiction. He worked for the City for approximately eight years before his injury. He installed, inspected, maintained and repaired flow regulators, recording and transmitter instruments, controlling apparatus, display equipment and other systems used in waste water treatment substations located throughout the city. His job responsibilities periodically required him to reach his hands into raw sewage to remove equipment for repair. Although Rosas wore gloves, sometimes the equipment would cut his gloves, exposing his hands to raw sewage, or the sewage would flow over the tops of the gloves. At times, his hands would be nicked and he would bleed. Rosas estimated he was exposed to raw sewage two or three times per week, including the time period prior to September 4, 1987. Some of the City’s sewer substations lacked facilities to wash after exposure to the sewage.

The parties submitted into evidence medical records and reports of Rosas’s treating and examining physicians. Dr. Del Paine reported that laboratory tests administered when Rosas received treatment at an emergency room on September 8, 1987, showed Rosas had contracted hepatitis B. Dr. Rishwain, a gastroenterologist, examined Rosas in November 1987. Rishwain reported that although Rosas’s symptoms associated with acute hepatitis B had begun to improve, Rosas began to experience weakness in his hands and feet approximately one month after the onset of the hepatitis B. In August 1989, Rishwain reported Rosas had developed chronic hepatitis B and, “in association with his type B hepatitis, he developed polyarteritis nodosa with significant neurologic deficits involving the use of Ms hands and legs.”

The parties deposed Dr. Rishwain regarding causation of the hepatitis B and polyarteritis nodosa (PAN). Rishwain testified Rosas could not have been a cMonic carrier of hepatitis B but rather must have contracted the disease witMn six months before Rishwain first saw Rosas because Rosas had never prior to September 1987 exMbited symptoms of hepatitis B and *1696 because Rosas’s “hepatitis B core antibody I[g]M blood test” was positive on October 30, 1987. Rishwain explained the positive immunoglobulin macro (IgM) blood test indicated Rosas developed PAN as a complication of acute hepatitis B. However, Rishwain testified he lacked sufficient information to know whether a person can contract hepatitis B from exposure to raw sewage, and would defer that question to an occupational health specialist.

Dr. Candara, a diplómate of the American Board of Internal Medicine, examined Rosas in June 1988. Candara reported Rosas has no risk factors for hepatitis B, such as intravenous drug use, homosexuality, foreign travel or hepatitis in family or friends. However, Rosas was required to place his gloved hands into raw sewage which often came into contact with his skin through leaks in the gloves or, from time to time, by.flowing over the tops of the gloves; also, Rosas sometimes smoked cigarettes after working in the sewage without first washing his hands. Candara reported: “Most commonly, hepatitis B is spread through either perinatal, exposure to infected blood or blood products, puncture of the skin with contaminated needles or instruments, and close personal contact, particularly sexual contact. However, hepatitis B has also been spread through household contacts of hepatitis B carriers, without the above mechanisms being implicated, and also in international travelers visiting endemic areas of hepatitis B infection. Studies such as those by Reiner, Bernier, and Blainey, have reported hepatitis B surface antigen in feces and urine of carriers of this disease [citations]. Presumably, a break in the mucosa of a sewer worker such as Mr. Rosas could then be implicated in the development of this disease. [][] As described above, Mr. Rosas has none of the other pre-disposing factors for this condition. Therefore, based on the information available, I would consider his hepatitis to be most likely and medically probably occupationally-related. Since [PAN] is a known complication of hepatitis B infection, this disorder should also be considered occupationally-related in this case.”

Dr. Candara reexamined Rosas in February 1989. Candara reported Rosas’s condition had developed into chronic hepatitis and Rosas remained severely disabled from PAN. In subsequent reports, Candara reasserted that PAN was a complication of hepatitis B. Candara argued the suggestion that Rosas’s hepatitis B might have developed as a complication of PAN was inconsistent with the medical findings in Rosas’s case and with accepted medical literature. Candara also cited a number of medical studies in support of his opinion that hepatitis B may be spread by exposure to human waste, such as blood, saliva, urine, semen, vaginal secretions and perhaps feces, although Candara conceded that he was unaware of studies showing exposure of hepatitis B to sewage treatment workers. Candara examined Rosas a third time, in February 1990. Candara reported that although Rosas had *1697 improved somewhat, Rosas continued to require ankle braces to support himself while walking and continued to have difficulty with fine motor coordination of his hands. In a supplemental report in January 1991, Candara cited medical studies in support of his view that Rosas’s PAN developed as a complication of hepatitis B.

Rosas also submitted the medical reports of Dr. Chu, a board certified physiatrist, who examined Rosas in March and April 1990. Chu opined that Rosas’s hepatitis B and PAN are probably work-related.

The City relied on the medical reports of Dr. Ogrod, an internist, who examined Rosas in January 1989.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Cal. App. 4th 1692, 20 Cal. Rptr. 2d 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosas-v-workers-compensation-appeals-board-calctapp-1993.