SMITH, KENDRA V. REGARD RECOVERY JP, LLC

2025 TN WC 52
CourtTennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims
DecidedAugust 5, 2025
Docket2025-60-3038, 2025-60-3037
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 TN WC 52 (SMITH, KENDRA V. REGARD RECOVERY JP, 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
SMITH, KENDRA V. REGARD RECOVERY JP, LLC, 2025 TN WC 52 (Tenn. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

FILED Aug 05, 2025 02:18 PM(CT) TENNESSEE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS

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

KENDRA SMITH, ) Docket Nos. 2025-60-3038 Employee, ) 2025-60-3037 v. ) REGARD RECOVERY JP, LLC, ) Employer, ) TECHNOLOGY INSURANCE CO., ) Carrier. ) State File Nos. 40527-2024 ) 860132-2025 And, ) TROY HALEY AS ) ADMINSTRATION OF THE ) SUBSEQUENT INJURY AND ) VOCATIONAL RECOVERY FUND ) Judge Joshua D. Baker FOR THE STATE OF TENNESSEE. ) ) )

EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER

At a July 23 expedited hearing, Ms. Smith requested a pulmonology panel, medical treatment, and continued temporary disability benefits for an alleged work-related aggravation of her preexisting asthma.1 For the reasons below, the Court holds she is likely to prevail at a final hearing on a pulmonology referral. Further, because she has workplace restrictions that Regard Recovery did not accommodate, she is also likely to prevail in proving entitlement to temporary disability benefits. However, without expert medical evidence establishing the reasonableness and necessity of the specific medical treatment she sought, that request is denied at this time.

1 Regard Recovery filed a motion to consolidate these claims, which Ms. Smith opposed. At the trial’s outset, the Court consolidated the claims for the purpose of this hearing because Ms. Smith was seeking the same benefits in both claims.

1 Claim History

Ms. Smith was exposed to vape smoke at work twice within a week, once on May 22 and again on June 1, 2024. She alleged the exposures aggravated her preexisting asthma, and Regard Recovery initially accepted her claim.

Within three days of her last exposure, an adjuster emailed Ms. Smith a choice of three walk-in clinics listed in the body of an email but omitting any physicians’ names. Ms. Smith responded to the email with her choice of clinic.

At the clinic, a nurse recommended on June 6 that Ms. Smith see a pulmonologist. Her recommendation read, “Follow up with pulmonologist as recommended to evaluate the extent of the potential damage to your lungs that vaping smoke may be contributing to.” A doctor at the same clinic also signed a pulmonology referral about a week later, on June 14. Additionally, Ms. Smith received restrictions that Regard Recovery did not accommodate, leaving her unemployed.

Christopher Broderick, who supervised adjusters on Ms. Smith’s claim, signed a declaration detailing the efforts made to find three pulmonologists until the claim’s denial “as not a compensable incident” on January 17, 2025. Mr. Broderick explained, “Despite these efforts, no panel of three pulmonologists could be assembled in compliance with Tennessee workers’ compensation requirements.” Regard Recovery gave no proof explaining why the claim was denied at that time.

Four months after the denial, Dr. Margaret Ikard, Ms. Smith’s primary care doctor, signed a letter explaining Ms. Smith saw “pulmonology for asthma and sleep apnea” before the work exposures but “did not require oxygenation during the day.” Since then, she continued, “The patient has reported worsening . . . symptoms with exposure to smoking, vaping, and air pollutants. To my knowledge, patient’s respiratory status has progressively declined, to now requiring oxygen.”

A day later, and nearly a year after the pulmonology referral, Regard Recovery offered Ms. Smith a panel of two pulmonologists. But Ms. Smith declined to choose one since the panel limited her choice to only two physicians.

Regard Recovery filed medical records from pulmonologists with whom Ms. Smith treated on her own after the work exposures to smoke. However, nothing in these records suggested Regard Recovery based its denial of her claim on the content of the records or that it even had the records when it denied the claim.

As for her pulmonology treatment, one pulmonologist, Dr. Kuhn, had treated Ms. Smith for years. Although she had seen him post-injury, his records did not contain an expert medical opinion on whether the smoke exposure at work aggravated her preexisting

2 asthma. Ms. Smith testified that she was highly unsatisfied with Dr. Kuhn’s care and would never return to him for treatment. Also, Dr. Kuhn does not treat workers’ compensation patients.

Hoping to transfer her care from Dr. Kuhn, Ms. Smith also saw pulmonologist Dr. Modupe Kehinde. But she felt displeased with the quality of his care, too. Dr. Kehinde’s records also lack any expert medical opinion on a work-related aggravation of Ms. Smith’s preexisting asthma.

According to Mr. Broderick’s declaration, the Carrier paid Ms. Smith $28,626.76 in temporary disability from June 1, 2024, to July 9, 2025. Although benefits ended with the January 17, 2025 denial, the insurer reinstated those benefits with a lump-sum payment, bringing temporary disability payments current as of July 9, 2025.

Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

Ms. Smith must prove she is likely to prevail at a final hearing on her requested benefits. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(d)(1) (2025); McCord v. Advantage Human Resourcing, 2015 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 6, at *7-8, 9 (Mar. 27, 2015). She requested a panel of pulmonologists, temporary disability benefits, and specific medical benefits like oxygen therapy, a pulse oximeter, and a portable continuous oxygen concentrator.

At trial, Regard Recovery did not dispute Ms. Smith’s exposures to smoke at work or that an authorized physician had recommended a pulmonologist. Instead, it pointed to Ms. Smith’s pulmonology treatment records, which lacked an expert opinion on medical causation, to argue for denial of benefits.

Certainly, Ms. Smith’s post-injury pulmonology treatment presented her an opportunity to obtain an expert opinion. Yet this case is distinguishable from cases where benefits were denied because a “medical opinion addressing causation [was] in the record [and was] contrary to Employee’s position.” Berdnik v. Fairfield Glade Cmty. Club, 2017 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 32, at *16 (May 18, 2017). Here, no expert medical opinion is in the record – only a treating physician’s pulmonology referral, which is presumed medically necessary. Tenn, Code Ann. § 50-6-204(a)(3)(H).

Moreover, an “employer’s assertion that an employee has no medical evidence supporting his or her claim does not, standing alone, excuse it from [its] statutory obligations under section 50-6-204(a)(1)(A).” Hawes v. McLane Co., Inc., 2021 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 30, at *10 (Aug. 25, 2021). Here, the employer’s obligation to provide a panel of pulmonologists under section Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6- 204(a)(3)(A)(i).

3 In fact, an injured worker is not required to prove medical causation or medical necessity to obtain an evaluation from a specialist when an authorized physician has made a referral. Beech v. G4S Secure Solutions (USA), Inc., 2020 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 71, at *9. Instead, at the interlocutory stage, “the relevant issue is whether . . . a panel-selected treating physician made a referral to a specialist[.]” Id.

Because a treating physician has referred Ms. Smith to a pulmonologist, the Court holds she is likely to prevail at a final hearing on authorization of the pulmonology referral.

Since Regard Recovery maintained it cannot find three pulmonologists, the Court orders an appointment with Dr. Ikard for her to refer Ms. Smith to a specific pulmonologist to become the authorized treating physician.

Next, the Court declines to order any specific medical treatment until the authorized pulmonologist recommends treatment made reasonably necessary by the work accident. Tenn. Code Ann.

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Related

§ 50-6-204
Tennessee § 50-6-204(a)(1)(A)
§ 50-6-239
Tennessee § 50-6-239(d)(1)

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Bluebook (online)
2025 TN WC 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-kendra-v-regard-recovery-jp-llc-tennworkcompcl-2025.