Tompkin v. RTG Medical

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 2016
DocketA-16-045
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tompkin v. RTG Medical (Tompkin v. RTG Medical) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tompkin v. RTG Medical, (Neb. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

TOMPKIN V. RTG MEDICAL

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

JANET TOMPKIN, APPELLEE, V.

RTG MEDICAL, APPELLANT.

Filed October 18, 2016. No. A-16-045.

Appeal from the Workers’ Compensation Court: JOHN R. HOFFERT, Judge. Affirmed. Christopher A. Sievers, of Prentiss Grant, L.L.C., for appellant. Michaela Skogerboe and James E. Harris, of Harris & Associates, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.

MOORE, Chief Judge, and RIEDMANN and PIRTLE, Judges. MOORE, Chief Judge. I. INTRODUCTION RTG Medical appeals from orders of the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court awarding Janet Tompkins ongoing temporary total disability benefits and medical expenses to include treatment of complex regional pain syndrome and depression, along with penalties, attorney fees, and interest. On appeal, RTG Medical challenges the finding of a causal connection between Janet’s accident and claimed injuries; ordering of ongoing disability benefits despite alleged employability; and awarding of penalties, interest, and attorney fees. Because we find no error, we affirm.

-1- II. BACKGROUND 1. JANET’S EMPLOYMENT, ORIGINAL INJURY, AND MEDICAL TREATMENT PRIOR TO COURT’S INITIAL AWARD On January 21, 2012, while Janet was employed by RTG Medical as a traveling nurse at a medical facility in Brookings, South Dakota, she slipped and fell on ice while walking outside the motel where she was being lodged. She landed on her outstretched left hand and wrist, her nondominant side, fracturing the left forearm. Janet did not hit her head or lose consciousness as a result of the fall. She denied having injuries beyond left forearm pain at that time. Janet was taken to a nearby emergency room that same day, where x rays revealed a left distal radius fracture. Closed reduction surgery was performed on the fracture, and the left arm was secured by a splint. Medical records note that Janet was taking depression medication at this time. Janet attempted a return to work the following workday, but was told by physicians at the medical facility after examination that she would be unable to work for approximately 12 weeks. They instructed her to go home. On that same day, Janet informed RTG Medical of her accident and injuries. Because Janet could not drive, her daughter transported Janet from Brookings to the daughter’s home in Wisconsin. Upon arriving in Wisconsin in January 2012, Janet was referred to Dr. Patrick Hall, an orthopedic surgeon. Hall examined Janet and performed an open reduction internal fixation of the left distal radius fracture. He expressed the opinion that Janet’s left arm/wrist injury was causally related to the accident. Hall referred Janet to an occupational therapist. In March 2012, Janet began attending occupational therapy. During these appointments, it was noted that Janet suffered from severe pain and substantial stiffness limiting her range of motion, all pertaining to the left forearm, wrist, and hand. The occupational therapist reported to Hall, expressing that the amount of pain experienced by Janet was reflective of complex regional pain syndrome. Janet ended this initial round of occupational therapy in May 2012 upon return to her Florida home. The occupational therapy discharge summary, signed by Hall, noted that Janet suffered from “pain well beyond proportion of injury.” X rays indicated that the facture was healing and bones were in alignment. It was observed that Janet received some relief through treatment, but not significant enough to really improve function. Hall “had questions” regarding whether Janet suffered from complex regional pain syndrome due to the severe pain and presence of swelling and discoloration. It was recommended that Janet continue seeing an orthopedic doctor and participate in further occupational therapy upon returning to Florida. Similar observations and diagnoses were made during Janet’s occupational therapy in Florida from June through August 2012. Janet continued to be limited to light activity due to severe pain in the left hand, forearm, and wrist. Her wrist remained very stiff and sensitive to the touch. Janet was unable to grasp or lift objects with her left hand and experienced shooting pain from the hand up into the forearm. During August 2012, Janet twice attempted to reenter the workforce. The first position was a one-day temporary job administering flu shots. The second position was at a school for severely

-2- handicapped children. The record does not indicate how long this employment lasted. Janet testified that these positions required significant accommodations to account for her inability to use her left hand, and she felt unable to fulfill the assigned job duties. Regarding the second position, she noted her co-workers were not happy “because they were doing the work and I was getting paid.” Janet indicated during physical therapy that working made the pain worse. She voluntarily left both these positions. Janet met with Dr. Siddharth Shah, a neurologist, from August through November 2012. Once again, Janet complained of severe pain in the left forearm, along with experiencing an electric shock sensation. The muscles of her left hand were weak, with grip and sensation being diminished. Her left hand suffered significant stiffness, being unable to bend, squeeze, or extend this hand, or touch the left thumb and outer area of the left forearm. Janet denied any neck or radicular pains. Shah also conducted a neurological evaluation, including EMG and nerve conduction studies. The EMG showed possible C7-T1 radiculopathy and the nerve conduction studies were normal. Shah wrote a letter stating that Janet suffers from severe left hand pain and could not bear any weight. Shah recommended pain medications and continued therapy. Shah also referred Janet to a pain management doctor. However, Janet testified that she was unable to begin treatment with a pain management physician at that time because it was not authorized by RTG Medical. Shah formed the opinion, contained within a September 2012 medical report, that “with reasonable medical certainty and probability, (Janet’s) injuries, diagnoses, complaints, and treatment are casually (sic) connected to the slip and fall accident.” Shah initially made inconsistent reports regarding whether Janet had reached maximum medical improvement and suffered from complex regional pain syndrome. However, he later clarified that Janet had reached maximum medical improvement from a neurological standpoint, and she most likely has complex regional pain syndrome. Dr. Nicholas Strobbe, Janet’s primary care physician, examined her on October 11, 2012. His assessment noted “reflex sympathetic dystrophy”, which is another term for complex regional pain syndrome. Strobbe provided Janet with a return-to-work note on this date establishing a 2-pound lifting restriction for the left hand. 2. ORIGINAL WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COURT ORDER On November 13, 2012, following the parties’ stipulation of dismissal, the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court entered an order finding that Janet sustained personal injuries in an accident on January 21, 2012 arising out of and in the course of employment with RTG Medical. As a result, the court determined that Janet was entitled to workers’ compensation benefits. The court found Janet had not yet reached maximum medical improvement and was entitled to temporary total and/or temporary partial disability benefits beginning October 13, 2012 and continuing for so long as she is temporarily disabled. Further, the court found that pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-120

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Tompkin v. RTG Medical, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkin-v-rtg-medical-nebctapp-2016.