TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION
IN THE COURT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION CLAIMS
AT MEMPHIS
JEFF D. WALLIS, ) Docket No. 2017-08-0772
Employee, )
v. ) State File No. 2656-2017
BAPTIST MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, )
Self-Insured Employer. ) Judge Allen Phillips
EXPEDITED HEARING ORDER GRANTING MEDICAL AND TEMPORARY
DISABILITY BENEFITS
Mr. Wallis requested medical and temporary disability benefits for an injury to his
back occurring on January 8, 201 7. Baptist Memorial Hospital asserted the injury did not
arise out of the employment and denied the claim. The Court heard the disputed issues on
March 21, 2018, and holds Mr. Wallis is entitled to the requested benefits.
History of Claim
Mr. Wallis worked for Baptist as a patient care assistant, a job that required lifting
patients. He described the job as physically demanding. In addition to lifting patients, he
~alked up to twelve hours during his shifts. A 2003 automobile accident caused him to
undergo a lumbar fusion surgery in 2008, but he completely recovered and returned to
steady employment. He denied any problems with his back until January 8.
On that date, Mr. Wallis helped lift a 300-pound patient. The patient collapsed
onto Mr. Wallis' arms when he "hooked" them under the patient to lift. He felt immediate
pain in his back "like being stuck with an ice pick." He went to the hospital's emergency
room, where the provider said Mr. Wallis had a lumbar strain and left-sided sciatica and
characterized it as a "work related injury." When Mr. Wallis did not improve, Baptist
offered him a panel of physicians, from which he chose Dr. James Varner, an orthopedic
surgeon.
On January 13, Dr. Varner recorded the incident and noted a lumbar fusion at the
L5-S l level. X-rays showed a "well-consolidated lumbar fusion with retained
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.. instrumentation." Dr. Varner diagnosed a lumbar strain with left sciatica and
recommended an MRI. He asked the radiologist to compare the MRI to one performed in
2008.
The radiologist interpreted the January I 7 MRI as showing an "interval posterior
fusion at the level ofL5 and SI" when comparing it to the 2008 MRI. Dr. Varner said his
review of the MRI showed "a well-consolidated fusion with reduction of [Mr. Wallis']
spondylolisthesis at L5-Sl." However, Mr. Wallis still complained of pain, so Dr. Varner
recommended a surgical consultation. Baptist provided another panel, from which Mr.
Wallis chose Dr. Laverne Lovell, a neurosurgeon.
Dr. Lovell said he could not determine if Mr. Wallis had a solid fusion based on
either the January 17 MRI or Dr. Varner's x-rays. Thus, he recommended a CT scan.
After his review of the CT, Dr. Lovell said, "I personally don't think he is fused across
the disc space," but he added, "I frankly don't think the CT scan is good enough
technically as an image to tell me that he is fused." He summarized his causation opinion
as follows:
It is an odd scenario and I understand that completely. The patient feels like
he has to be fused since his surgery was done in 2008 and he supposedly
had no symptoms until this work injury. I understand his feelings about that
but a fibrous non-union, I think, will eventually become symptomatic for a
patient as time goes by and it has just taken him a lot longer period of time.
I don't deny that there was increased or occurrence of symptoms with this
episode at work. I just think way more than 50% of his problem stems
around a fibrous non-union from a surgery done eight years ago under his
regular insurance.
Dr. Lovell recommended Mr. Wallis return to Dr. Francis Camillo, his surgeon in 2008,
or alternatively Dr. Lovell could perform a repeat fusion "under ... regular insurance."
Mr. Wallis opted to see Dr. Camillo.
On June 5, Dr. Camillo reviewed the CT scan and said it showed a broken screw.
He also saw the broken screw on his own x-rays but noted no other abnormalities. Dr.
Camillo summarized his findings by stating:
What I believe is he had a psuedoarthrosis. 1 I believe when he was holding
the patient more than likely he fatigued the screw, and it broke, and now
this is the increase in his pain in his back. . . . I do believe that this was
due to his work injury.
1
A pseudoarthrosis is a failure of a fusion following surgery. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles (last
visited April 2, 2018).
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Dr. Lovell reviewed Dr. Camillo's office note and x-rays. He said he "went back"
and looked at the CT scan and plain x-rays taken before Dr. Camillo's visit, and he still
did not see a broken screw on those studies. He did say the earlier studies confirmed that
Mr. Wallis did not have a solid fusion. However, Dr. Lovell also stated that he "would
not consider in any way, shape or form a broken screw and non-union from a previous
operation to be related in any kind of work incident." Instead, he said broken screws "can
happen for no reason and for any reason and I will not relate that to a work injury." He
then stated:
It is not clear to me whether my previous studies just weren't in correct
focus or alignment to show this screw fracture and Dr. Camillo's study
happened to be in a proper alignment or if the patient actually broke the
screw after seeing me and prior to seeing Dr. Camillo. The CT scan
generally will be the best study and will show a screw fracture and the CT
scan that I performed on the patient does not show that.
Dr. Lovell "went on record" as saying the broken screw happened between the time he
saw Mr. Wallis and the time Dr. Camillo saw Mr. Wallis. Dr. Lovell confirmed his
opinions in affidavit form.
Based on this proof, Baptist contended Mr. Wallis did not establish the required
causal connection between the January 8 incident and his injury. It pointed to the absence
of any diagnosis of a broken screw until after April 2017 and argued the Court must
presume Dr. Lovell's opinions are correct. Mr. Wallis argued it is "ridiculous" to argue
his problems came from anything other than the work incident because he had no
problems until then. He relied upon Dr. Camillo's opinion.
Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
Standard applied
Mr. Wallis must come forward with sufficient evidence demonstrating he is likely
to prevail at a hearing on the merits. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(d)(l) (2017). Mr.
Wallis elected to represent himself, as is his right, but the Court cannot "excuse him from
complying with the same substantive and procedural rules that represented parties are
expected to observe." Walton v. Averitt Express, Inc., 2017 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd.
LEXIS 37, at *5 (June 2, 2017).
Analysis
Mr. Wallis claims the January 8 incident caused his disablement and need for
medical treatment. To prevail, he must establish a specific incident that arose primarily
out of his employment by presenting medical evidence that the incident "contributed
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more than fifty percent (50%)" to his claimed disablement or need for medical treatment.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-102(14)(C)-(D). The Court finds he did so.
Looking to the above requirements, the Court first finds Mr. Wallis established a
specific incident. He credibly detailed the mechanics of the January 8 event and its
immediate effects. He was steady, forthcoming, and self-assured based on the Court's
direct observation. See Kelly v. Kelly, 445 S.W.3d 685, 695-696 (Tenn. 2014). Further,
the Court notes Mr. Wallis appeared to be in legitimate pain based on his physical
demeanor.
Next, the Court finds Mr. Wallis established the work incident contributed more
than fifty percent to his disablement and need for treatment. In so finding, the Court
recognizes Dr. Lovell's opinion is presumed correct. Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-102
(14)(E). However, his opinion is subject to rebuttal by a preponderance of the evidence,
and the Court finds Mr. Wallis would likely prevail in rebutting that opinion at a hearing
on the merits.
On this point, the Court considers that Tennessee law has long held medical proof
is not to be "read and evaluated in a vacuum" but, instead "must be considered in
conjunction with the lay testimony of the employee as to how the injury occurred and the
employee's subsequent condition." Thomas v. Aetna Life and Cas. Co., 812 S.W.2d 278,
283 (Tenn. 1991). The Court believes Mr. Wallis' uncontroverted testimony that he
worked a physically demanding job until the January 8 incident disabled him. Baptist
offered no evidence to substantiate that he injured his back between April and June 2017,
as Dr. Lovell suggested.
Moreover, Mr. Wallis' testimony is consistent with Dr. Camillo's opinion that the
screw most likely broke on January 8. When faced with conflicting medical testimony,
the Court must use its discretion in accepting one expert opinion over another and, in so
doing, may consider which opinion contains the more probable explanation. Sanker v.
Nacarato Trucks, Inc., 2016 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 27, at *12 (July 6, 2016).
Here, the Court finds Dr. Camillo's opinion contains the more probable explanation.
Both Drs. Camillo and Lovell believed Mr. Wallis had an incomplete fusion from
his surgery in 2008. However, unlike Dr. Lovell, Dr. Camillo thought the event of
January 8 "fatigued" the screw, causing it to break and lead to Mr. Wallis' pain. Dr.
Camillo detected a broken screw on both the CT scan and on x-rays taken in his office.
He found no other abnormalities, in accord with Dr. Lovell, to account for Mr. Wallis'
pam.
The Court contrasts Dr. Camillo's opinion with that of Dr. Lovell, who said, "[I]t
is not clear" whether poor quality x-rays were to blame for not seeing a broken screw or
whether the screw broke between April and June. He further assailed the April 7 CT scan
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as not "good enough technically" to confirm a fusion, but he later labeled the same CT
scan as "the best study" to show a fractured screw. He then used his interpretation of the
CT scan to relegate the January 8 incident to mere happenstance, saying an implanted
screw might break "for no reason [or] for any reason," but not because a 300-pound
patient collapsed on Mr. Wallis. This opinion cannot account for the uncontroverted
testimony of Mr. Wallis that he functioned without restriction until January 8.
For these reasons, the Court accredits Dr. Camillo's opinion and holds Mr. Wallis
presented sufficient evidence that he is likely to prevail at a hearing on the merits
regarding causation.
Medical benefits
Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-204(a)(3)(A)(i) requires Baptist provide
Mr. Wallis a panel of physicians to provide authorized treatment. It did so twice. Thus,
the Court will not order another panel. However, Dr. Lovell recommended that Mr.
Wallis return to Dr. Camillo. The Court holds it is appropriate to designate Dr. Camillo as
the authorized physician under these circumstances.
Temporary disability benefits
Dr. Lovell did not totally restrict Mr. Wallis from work. Thus, Mr. Wallis is not
entitled to temporary total disability. However, he might be entitled to temporary partial
disability (TPD), which is payable when an employee might resume some gainful
employment but has yet to reach maximum medical improvement. Hackney v. Integrity
Staffing Solutions, Inc., 2016 TN Wrk. Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 29, at * 11 (July 22,
2016). Here, Dr. Lovell maintained light-duty restrictions as of April 27, 2017. Mr.
Wallis testified without rebuttal that Baptist ceased accommodating his restrictions after
Dr. Lovell said it was not work-related. Thus, the Court finds he is entitled to TPD from
then until now and ongoing, until a physician releases him to work or places him at
maximum medical improvement.
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED as follows:
1. Baptist shall provide Mr. Wallis with reasonable and necessary medical treatment
of his lumbar spine injury under Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-
204(a)(l)(A), including any proposed surgery. Mr. Wallis or Dr. Camillo shall
provide the bills to Baptist.
2. Baptist shall pay TPD benefits to Mr. Wallis for the period of April 28, 2017, to
April 4, 2018, a period of forty-eight weeks and five days, at a rate of $425.88 per
week, or $20,744.61. Baptist shall continue TPD payments until a physician
releases Mr. Wallis to full-duty or places him at maximum medical improvement.
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3. This matter is set for a telephonic Status Hearing on Tuesday, June 26, 2018, at
10:00 a.m. Central Time. The parties must call toll-free at 855-543-5038 to
participate in the hearing. Failure to call in may result in a determination of the
issues without a party's further participation.
4. Unless interlocutory appeal of the Expedited Hearing Order is filed, compliance
with this Order must occur no later than seven business days from the date of entry
of this Order as required by Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-239(d)(3).
The Insurer or Self-Insured Employer must submit confirmation of compliance
with this Order to the Bureau by email to WCCompliance.Program@tn.go no
later than the seventh business day after entry of this Order. Failure to submit the
necessary confirmation within the period of compliance may result in a penalty
assessment for non-compliance. For questions regarding compliance, please
contact the Workers' Compensation Compliance Unit via email
WCCompl iance.Program@tn.gov.
ENTERED this the 4th day of April,
pensation Claims
APPENDIX
Exhibits:
1. Collective Medical Records of Baptist Hospital and Drs. Varner and Lovell
2. Medical Records of Dr. Francis Camillo
3. X-rays purported to be Mr. Wallis' spine
4. Wage Statement
Technical record:
1. Petition for Benefit Determination
2. Dispute Certification Notice
3. Request for Expedited Hearing
4. Employer's Motion for Summary Judgment
5. Statement of Undisputed Material Facts in Support of Summary Judgment
6. Order Denying Motion for Summary Judgment
7. Employer's "Plain and Concise Statement As to Why Relief Should Not Be
Granted"
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I certify that a true and correct copy of this Expedited Hearing Order was sent to
the following recipients by the following methods of service on this the 4th day of April,
2018.
Name Via Email Service sent to:
Jeff Wallis, Self-Represented Employee x ljeffwallis.@att.net
Matthew Kirby, Attorney for Employer x mkirby@harrisshelton.com
Pablo Varela, Attorney for Employer x pvarela@harrisshelton.com
'£J )JµliAA-- /
q u..,., Court Clerk
Cou:O:Workers' Compensation Claims
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