Court Opinion

ID: 9699665
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-25 20:44:28.884071+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:20:55.263763
License: Public Domain

OPINION BY
Judge PELLEGRINI.
Denise Elberson (Claimant) appeals from an order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) affirming the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) granting Elwyn, Inc.’s (Employer) termination petition.
Employer, an organization that provides services to individuals with special needs, employed Claimant as a program supervisor placing her in charge of various aspects of client care. On March 17, 2001, while making her rounds, Claimant sustained a work-related injury to her back when she lifted a client off the floor and back into his walker. Employer issued a notice of compensation payable on April 5, 2001, defining Claimant’s work injury as a *1197herniated nucleus pulposus at L4-5 (HNP at L4-5), and she began receiving benefits in accordance with the Workers’ Compensation Act.1 On June 9, 2004, Employer filed a termination petition alleging that Claimant had fully recovered from her work-related injury as of November 19, 2003. Claimant filed an answer denying Employer’s allegations, and the matter was assigned to a WCJ for a hearing.
To establish that Claimant had fully recovered from her work-related injury, Howard H. Steel, M.D. (Dr. Steel), who was board certified in orthopedic surgery, testified that when he examined Claimant, she complained of low back pain, numbness on the right outer aspect of her calf, cramping in her toes, and cramps in her hamstrings. Following the examination, though, Dr. Steel stated that he observed that Claimant had excellent motion of her back and normal reflexes. He went on to state that the results of the sitting and supine straight leg exam were inconsistent in that Claimant experienced pain when raising her leg in the supine position but was unaffected when doing so in the sitting position. Dr. Steel testified that the results should have been the same regardless of corporal position.
Dr. Steel also testified that he reviewed two MRIs that Claimant underwent in March 2001 and August 2002. With regard to the March 2001 report, he stated that she had “bulging discs from the top to bottom” of her spine that he believed preexisted the March 17, 2001 injury. (Reproduced Record at 72a.) He went on to testify that the August 2002 report showed that the herniated disc at L5-S1 was better. He also testified that while an EMG indicated radiculopathy at L5-S1, he was unable to discover signs or symptoms of radiculopathy during Claimant’s examination.
Based on his assessment of her condition, Dr. Steel opined, without mentioning Claimant’s HNP at L4-5, that Claimant had fully recovered from her work injury because no evidence suggested that she had a herniated disc. He released her to work full duties in her position as program supervisor but stated that she should not lift anything based on the positive findings on the MRI and EMG and a possible previously diagnosed herniated disc, all of which he attributed to pre-existing conditions.
In opposition, Claimant testified that before her injury, she did not experience back problems, but after it occurred, she received four epidurals, two EMGs, physical therapy, pain management and home exercises. Claimant stated that she was unable to return to work because she was not able to perform her job at her pre-injury level. She admitted, though, that she would return to work if a position opened up with Employer that did not require lifting.
Claimant also offered the testimony of William C. Murphy, D.O. (Dr. Murphy), who was board certified in the field of physical medicine and rehabilitation. He testified that Claimant had back pain, weakness in the muscles in her right lower extremities, and pain which radiated down to her right leg. Upon reviewing her MRI reports, he determined that Claimant had multiple level disc protrusions at L3-4 and L4-5, with a herniated disc at L5-S1 that he opined was the source of her radiculo-pathy. Specifically, Dr. Murphy concluded that based on the March 2001 MRI, the disc protrusions were directly attributable to the March 17, 2001 injury. Dr. Murphy also stated that two EMGs performed on Claimant in April 2003 and June 2004 re*1198vealed a right L5-S1 radiculopathy of a mild to moderate severity. He diagnosed Claimant with a herniated lumbar disc at multiple levels, particularly at L3-4 through L5-S1, and a right lumbar radicu-lopathy. He then opined that because her job as program supervisor involved lifting, she would be unable to return to her pre-injury duties and restricted Claimant to lifting no greater than 10 pounds occasionally and five pounds frequently.
Finding Dr. Steel’s testimony to be credible, the WCJ concluded that Claimant had fully recovered from her work injury as of November 17, 2003, and could return to work at full-duty with no restrictions related to that injury. She reasoned that Dr. Steel was unable to find orthopedic or neurological abnormalities that could be objectively correlated to Claimant’s subjective complaints, and the lifting restrictions he imposed were based on the positive findings of diagnostic studies of a previously diagnosed disc disease. The WCJ found Dr. Murphy’s testimony unpersuasive because he failed to offer an opinion on whether Claimant had fully recovered from her work injury and merely stated that she could not return to her pre-injury job. The WCJ also found Claimant’s testimony not credible because her subjective complaints of pain were not consistent with any identifiable neurological or physiological causes. Concluding that Employer met its burden of proving that Claimant’s work-related injury ceased, the WCJ granted its termination petition.
Claimant appealed to the Board arguing that Dr. Steel’s testimony was insufficient to support the termination petition because he failed to address the injury described in the notice of compensation payable, the HNP at L4-5. She also claimed that because he opined that she could not perform the lifting requirements of her pre-injury job, his testimony was not sufficient to establish that she had fully recovered from her work-related injury. The Board, however, found that even though he never addressed the work-related injury, Dr. Steel clearly stated that his examination revealed no evidence of an orthopedic or neurological disease or a herniated disc. In addition, the Board reasoned that Dr. Steel’s lifting restrictions were not based on any objective medical findings but on Claimant’s own subjective reports of pain. It affirmed the WCJ’s termination of Claimant’s benefits, and this appeal followed.2
Claimant contends, as she did before the Board, that the WCJ erred in granting Employer’s termination petition3 because Dr. Steel failed to acknowledge the exact injury indicated in the notice of compensation payable, the HNP at L4-5, and testify that Claimant had fully recovered. She maintains that without unequivocally establishing that she had recovered *1199from the designated injury, Employer was unable to meet its burden to terminate her benefits. Employer counters that even though Dr. Steel testified that he believed Claimant had sustained a lumbar sprain or strain, he also did not disagree that she sustained a herniated disc, and his testimony demonstrated that no objective evidence existed which would have substantiated that Claimant continued to suffer from her alleged disability.
To terminate benefits, an employer’s expert must recognize the work injury as described in the notice of compensation payable and opine that the claimant has fully recovered from that injury. GA & FC Wagman, Inc. v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Aucker), 785 A.2d 1087 (Pa.Cmwlth.2001). For example, in Wagman, the claimant was awarded benefits pursuant to a notice of compensation payable that listed his injury as an “exacerbation of pseudoarthrosis L45.” Subsequently, the employer sought to terminate benefits, and before the WCJ, it offered expert testimony that failed to acknowledge that the claimant ever suffered from the injury listed in the notice, but stated that he had fully recovered from any work injury. Finding this testimony to be credible, the WCJ granted the employer’s termination petition but the Board reversed. On appeal, we affirmed the Board’s decision holding that the testimony of a medical expert could not support a termination of benefits where the doctor failed to determine whether the claimant had recovered fully from the accepted injury listed in the notice of compensation payable. Because the employer’s expert did not recognize that the claimant suffered from the injury set forth in the notice, we concluded that it would have been impossible for him to find that the claimant fully recovered from that particular injury. See also Gillyard v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board), 865 A.2d 991, 996 (Pa.Cmwlth.2005) (where medical expert testified that claimant’s back was normal but failed to address the work-related injury, we held that testimony to be insufficient to support a termination of benefits).
In the present matter, for Employer to be successful in terminating benefits, it had to submit medical evidence proving that Claimant had recovered from her work-related injury — the HNP at L4-5. Although Dr. Steel opined that Claimant had recovered from her work injury, he did so without knowing what the work injury was:
Q: Did you find that she was fully recovered from that work injury?
A: Since I couldn’t find any abnormality, I would have to say she had gotten better, yes.
Q: And do you have any further explanation, aside from what you’ve already given, as to any other reason why you felt that she was fully recovered from what you understood her injury to be, a lumbar strain and sprain?
A: I don’t understand the question.
Q: Let me ask you this: What did you understand her work injury to be?
A: I understood — I knew it occurred. I didn’t know what her work injury was. But I would infer from what I saw her, when I saw her, that she had a sprain or strain of her back. And I could find no evidence or any residual thereof or anything to suggest a herniated disc.
(Reproduced Record at 70a-71a.) (Emphasis added.)
In this case, Dr. Steel never recognized that Claimant suffered from the HNP at L4-5 because he thought that the work *1200injury was a sprain or strain of her back.4 Even though he testified that there was no clinical evidence of any “abnormality” in Claimant’s spine, without recognizing the specific work-related injury, Dr. Steel’s opinion is insufficient to support that she had fully recovered from a specific work-related injury. Aucker. At a bare minimum, the expert must know what the accepted work-related injury was to be competent to testify that a claimant has fully recovered from a work-related injury. Accordingly, because the WCJ and the Board improperly relied on Dr. Steel’s opinion in granting Employer’s termination petition, the WCJ’s order is reversed.5

ORDER

AND NOW, this 10th day of September, 2007, the order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board, No. A05-3027, is reversed.

. Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1041.4, 2501-2626.

. Our scope of review in a workers’ compensation appeal is limited to determining whether necessary findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence, whether an error of law was committed, or whether constitutional rights were violated. City of Scranton v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Roche), 909 A.2d 485 (Pa.Cmwlth.2006).

. In a termination proceeding, the employer bears the burden of establishing that the claimant has fully recovered from her work-related injury. Schachter v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (SPS Technologies), 910 A.2d 742 (Pa.Cmwlth.2006). An employer may satisfy its burden by offering unequivocal medical evidence which establishes with a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the claimant has fully recovered, can return to work without restrictions, and there are no objective medical findings which either substantiate the claims of pain or connect them to the work injury. Udvari v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board (USAir), 550 Pa. 319, 705 A.2d 1290 (1997).

. In To v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Insaco, Inc.), 819 A.2d 1222 (Pa.Cmwlth.2003), we held that the testimony of employer's medical expert was sufficient to support a termination of benefits, notwithstanding the doctor's expressed belief that claimant never sustained the injury acknowledged in the notice of compensation payable. In reaching this conclusion, we distinguished the-facts presented in Wagman because in To, the employer’s expert specifically opined that the claimant had fully recovered from the accepted injury. To is inapplicable because Dr. Steel did not specifically address whether Claimant had recovered from the work-related injury because he did know what it was.

. Claimant also argues that the WCJ erred because Dr. Steel credited her subjective corn-plaints of pain and placed lifting restrictions on her job. Without demonstrating that the reason for those restrictions was related to a back condition that was totally independent from the work injury, she maintains that Employer has not proven that she is fully recovered. However, because of the manner in which we have resolved Claimant’s first argument, we need not address the merits of her second argument.