Court Opinion

ID: 4265984
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-04-20 13:52:08.557226+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:31:03.523830
License: Public Domain

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

UPMC Mercy and UPMC Benefit                    :
Management Services, Inc.,                     :
                Petitioners                    :
                                               :
              v.                               :    No. 1319 C.D. 2017
                                               :    Submitted: January 19, 2018
Workers’ Compensation Appeal                   :
Board (Luterancik),                            :
                  Respondent                   :

BEFORE:       HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
              HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
              HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT                                            FILED: April 20, 2018

              UPMC Mercy and UPMC Benefit Management Services, Inc.
(Employer) petition for review of an adjudication of the Workers’ Compensation
Appeal Board (Board) affirming the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge
(WCJ) to award Donna Luterancik (Claimant) compensation for her lower back
injury.1 Employer argues that the testimony of Claimant’s medical expert was not
competent because it was based upon incorrect information about the cause of
Claimant’s low back injury. Additionally, Employer contends that the WCJ’s
Findings of Fact Nos. 3(f) and 4(a) are not supported by the evidence in the record.
For the following reasons, we affirm.

1
  The Board also affirmed the WCJ’s decision granting Employer’s Termination Petition with
regard to Claimant’s left shoulder injury. Neither party has appealed this portion of the Board’s
adjudication.
               Claimant worked for Employer as a Patient Care Technician.2 On
January 8, 2015, while assisting a patient to the restroom, Claimant sustained an
injury. Employer accepted liability for medical treatment only of a left shoulder
strain. Claimant continued working in a light-duty capacity from January 8, 2015,
through March 6, 2015, when she was released to return to her pre-injury job. On
March 18, 2015, Claimant found herself unable to move because of severe low back
pain. She did not return to work. On April 24, 2015, Claimant filed a claim petition
alleging that she suffered a low back injury on January 8, 2015, for which she sought
total disability compensation.
               At the hearing before the WCJ, Claimant described the work incident
as follows:

               A [patient] in Room 12 called out, put her call light on. I went
               in. The woman was sitting in her chair and said she had to go to
               the ladies room. I asked her how she wanted to do this because
               there was a bedside commode fairly close and she said she
               wanted to go on the bedside commode. She stood up and all of
               a sudden could not – I guess her legs gave out. She grabbed onto
               me, we turned, fell into the wall down to the floor.

N.T., 6/10/2015, at 11-12; R.R. 35a-36a. Claimant stated that her “whole back”
struck the wall. Id. at 12; R.R. 36a. To assist the patient up from the floor, Claimant
put her “left arm underneath the lady” and helped her halfway up before other nurses
came into the room to assist her. Id. Claimant stated that she experienced pain in
her “whole back including [her] left shoulder.” Id. at 13; R.R. 37a.
               Claimant sought medical treatment at Occu-Med, where she was
prescribed Vicodin and Flexeril. Id. Regarding the pain in her back, Claimant

2
 As a Patient Care Technician, Claimant’s job duties included lifting patients from their bed to a
chair, bathing them, and checking their vital signs. Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 6/10/2015, at 9;
Reproduced Record at 33a (R.R. __).
                                                2
testified that “most of it was all on my left side but it was my whole back that hurt
like in the beginning.” Id. at 14; R.R. 38a. Claimant testified that she began physical
therapy and

              a week after physical therapy after this happened I noticed I was
              having lower back pain. I had mentioned it to my therapist and
              he just said it was related to my injury and to ask when I go back
              to the doctor, mention it to the doctor and tell him you were
              having these pains back there and they were --- they were pains
              and I had them 24 hours in my lower back. I asked the doctor …
              he said the same thing, it’s just you have this injury. This is what
              this is all caused from.

Id. at 15-16; R.R. 39a-40a.       Claimant related the low back symptoms to the
workplace incident because she

              never had back problems in the past, ever. I never seen [sic] a
              chiropractor never had --- I mean, it just seemed like after this
              happened I did have these back pains. I was able to do my job
              when he sent me back on regular duty to a certain extent but these
              pains just kept --- they were ongoing.

Id. at 19; R.R. 43a.
              On cross-examination, Claimant acknowledged that when she began
physical therapy, she did not tell the physical therapist that she had low back pain.
Rather, it was around February 20, 2015, about a month after she started physical
therapy, that Claimant told the physical therapist that she was experiencing low back
pain.
              Claimant also submitted the deposition and report of Melissa Guanche,
M.D., who is board certified in physical medicine and rehabilitation and began
treating Claimant on March 25, 2015. Claimant told Dr. Guanche about her fall at
work while assisting an obese patient. Claimant also told Dr. Guanche that her low
back pain developed “while she was in physical therapy for her left shoulder.” N.T.,
                                           3
10/15/2015, at 7; R.R. 84a. Dr. Guanche’s examination of Claimant showed
“weakness in both hip flexors … significant difficulty with lumbar flexion that
reproduced her pain, and tenderness across the lower lumbosacral spine.” Id. at 8;
R.R. 85a.
               Dr. Guanche ordered several diagnostic studies.                      An x-ray of
Claimant’s back was taken, which revealed “[d]ecreased disc space height with
degenerative changes at the L5-S1 segment.” Id. An MRI revealed that Claimant

               had a disc protrusion. She had some degenerative changes at the
               upper lumbar levels. At the L5-S1 segment she had a disc
               protrusion off to the left with mild foraminal narrowing meaning
               mild narrowing of the space where the nerve exists.

Id. at 9; R.R. 86a. Dr. Guanche diagnosed Claimant with left lumbar radiculitis,
discogenic pain, and a lumbar strain.3 Id. at 10; R.R. 87a.
               Dr. Guanche testified that, in her opinion, Claimant’s low back
problems were related to her work injury. Dr. Guanche explained:

               [w]hile she was in physical therapy is when she started
               developing this worsening back pain. Pain was going down the
               left butt into the posterior left thigh. She stated she never had
               these kind of symptoms before. That led me to get the MRI, and
               there were concordant findings on the MRI of the left disc
               protrusion with some narrowing of the left foramen. So her
               presentation definitely – you know, it doesn’t always correlate

3
  Dr. Guanche testified that
                left lumbar radiculitis means inflammation of the nerve root on the left side
                likely attributing to the pain she was having going down her leg. Discogenic
                pain means pain originating from the disc itself; so a disc tear, disc
                protrusion, an abnormality within the disc typically causing pain on forward
                flexion, sitting. And lumbar strain is a strain, muscle pull.
Id. at 10; R.R. 87a.
                                                 4
             with the imaging. It did in her case. And she didn’t have a
             history of, you know, recent similar pain or presentation.

Id. at 13; R.R. 90a (emphasis added). On September 23, 2015, Dr. Guanche found
Claimant still suffering from disabling back pain but with a good prognosis for
recovery.
             On cross-examination, Dr. Guanche acknowledged that, with respect to
Claimant’s degenerative changes at L5-S1, there was “no way of telling if that disc
[wa]s acute or chronic.” Id. at 22; R.R. 99a. Stated otherwise, there was “no way
of telling if that happened 15 years ago or that happened at the time of accident.” Id.
Accordingly, Dr. Guanche stated that she relied “primarily on [] Claimant’s history
of having had an acute incident in determining the source or origination of her low
back issues.” Id. at 25; R.R. 102a.
             In opposition to the claim petition, Employer presented the testimony
of Thomas D. Kramer, M.D., a board certified orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Kramer
evaluated Claimant on July 31, 2015. He examined her lumbar spine and observed
tenderness at the lumbosacral junction. Based upon his review of the results of
Claimant’s MRI, Dr. Kramer opined that Claimant had “lumbar degenerative disk
disease mainly at the L5-S1 level, with endplate degenerative changes, along with a
central disk protrusion.” N.T., 12/10/2015, at 13; R.R. 133a. He disagreed that there
was a herniation but noted that, in any event, a herniation “does not cause any type
of canal stenosis.” Id.
             Dr. Kramer opined that Claimant did not sustain a back injury in the
January 8, 2015, work incident or “as a consequence of performing physical therapy
for her left shoulder.” Id. at 23; R.R. 143a. Dr. Kramer opined that the MRI study
showed a degenerative condition, along with a disk protrusion, not related to or
aggravated by the work injury.

                                          5
             The WCJ concluded that Claimant established that she sustained a work
injury on January 8, 2015, in the nature of a left shoulder strain and left lumbar
radiculitis, discogenic pain, and a lumbar strain. WCJ Decision, 10/20/2016, at 6,
Finding of Fact (F.F.) No. 6(a); R.R. 204a. In so concluding, the WCJ credited the
testimony of Claimant and Dr. Guanche’s opinion on causation. Id. at 6-7, F.F. No.
6a; R.R. 204a-05a. The WCJ explained:

             Dr. Guanche is the treating physician of [] Claimant and has
             examined her on multiple occasions. Furthermore, this Judge
             finds Dr. Guanche’s explanation to be logical as to why she finds
             Claimant’s lower back condition related to the work injury.
             Additionally, Dr. Guanche noted Claimant’s low back
             complaints are supported by the findings on her MRI[.]

Id. at 7, F.F. No. 6(c); R.R. 205a. The WCJ rejected the opinion of Dr. Kramer to
the extent it conflicted with that of Dr. Guanche, explaining that

             Dr. Kramer only examined Claimant on one occasion.
             Furthermore, Dr. Kramer agreed that Claimant had no prior
             history of low back complaints and/or treatment although he
             opined Claimant’s current complaints were related to a pre-
             existing back condition. Furthermore, Dr. Kramer agreed that
             she had complaints of lower back pain and this occurred within
             one month of the work injury in question.

Id. at 7, F.F. No. 6(d); R.R. 205a.
             Employer appealed and the Board affirmed the WCJ’s decision. The
Board rejected Employer’s contention that the testimony of Dr. Guanche was not
competent. The Board explained that

             Dr. Guanche testified that Claimant’s back pain began after a
             work injury. Her treatment had focused on a left shoulder injury,
             and Claimant told Dr. Guanche that the pain began while she was
             in physical therapy for her left shoulder…. [Dr. Guanche] related
             Claimant’s low back condition to the work injury because
             Claimant started to develop worsening back pain while she was
                                          6
              in physical therapy and had never had symptoms of that nature
              before.

Board Adjudication, 8/22/2017, at 4 (internal citations omitted).
              On appeal,4 Employer raises two arguments. First, Employer argues
that Dr. Guanche’s testimony was not competent because she did not understand the
cause of Claimant’s low back injury. Second, Employer argues that the WCJ’s
Findings of Fact Nos. 3(f) and 4(a), relating to the testimony of Dr. Guanche and Dr.
Kramer, are not supported by substantial competent evidence.
              The question of witness competency is one of law and subject to
plenary review. Cerro Metal Products Company v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal
Board (PLEWA), 855 A.2d 932, 937 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004). Where an expert’s opinion
is not based upon facts of record, that opinion is incompetent. Taylor v. Workers’
Compensation Appeal Board (Servistar Corporation), 883 A.2d 710, 713 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2005). Nevertheless, the opinion of a medical expert must be viewed as a
whole; reference to inaccurate information will not render the opinion incompetent
unless it is dependent upon that inaccurate information. Id.
              In its first issue, Employer contends that Dr. Guanche’s opinion was
based upon an incorrect history received from Claimant. In support, Employer
directs the Court’s attention to Newcomer v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal
Board (Ward Trucking Corp.), 692 A.2d 1062 (Pa. 1997). In that case, the claimant
described his work accident to his medical expert in a way that was “patently
different” from the description he gave to other physicians, who treated him at the

4
  In reviewing the Board’s adjudication, this Court determines whether the necessary findings of
fact are supported by substantial evidence, whether Board procedures were violated, whether
constitutional rights were violated or whether an error of law was committed. CVA, Inc. v.
Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Riley), 29 A.3d 1224, 1227 n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011).
                                               7
time of injury. Id. at 1066. Employer argues that under Newcomer, Dr. Guanche’s
opinion was not competent.
             Claimant testified that when she fell at work her “whole back” struck
the wall, causing pain both to her shoulder and back. N.T., 6/10/2015, at 12; R.R.
36a. The notes from Occu-Med, dating to the day of the accident, reported that
Claimant fell backwards into a wall causing “shoulder/back, pain …
neck/shoulder/upperback.” Certified Record, Item No. 20 at 1. After a week of
physical therapy, Claimant noticed lower back pain, which she reported to the
physical therapist. By March 18, 2015, Claimant could not move because of the
back pain.
             Dr. Guanche testified that Claimant fell while assisting an obese patient
and later she developed “worsening back pain” during physical therapy. N.T.,
10/15/2015, at 13; R.R. 90a. Dr. Guanche’s understanding of Claimant’s accident
and developing pain was consistent with Claimant’s credited testimony. There is no
patent difference between Claimant’s account of the work accident and Dr.
Guanche’s understanding thereof. Newcomer is inapposite.
             Employer argues, however, that Dr. Guanche’s testimony about the role
of Claimant’s physical therapy in her developing pain renders her causation opinion
incompetent. Employer points to the following cross-examination of Dr. Guanche:

             [Attorney:]        When you wrote down that she injured it in
                                PT, what was your understanding of what
                                that meant? Did that mean she was actually
                                at a physical therapy appointment? Did that
                                mean that she was actively participating in
                                physical therapy?
             [Dr. Guanche:]     To me that meant that while she was getting
                                treatment for physical therapy is when she
                                developed this back pain going to her butt.

                                          8
                                                ***
             [Attorney:]         Okay. So she initially hurt herself at physical
                                 therapy, and then the back got worse over
                                 time?
             [Dr. Guanche:]      Correct.

N.T., 10/15/2015, at 17-18; R.R. 94a-95a. Employer contends that Dr. Guanche’s
response, “correct,” shows that she believed that Claimant’s low back pain was
caused by the physical therapy, not the fall.
             To determine competency, the fact finder must examine all the
testimony, not a single response given in cross-examination.         This Court has
explained as follows:

             In a worker’s [sic] compensation proceeding, answers given in
             cross-examination do not, as a matter of law, destroy the
             effectiveness of previous opinions expressed by a physician.
             Rather, the evidence will be assessed as a whole in passing upon
             the weight to be given to the expressed opinion.

Hannigan v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Asplundh Tree Expert
Company), 616 A.2d 764, 767 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1992). Dr. Guanche stated that while
in physical therapy, Claimant developed “worsening back pain.” N.T., 10/15/2015,
at 13; R.R. 90a. Dr. Guanche did not state that Claimant never experienced back
pain before that day or that the therapy itself caused the low back pain. She simply
stated, relying on Claimant’s statement, that Claimant’s back pain “worsened” that
day. This suggests that the pain pre-existed its “worsening” that day.
             On cross-examination, Dr. Guanche was asked if Claimant “hurt herself
at physical therapy, and then the back got worse over time.” N.T., 10/15/2015, at
17-18; R.R. 94a-95a. The phrase “hurt herself” is subject to interpretation and can
mean simply that Claimant experienced pain at physical therapy. Dr. Guanche’s one

                                            9
word response, “correct,” did not invalidate her opinion that Claimant’s back injury
was caused by the fall at work. We conclude, based upon a review of all of her
testimony, that Dr. Guanche’s understanding of the work accident and its impact on
Claimant was supported by the record, i.e., Claimant’s credited testimony, and, thus,
competent.
             In its second issue, Employer challenges two of the WCJ’s findings of
fact as not supported by substantial evidence. They are Findings of Fact Nos. 3(f)
and 4(a). We review each finding of fact seriately.
             Finding of Fact No. 3(f) states as follows:

             On cross-examination, [Dr. Guanche] agreed she relied on
             Claimant’s history regarding the development of low back pain
             after the time of the work injury.

WCJ Decision, 10/20/2016, at 5; F.F. No. 3(f); R.R. 203a. Employer asserts that
this finding is unfounded because Dr. Guanche misunderstood Claimant’s relevant
medical history. This contention is simply a different take on Employer’s first issue,
i.e., that Dr. Guanche’s cross-examination showed that she believed that Claimant
suffered an acute incident in physical therapy, which was at odds with Claimant’s
testimony.
             Whether characterized as a lack of substantial evidence or lack of
competent medical evidence on causation, the contention lacks merit. Dr. Guanche’s
cross-examination did not negate her testimony that she relied upon Claimant’s
description of her fall at work and Claimant’s statement that she never had back pain
before the fall to find her back pain work-related. However, even if Dr. Guanche’s
cross-examination answer is construed to mean that she believed Claimant also
suffered a back injury in physical therapy, the WCJ was “free to accept or reject the
testimony of any witness, including a medical witness, in whole or in part.” Verizon
                                         10
Pennsylvania Incorporated v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Mills), 116
A.3d 1157, 1162 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015). We reject Employer’s argument that Finding
of Fact No. 3(f) is not supported by substantial evidence.
             Employer also challenges the WCJ’s Finding of Fact No. 4(a) as not
supported by substantial evidence. This finding of fact summarized Dr. Kramer’s
testimony, in relevant part, as follows:

             He examined Claimant on one occasion, July 31, 2015. On that
             date, Claimant indicated she sustained an injury on January 8,
             2015 when she was assisting a patient to stand up and that patient
             fell on top of her…. Claimant began physical therapy for her left
             shoulder where she developed low back pain.

WCJ’s Decision, 10/20/2016, at 5, F.F. No. 4(a); R.R. 203a. Employer contends
that this finding of fact suggests that Dr. Kramer believed Claimant suffered an acute
injury while in physical therapy, which is a mischaracterization of Dr. Kramer’s
testimony. He was clear that neither the medical records, nor the physical therapy
records, indicated that Claimant’s back pain was caused by physical therapy.
             At the hearing, Dr. Kramer testified about the information he learned
from Claimant regarding her injury and subsequent medical treatment. He stated:

             [s]he had worked four-and-a-half years at Mercy Hospital as a
             patient care technician. She stated that she was injured on
             January 8 of 2015. She was pulled to another unit and was taking
             care of a patient for whom she had to transfer to the bedside
             commode.
             The patient stood up. The patient couldn’t feel her legs, and then
             the patient fell onto her, and then she subsequently hit the wall.
             They both then went to the floor.
             … She tried to get the patient up on her own and had to lower her
             back down. She stated that she had experienced pain
             everywhere. She did report the injury, and thereafter, stopped
             working.

                                           11
             … She then had follow-up where she underwent physical therapy
             for her left shoulder. She stated she developed lower back pain
             afterwards.
             She did tell me that she was told by the physical therapist that her
             lower back pain was related to her initial injury.

N.T., 12/10/2015, at 7-8; R.R. 127a-28a. This testimony formed the basis of Finding
of Fact No. 4(a).
             The WCJ did not mischaracterize Dr. Kramer’s testimony in Finding of
Fact No. 4(a). It is a concise summary of Dr. Kramer’s testimony, and this summary
does not state, or suggest, that Dr. Kramer believed Claimant suffered an acute injury
at physical therapy. We reject Employer’s challenge to Finding of Fact No. 4(a).
             For all the above-stated reasons, the Court affirms the Board’s
adjudication.

                                    ______________________________________
                                    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge

                                          12
         IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

UPMC Mercy and UPMC Benefit           :
Management Services, Inc.,            :
                Petitioners           :
                                      :
            v.                        :   No. 1319 C.D. 2017
                                      :
Workers’ Compensation Appeal          :
Board (Luterancik),                   :
                  Respondent          :

                                 ORDER

            AND NOW, this 20th day of April, 2018, the order of the Workers’
Compensation Appeal Board dated August 22, 2017, in the above-captioned matter
is AFFIRMED.

                                _____________________________________
                                MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge