Court Opinion

ID: 9931583
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-09 15:04:51.150008+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:24:24.023483
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

                                   No. 22–0471

            Submitted December 14, 2023—Filed February 9, 2024

MID AMERICAN CONSTRUCTION LLC and GRINNELL MUTUAL,

      Resisters,

vs.

MARSHALL SANDLIN,

      Applicant.

      On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Scott D. Rosenberg,

Judge.

      An employee seeks further review of court of appeals decision that limited

his reimbursement for an independent medical examination under the 2017

amendment to Iowa Code section 85.39(2). DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS

AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED IN PART; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
      Waterman, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices

joined.

      Stephen      W.   Spencer   and   Christopher   S.   Spencer   of   Peddicord

Wharton, LLP, West Des Moines, for appellants.

      Zeke R. McCartney of Reyolds & Kenline, LLP, Dubuque, for appellee.
                                       2

WATERMAN, Justice.
      In this appeal, we must determine whether the court of appeals correctly

applied Iowa Code section 85.39, as amended in 2017, to limit an employee’s

reimbursement for an independent medical examination (IME). The workers’

compensation commissioner awarded the full $2,020 charged by the physician,

who opined that his own charge was reasonable. The district court affirmed, and

we transferred the employer’s appeal to the court of appeals, which reduced the

reimbursement to $500 based on its interpretation of the amendment as limiting

reimbursement to the impairment rating alone without the accompanying

examination. We granted the employee’s application for further review.

      On our review, we hold that the employee is entitled to the reasonable cost

of the examination accompanying the physician’s determination of the

impairment rating, not merely the component cost of the impairment rating

itself. Under the 2017 amendment, reasonableness is to be based on the typical

fee charged in the locale where the examination is performed. To determine the

rating, the physician in this case examined and tested the claimant and reviewed

records. Section 85.39, as amended, continues to allow reimbursement for the

complete “examination” to ascertain the impairment rating, including these
activities. The employee bears the burden to prove the reasonableness of the fee.

Whether the fee is reasonable is a question of fact, and the commissioner’s

finding of reasonableness is to be affirmed if supported by substantial evidence.

Here, however, the commissioner failed to make a finding required under the

2017 amendment as to the fee typically charged in that locale. Accordingly, we

affirm in part and remand the case for the commissioner to conduct further

fact-finding on that issue.
                                         3

      I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

      Marshall Sandlin, then age 42, began working at Mid American

Construction LLC as a laborer in May 2017. On September 6, Sandlin was

working in Dubuque on a two-story deck removing rotten boards. He was

standing on a step ladder removing a trim board about ten feet off the ground

when the ladder gave way. As he fell onto the concrete floor, his left foot caught

on the ladder. Sandlin’s foot hurt, but he tried to “walk it off.” When he remained

unable to put any weight on his foot without pain, he called his boss, who told

him to come see him. His boss looked at Sandlin’s foot and told him to “go home

and put ice on it.”

      Sandlin stayed home for a few days, but his pain persisted. His boss told

him to “[j]ust give it more time [and] just stay off work.” Frustrated, Sandlin told

his employer he needed to see a doctor. On Saturday, September 9, Sandlin, on

his own initiative, saw Dr. Frederick Isaak at Medical Associates Clinic—his

primary physician and the only clinic open that weekend. Dr. Isaak ordered

X-rays that showed a possible fracture in Sandlin’s fifth metatarsal. Dr. Isaak

advised him to keep his foot elevated, use ice, and take ibuprofen for pain.

      Dr. Isaak referred Sandlin to a podiatrist, Dr. Tracy Hughes, at Medical
Associates Podiatry. Sandlin saw Dr. Hughes on September 13. She noted

Sandlin’s continued reports of pain and ordered Sandlin to wear a boot and use

crutches. Sandlin returned to see Dr. Hughes the next month. Dr. Hughes

observed that Sandlin’s foot was improving and advised that he could return to

work “full time without restrictions in 1 week.”

      On December 14, Sandlin underwent an IME by Dr. Erin Kennedy at

Tri-State Occupational Health. The parties dispute how this IME was set.

Sandlin later testified that Mid American’s insurance carrier, Grinnell Mutual,
had its medical case manager schedule the examination and directed Sandlin to
                                        4

see Dr. Kennedy; the insurer argues that Dr. Hughes referred Sandlin to

Dr. Kennedy. Regardless, Dr. Kennedy performed the examination in under

thirty minutes and determined that Sandlin had reached maximum medical

improvement. She assigned Sandlin a 0% impairment rating. Dr. Kennedy did

note, however, that Sandlin continued to experience minor symptoms resulting

from the fracture. The examination fee totaled $174.25. Other records show

Dr. Kennedy regularly performs examinations for employers’ insurers, including

Grinnell Mutual.

      In June 2018, Sandlin’s counsel arranged for another IME by Dr. Mark

Taylor at Medix Occupational Health Clinic in Cedar Rapids. Dr. Taylor spent

more time examining Sandlin than Dr. Kennedy, spending about one hour with

Sandlin. Unlike Dr. Kennedy, Dr. Taylor used instruments to test Sandlin’s

range of motion in his foot and ankle. He also made Sandlin perform walking

and stretching exercises to determine Sandlin’s discomfort in his foot, and he

spent time reviewing Sandlin’s medical history and records. Dr. Taylor diagnosed

Sandlin’s injury and assigned a 2% impairment rating to Sandlin’s left foot for

his work injury. Dr. Taylor also prepared a report outlining his findings,

concluding with the following statement on his fees:

             The fees for this examination are reasonable based upon my
      training and certification in performing such examinations as a
      Board Certified specialist in Occupational and Environmental
      Medicine, as well as certification as an Independent Medical
      Examiner by the American Board of Independent Medical
      Examiners[,] the time spent with the examinee obtaining the history
      and performing the examination, the time spent in preparing this
      report, [and] the time spent by my staff preparing the file for use in
      preparing this report.

Dr. Taylor sent an invoice to Sandlin’s counsel for $2,020. The invoice provided

the following fee breakdown:

      •   IME Exam 1st Hour: $700
                                        5

      •   IME Exam time greater than 1 hour: $209

      •   IME Report 1st hour: $700

      •   IME Report time greater than 1 hour: $411

Neither the invoice nor Dr. Taylor’s report addressed the fees typically charged

in the Cedar Rapids area for impairment ratings.

      Sandlin sought reimbursement from Grinnell Mutual under Iowa Code

section 85.39 (2018). Grinnell Mutual responded that it “will not be paying out

the 2% rating assessed by Dr. Taylor” and “will not be reimbursing [Sandlin] for

the IME report.” Grinnell Mutual claimed that Sandlin was only “entitled to

reimbursement of a reasonable fee for another impairment rating, not a full

blown [IME].”

      Sandlin filed a petition for arbitration seeking compensation benefits and

full reimbursement for Dr. Taylor’s examination. The parties stipulated that

Sandlin “suffered an injury to his left foot which arose out of and in the course

of employment on September 6, 2017.” But Mid American disputed whether

Sandlin suffered a permanent disability, the extent of any disability, and his

eligibility to get his IME expense reimbursed.

      A deputy workers’ compensation commissioner conducted an evidentiary
hearing. Sandlin testified that he “has a dull, throbbing pain in the mid to side

of [his] foot” and that he is unable to engage in hobbies “as much as he did

before” the injury. The deputy found Sandlin’s testimony “believable.” Exhibits

introduced into evidence included Dr. Hughes’s report, Dr. Taylor’s report and

invoice for his IME, and the letter from Grinnell Mutual denying reimbursement.

Mid American introduced Dr. Kennedy’s IME report and invoice as well as a

separate document from Dr. Taylor’s office, Medix, entitled “Examination Fees

7/1/2015–Present” setting forth the following fee schedule:
                                       6

Independent Medical Exam                   $1400 Base Fee
Physician time billed at $95 per
15-minute increment.
Rush IME Report                            $750/$600
Inside of 1-week from appt
date/Inside of 3-weeks from appt
date.
Impairment Rating/Restrictions             $500 Flat Fee
Exam
Includes cost for one body part.
Additional $150 per addit body part.
Rush IR Report                             $300
Inside of 3-weeks from appt date.
File Review                                $95 per ¼ hour
Phone Conference                           $95 per ¼ hour
Letter Fee                                 $95 per ¼ hour
IME Cancel Fee                             $500
Less than 2-weeks notice
Impairment Rating Cancel Fee               $250
Less than 2-weeks notice
IME No-Show Fee                            $750
Impairment Rating No-Show Fee              $300

      The deputy’s arbitration decision found Sandlin suffered a 2% impairment

rating to his left leg and ruled that Sandlin qualified for reimbursement under

Iowa Code section 85.39. The deputy ordered Mid American to reimburse

Sandlin for his IME costs in the full amount of $2,020. The arbitration decision

was silent as to the fee typically charged in Cedar Rapids for an IME.

      Mid American filed a motion for rehearing, arguing that it did not “retain”

Dr. Kennedy to evaluate Sandlin’s impairment; therefore, he was ineligible for

reimbursement for the IME by Dr. Taylor under Iowa Code section 85.39(2).

Mid American alternatively argued that it only owed the cost of Dr. Taylor’s
impairment rating, not the rest of the examination charges, and that his charges
                                         7

were unreasonable. Finally, Mid American requested modification of the deputy’s

arbitration decision based on the parties’ stipulation that Sandlin had injured

his foot, not his leg. The deputy modified the decision to refer to the foot. But the

deputy disagreed with Mid American about the IME costs. The deputy

determined that Sandlin “was directed to see Dr. Kennedy by the insurance

carrier,” meaning that Mid American “retained” Dr. Kennedy. The deputy left the

reimbursement award of $2,020 intact, without addressing what fees are

typically charged in the Cedar Rapids area.

      Mid American appealed to the Workers’ Compensation Commissioner. The

commissioner affirmed the deputy’s finding that Sandlin suffered a 2%

impairment rating and affirmed the deputy’s award of the full $2,020 cost of

Dr. Taylor’s IME. The commissioner found that Grinnell Mutual’s medical case

manager sought out “the appointment with Dr. Kennedy for the purposes of

obtaining an impairment rating” and concluded that Mid American thereby

“retained” Dr. Kennedy. The commissioner also found the costs of the IME were

reasonable. The commissioner placed little weight on the bill for Dr. Kennedy of

$174.25 without any breakdown or explanation of the charges or any disclosure

of a fee-reduction agreement with the insurer. The commissioner found
Dr. Taylor’s explanation of the IME costs persuasive, however, and determined

that Dr. Taylor’s bill was reasonable. The commissioner addressed the Medix fee

schedule and stated that “[p]resumably, this would be a case in which the less

expensive impairment rating/restrictions exam would be appropriate.” But the

commissioner found that this “presumption” was “outweighed by Dr. Taylor’s

statement that his fees . . . are reasonable.” The commissioner ordered

Mid American to reimburse Sandlin $2,020—the full amount charged for the

IME. The commissioner made no finding as to the amount typically charged in
that locality.
                                        8

      Mid American filed this action for judicial review. The district court

affirmed the commissioner’s findings, including the impairment finding and the

IME reimbursement of $2,020. Specifically, the district court reasoned:

             Therefore, while the legislature amended the law so that a
      reasonableness determination must address impairment ratings, it
      did not go so far as grant reimbursement solely for impairment
      ratings. As Petitioners point out, IMEs can have components beyond
      impairment ratings. They may also have opinions on causation,
      permanent restrictions, additional treatment, and maximum
      medical improvement for example. . . . Additionally, the amendment
      added a point of reference for reasonability comparisons, which is
      “based on a typical fee charged by a medical provider in the local
      area where the examination is conducted.” Iowa Code § 89.39(2).
      The Commissioner applied facts to law when he determined that Dr.
      Kennedy’s fee breakdown is not an appropriate comparison to Dr.
      Taylor. He found that Petitioners did not indicate whether Dr.
      Kennedy had fee-reduction agreements in place, which resulted in
      an incomplete picture of her fees and thus not a proper point of
      comparison to Dr. Taylor. On the other hand, the Commissioner
      found Dr. Taylor’s fee statement reasonable, including the time
      spent on the report and time spent reviewing Sandlin’s records. The
      Commissioner committed no error of law when he found that Dr.
      Taylor’s full IME charge is allowable under Iowa Code section 85.39.
      Likewise, the Commissioner’s findings of fact and application of law
      to facts are supported by substantial evidence and are not irrational.

(Citations omitted.)

      Mid American appealed. Without challenging the 2% impairment rating,

Mid American argued that “Sandlin was not entitled to reimbursement for the

IME, and if he was, the amount was unreasonable.” Mid American reiterated that

it did not retain Dr. Kennedy to perform an examination to determine an

impairment rating under section 85.39(2), and so Sandlin was ineligible for

reimbursement for another IME by his chosen physician. Alternatively,

Mid American argued that even if Sandlin was entitled to reimbursement for

Dr. Taylor’s IME expense, Mid American should only reimburse Sandlin the

reasonable cost of the impairment rating itself, not any “additional costs to
provide other opinions beyond impairment or even necessitate reviewing a great
                                          9

deal of records.” Sandlin countered that Mid American’s insurer had scheduled

the appointment with Dr. Kennedy and thereby “retained” her within the

meaning of section 85.39(2). Sandlin also argued that section 85.39(2) requires

reimbursement of the reasonable fee for the “examination,” not just the

impairment rating, and that substantial evidence supported the commissioner’s

finding that Dr. Taylor’s IME fee was reasonable.

      We transferred this case to the court of appeals. The court of appeals

affirmed the district court’s conclusion that “substantial evidence support[ed]

the commissioner’s determination that the employer and insurer, via the medical

case manager, chose Dr. Kennedy to perform the examination.” But the court of

appeals reversed on the reasonableness of the IME costs, finding that

section 85.39(2) provides for the “reasonableness of a fee” to be “based on the

typical fee charged by a medical provider to perform an impairment rating.” The

court of appeals found that the 2017 amendment to section 85.39(2) “only allows

for reimbursement of an examination based on the typical fee charged for an

impairment rating, not the extent of information a full IME entails” and reduced

the award to the $500 flat fee for an impairment rating.

      We granted Sandlin’s application for further review.
      II. Standard of Review.

      We review the commissioner’s “legal interpretations of Iowa Code

chapter 85   for   errors   at   law   rather   than   giving   deference   to   those

interpretations.” Gumm v. Easter Seal Soc’y of Iowa, Inc., 943 N.W.2d 23, 28

(Iowa 2020). “[W]e accept the commissioner’s factual findings when supported

by substantial evidence.” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Bluml v. Dee Jay’s

Inc., 920 N.W.2d 82, 84 (Iowa 2018)). Substantial evidence means that “we must

affirm [the commissioner] if there is enough evidence to support the finding,”
IBP, Inc. v. Harpole, 621 N.W.2d 410, 420 (Iowa 2001) (en banc), even if “we may
                                         10

draw different conclusions from the record.” Coffey v. Mid Seven Transp. Co., 831

N.W.2d 81, 89 (Iowa 2013). “Under [Iowa Code] section 17A.19(10)(f), we may

reverse, modify, or grant other appropriate relief when important findings of a

workers’ compensation decision were not supported by substantial evidence.”

Bell Bros. Heating & Air Conditioning v. Gwinn, 779 N.W.2d 193, 209 (Iowa 2010).

It is a “well-established rule that chapter 85 is liberally construed in favor of the

employee, with any doubt in its construction being resolved in the employee’s

favor.” Larson Mfg. Co. v. Thorson, 763 N.W.2d 842, 859 (Iowa 2009).

      III. Analysis.

      We must decide whether the court of appeals erred in interpreting

section 85.39(2) to limit the IME reimbursement to $500. First, we must

determine the meaning of Iowa Code section 85.39(2) as amended in 2017. We

hold that section 85.39(2) provides for reimbursement of the reasonable cost of

the examination to determine the impairment rating, and the examination

encompasses the records review, the physical examination and testing, and a

written report. The court of appeals erred by limiting reimbursement to the

impairment rating alone, without including the accompanying examination, and

we vacate that part of the court of appeals decision.
      Second, we must determine whether the district court erred in upholding

the commissioner’s award for the full $2,020 charged by Dr. Taylor for his IME.

The commissioner failed to make a finding of fact necessary under the 2017

amendment: the fee typically charged in that local area. We reverse the district

court on that issue and remand the case for further factfinding by the

commissioner.

      A. The Meaning of Iowa Code Section 85.39(2) as Amended in 2017.

Sandlin argues that the district court and commissioner correctly interpreted
section 85.39 to provide for reimbursements for the full examination and should
                                         11

not be limited to only reimbursement for the impairment rating. Sandlin argues

that the physician must review medical records and conduct a full examination

to avoid “pulling a number out of thin air.” Mid American argues section 85.39,

as amended, limits reimbursement to the impairment rating component of the

examination, as the court of appeals held.

        We begin our analysis with the text of the statute. We quote in full Iowa

Code section 85.39 as amended in 2017, with the language added that year in

bold:

               1. After an injury, the employee, if requested by the employer,
        shall submit for examination at some reasonable time and place and
        as often as reasonably requested, to a physician or physicians
        authorized to practice under the laws of this state or another state,
        without cost to the employee; but if the employee requests, the
        employee, at the employee’s own cost, is entitled to have a physician
        or physicians of the employee’s own selection present to participate
        in the examination. If an employee is required to leave work for which
        the employee is being paid wages to attend the requested
        examination, the employee shall be compensated at the employee’s
        regular rate for the time the employee is required to leave work, and
        the employee shall be furnished transportation to and from the place
        of examination, or the employer may elect to pay the employee the
        reasonable cost of the transportation. The refusal of the employee to
        submit to the examination shall forfeit the employee’s right to any
        compensation for the period of the refusal. Compensation shall not
        be payable for the period of refusal.

              2. If an evaluation of permanent disability has been made by
        a physician retained by the employer and the employee believes this
        evaluation to be too low, the employee shall, upon application to the
        commissioner and upon delivery of a copy of the application to the
        employer and its insurance carrier, be reimbursed by the employer
        the reasonable fee for a subsequent examination by a physician of
        the employee’s own choice, and reasonably necessary transportation
        expenses incurred for the examination. The physician chosen by the
        employee has the right to confer with and obtain from the
        employer-retained physician sufficient history of the injury to make
        a proper examination. An employer is only liable to reimburse an
        employee for the cost of an examination conducted pursuant to
        this subsection if the injury for which the employee is being
        examined is determined to be compensable under this chapter
        or chapter 85A or 85B. An employer is not liable for the cost of
        such an examination if the injury for which the employee is
                                        12

      being examined is determined not to be a compensable injury.
      A determination of the reasonableness of a fee for an
      examination made pursuant to this subsection, shall be based
      on the typical fee charged by a medical provider to perform an
      impairment rating in the local area where the examination is
      conducted.

2017 Iowa Acts ch. 23, § 15 (codified at Iowa Code § 85.39 (2018))

(emphasis added).

      Section 85.39 “is devoted to the examination of an injured worker for the

purpose of ascertaining ‘the extent and character of the injury’ for purposes of

paying benefits in the event of a disability resulting from the injury.” Des Moines

Area Reg’l Transit Auth. v. Young, 867 N.W.2d 839, 843 (Iowa 2015) (quoting

Daugherty v. Scandia Coal Co., 219 N.W. 65, 67 (Iowa 1928)). In subsection 1,

the employer may request the employee submit to an examination that is

conducted by a physician of the employer’s choice, and the employee must

attend the examination or forfeit their right to any compensation “for the period

of refusal.” Iowa Code § 85.39(1). We conclude that substantial evidence

supports the commissioner’s finding that Dr. Kennedy was chosen by the

employer’s insurer to conduct that examination of Sandlin, and we affirm the

court of appeals decision and district court ruling on that disputed issue.
      In subsection 2, the legislature leveled the playing field between the

employer and the employee. See id. § 85.39(2); Young, 867 N.W.2d at 844 (“The

statutory process balances the competing interests of the employer and employee

and permits the employee to obtain an independent medical examination at the

employer’s expense.”). Subsection 2 entitles the employee to receive an

examination if the employee believes the evaluation made by the employer’s

physician was too low. Iowa Code § 85.39(2); Young, 867 N.W.2d at 844. The

employee’s own examination “is known as an IME because the examination is
independent of the examination done by the physician selected by the employer.”
                                        13

Young, 867 N.W.2d at 843–44. Here, Dr. Kennedy found zero impairment, which

Sandlin believed was too low, triggering his statutory right to an IME by a

physician of his choosing—Dr. Taylor.

      Subsection 2, as amended in 2017, continues to expressly require the

employer to reimburse the employee for the “reasonable fee for a subsequent

examination by a physician of the employee’s own choice.” Iowa Code § 85.39(2)

(emphasis added). This “is consistent with the overall approach under the

workers’ compensation statute that makes the employer responsible for the

medical care of an employee.” Young, 867 N.W.2d at 846; see Iowa Code

§ 85.27(1) (“The employer, for all injuries compensable under this chapter or

chapter 85A, shall furnish reasonable surgical, medical, dental, osteopathic,

chiropractic, podiatric, physical rehabilitation, nursing, ambulance, and

hospital services and supplies therefor and shall allow reasonably necessary

transportation expenses incurred for such services.”).

      The 2017 amendment added three sentences to the end of subsection 2.

2017 Iowa Acts ch. 23, § 15 (codified at Iowa Code § 85.39 (2018)). The first two

sentences bar an employee from reimbursement if their injury is not

compensable. Id.; Tweeten v. Tweeten, 999 N.W.2d 270, 282 (Iowa 2023).
Today’s case turns on the third sentence: “A determination of the reasonableness

of a fee for an examination made pursuant to this subsection, shall be based on

the typical fee charged by a medical provider to perform an impairment rating in

the local area where the examination is conducted.” 2017 Iowa Acts ch. 23, § 15

(codified at Iowa Code § 85.39 (2018)). The fighting issue in this case is whether

the amendment narrowed the scope of reimbursement from the reasonable cost

of the examination to the reasonable cost of the impairment rating alone. As the

district court correctly concluded, “[T]he amendment added a point of reference
for reasonability comparisons, which is ‘based on a typical fee charged by a
                                         14

medical provider in the local area where the examination is conducted.’ ”

(Quoting Iowa Code § 85.39(2).)

      Mid American argued, and the court of appeals agreed, that Sandlin

should only be reimbursed for the cost of an impairment rating listed on the

Medix fee schedule as $500, not the accompanying examination. We disagree. In

our view, the commissioner and district court correctly interpreted the statute to

allow the cost of the accompanying examination.

      When determining the meaning of a statute, a core canon of statutory

interpretation requires us to construe the statute as a whole. See Iowa Ins.

Inst. v. Core Grp. of Iowa Ass’n for Just., 867 N.W.2d 58, 72 (Iowa 2015); Antonin

Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 167–69

(2012) [hereinafter Scalia & Garner, Reading Law] (stating that this canon “calls

on the judicial interpreter to consider the entire text, in view of its structure and

of the physical and logical relation of its many parts”). Throughout section 85.39,

the term “examination” is used twelve times—five times in subsection 1 and

seven times in subsection 2. See Iowa Code § 85.39. Subsection 2 states that the

employee shall “be reimbursed by the employer the reasonable fee for a

subsequent examination by a physician of the employee’s own choice, and
reasonably necessary transportation expenses incurred for the examination.” Id.

§ 85.39(2) (emphasis added). Under the 2017 amendment, the employer must

reimburse the employee “for the cost of such an examination [only] if the injury

. . . is determined . . . to be a compensable injury.” 2017 Iowa Acts ch. 23, § 15

(codified at Iowa Code § 85.39 (2018)) (emphasis added). Finally, the last

sentence added in 2017 again refers to “the reasonableness of a fee for an

examination.” Id. (emphasis added). Read as a whole, the statute still allows for

the employee with a compensable injury to be reimbursed for the reasonable cost
of the “examination.” See Iowa Code § 85.39. The legislature did not change the
                                       15

target of the fee reimbursement—i.e., the examination—when it amended the

statute. The legislature instead defined how “the reasonable fee for a subsequent

examination” would be determined—i.e., “based on the typical fee charged by a

medical provider to perform an impairment rating in the local area.” Id.

§ 85.39(2). Under our “whole text” analysis, reimbursement is not limited to the

impairment rating but includes the accompanying examination.

      The 2017 amendment effectively necessitates fact-finding by the

commissioner on the fees typically charged in the local area where the

examination is performed. Parties may offer evidence of the fees typically charged

in that locality to support or challenge the fee charged in a particular case. And

the amendment allows consideration of the agency’s own experience adjudicating

IME reimbursement claims in the local area where the examination is performed.

In Nguyen v. Hy-Vee, Inc., the commissioner observed that “many IMEs come

before the agency, which allows the [commissioner] to use agency experience and

expertise to conclude that [the physician’s] charges are in line with those of an

occupational medicine doctor with a practice in the . . . [local] area performing

an evaluation of permanent impairment in accordance with the [AMA] Guides.”

Iowa Workers’ Comp. Comm’n, No. 21003118.03, 2023 WL 7128682, at *32
(Oct. 20, 2023). We agree.

      Under section 85.39, the Iowa Workers’ Compensation Commission “has

long awarded the full cost of an independent medical evaluation, including

review of medical records and opinions pertaining to causation, restrictions, and

future medical care.” Rekic v. Seehase Masonry, Iowa Workers’ Comp. Comm’n

No. 5059846, 2019 WL 1326344, at *12 (Mar. 19, 2019); see, e.g., Eisenbacher v.

United   Parcel   Serv.,     Iowa   Workers’   Comp.     Comm’n      No. 979203,

1993 WL 13021569, at *3, *6 (Feb. 9, 1993) (awarding the employee the full cost
of the IME, which was “conducted for purposes of litigation in order to obtain a
                                       16

rating of impairment”); Spike v. AALFS Mfg., Iowa Workers’ Comp. Comm’n

No. 913731, 1993 WL 13016106, at *5, *7 (Jan. 29, 1993) (awarding the

employee the full cost of the IME and travel expenses). If the legislature wanted

to change this practice, it could have amended the language allowing “the

reasonable fee for a subsequent examination” to instead say that an employee

could be reimbursed “the reasonable fee for an impairment rating.” But it chose

not to. “[W]e look to the language chosen by the legislature and not what the

legislature might have said.” Ramirez-Trujillo v. Quality Egg, LLC, 878 N.W.2d

759, 770 (Iowa 2016).

      Other canons support our interpretation. A statute is to be “liberally

construed with a view to promote its objects.” Iowa Code § 4.2. We have stated

that section 85.39 “should be accorded a logical, sensible construction which

gives harmonious meaning to related sections and accomplishes the legislative

purpose.” IBP, Inc. v. Harker, 633 N.W.2d 322, 325 (Iowa 2001) (quoting

McSpadden v. Big Ben Coal Co., 288 N.W.2d 181, 188 (Iowa 1980)); see Scalia &

Garner, Reading Law 63 (“A textually permissible interpretation that furthers

rather than obstructs the document’s purpose should be favored.”). And when

ambiguity arises in chapter 85, we liberally construe the statute in favor of the
employee. Thorson, 763 N.W.2d at 859–60; see also Bluml, 920 N.W.2d at 91

(stating that “we have long applied the workers’ compensation statute ‘broadly

and liberally in keeping with its humanitarian objective’ ” (quoting Xenia Rural

Water Dist. v. Vegors, 786 N.W.2d 250, 257 (Iowa 2010))).

      “The primary purpose of the workers’ compensation statute is to benefit

the worker and his or her dependents, insofar as statutory requirements permit.”

Harker, 633 N.W.2d at 325 (quoting McSpadden, 288 N.W.2d at 188); see also

Young, 867 N.W.2d at 846 (stating that “the overall approach under the workers’
compensation statute [is to] make[] the employer responsible for the medical care
                                        17

of an employee”). The purpose of section 85.39(2) is to “balance[] the competing

interests of the employer and employee and permit[] the employee to obtain an

independent medical examination at the employer’s expense.” Young, 867

N.W.2d at 844. Reading the amended statute to continue requiring the

reimbursement of the subsequent examination while clarifying how the

reasonable fee is to be determined is a logical and sensible reading that furthers

the purpose of the workers’ compensation statute. See Bluml, 920 N.W.2d at 91.

      Next, we construe the phrase “to perform an impairment rating.” Iowa

Code § 85.39(2). “Perform” is a key word in the last sentence of section 85.39(2).

“Perform” does work. “Canons of statutory interpretation require that every word

and every provision in a statute is to be given effect, if possible, and not deemed

mere surplusage.” Vroegh v. Iowa Dep’t of Corr., 972 N.W.2d 686, 703 (Iowa

2022) (emphasis in original); Scalia & Garner, Reading Law 174. Thus, we must

determine what it means “to perform an impairment rating” as a physician. Iowa

Code § 85.39(2) (emphasis added). We interpret this language in context with a

related amendment that added a new subsection to section 85.34. See Scalia &

Garner, Reading Law 252 (describing the “Related-Statutes Canon” as

encouraging “laws dealing with the same subject . . . [to] be interpreted
harmoniously”). This new subsection requires that “the extent of loss or

percentage of permanent impairment” be “determined solely by utilizing the

guides to the evaluation of permanent impairment, published by the American

medical association,” otherwise known as the AMA Guides. Iowa Code

§ 85.34(2)(x). Prior to 2017, “the [AMA] Guides were a tool the agency could use

when determining the extent of permanent disability caused by an employee’s

work injury,” but use of the guides was not required by statute. Nguyen, Iowa

Workers’ Comp. Comm’n, 2023 WL 7128682, at *27. “The [AMA] Guides contain
a process for physicians to use when evaluating permanent impairment[,] with
                                           18

the impairment rating punctuating that process.” Id. (“Under the [AMA] Guides,

the evaluation of permanent impairment is inextricably intertwined with

assigning an impairment rating.”). Thus, the commission has repeatedly found

a physician’s impairment rating to be unpersuasive when they do not use the

AMA Guides. 15 John Lawyer & James R. Lawyer, Iowa Practice Series Workers’

Compensation § 15.3, at 228 (2022–2023 ed. 2022); see also Shrum v. Boldt Grp.,

Inc., Iowa Workers’ Comp. Comm’n No. 5067317, 2020 WL 7338305, at *3

(Dec. 7, 2020).

      The AMA Guides direct the physician to conduct various tasks to

determine an impairment rating. The physician should determine whether the

employee is at maximal medical improvement. Linda Cocchiarella & Gunnar

B. J. Andersson, AMA Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment 19 (5th

ed. 2001) [hereinafter AMA Guides]. The physician should know about any past

injuries to the employee, and they do this by reviewing past medical records. Id.

at 11–12. The physician should determine whether the work injury caused the

impairment. Id. at 11; see also Kern v. Fenchel, Doster & Buck, No. 20–1206,

2021 WL 3890603, at *4 (Iowa Ct. App. Sep. 1, 2021) (finding that “there can be

no disability determination arising out of a disability evaluation without a
determination there was causation”). The physician should conduct a physical

examination       to   assess   the   employee’s   status   and   perform   accurate

measurements. AMA Guides 21. The physician should determine a diagnosis. Id.

at 22. Under the AMA Guides, a physician is to conduct multiple tasks to perform

an employee’s impairment rating. We construe section 85.39 together with

section 85.34 to conclude that the “examination” required “to perform an

impairment rating” must include the foregoing steps required under the AMA

Guides.
                                       19

      This reading of the statute is bolstered by language used earlier in

section 85.39(2). There, the legislature recognized there must be more to perform

an impairment rating than simply giving a percentage. For example,

section 85.39(2) allows “[t]he physician chosen by the employee . . . the right to

confer with and obtain from the employer-retained physician sufficient history

of the injury to make a proper examination.” Iowa Code § 85.39(2). It would be

nonsensical to give the employee’s chosen physician the right to confer with the

employer’s chosen physician and obtain and review records but then deny

reimbursement for that part of the IME.

      We construe section 85.39(2) as amended in 2017 to require the employer

to reimburse the reasonable cost of the examination that is conducted by a

physician of the employee’s own choosing. The reasonableness of the fees will be

analyzed based on what physicians in that area typically charge to perform the

impairment rating examination—which may include “the costs of reviewing

medical records, conducting a physical examination, opining on causation,

assessing permanent impairment, assigning restrictions, and addressing further

treatment recommendations.” Turner v. NCI Bldg. Sys., Inc., Iowa Workers’ Comp.

Comm’n No. 1652235.01, 2022 WL 1787301, at *26 (Feb. 24, 2022). The court
of appeals erred by basing the award on the impairment rating alone, without

including the accompanying examination.

      B. The Reasonableness of Dr. Taylor’s IME Fee. We turn now to the

commissioner’s finding that Dr. Taylor’s $2,020 IME fee was reasonable. We hold

that the burden is on the claimant to show the reasonableness of his chosen

physician’s IME fee. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(e) (“Ordinarily, the burden of

proof on an issue is upon the party who would suffer loss if the issue were not

established.”); see also Pexa v. Auto Owners Ins., 686 N.W.2d 150, 156 (Iowa
2004) (stating “the plaintiff has the burden to prove the reasonable value of the
                                        20

[medical] services rendered”). The reasonableness of Dr. Taylor’s fee is a question

of fact to be decided by the commissioner. See Quaker Oats Co. v. Ciha,

552 N.W.2d 143, 154 (Iowa 1996). The commissioner’s factual findings are

binding on appeal if supported by substantial evidence. Gumm, 943 N.W.2d at

28.

      The district court ruled that substantial evidence supported the

commissioner’s finding that Dr. Taylor’s $2,020 IME fee was reasonable. An

appellate court cannot substitute its judgment for the factfinder and find the

facts anew. See Harpole, 621 N.W.2d at 418. The court of appeals erred by

resetting the reimbursement amount to $500 based on a schedule of what

Dr. Taylor apparently charges for an impairment rating alone. But we are unable

to affirm the commissioner’s $2,020 award because in our view, the

commissioner’s analysis and factfinding were incomplete considering the 2017

amendment to section 85.39(2).

      We agree the commissioner properly considered Dr. Taylor’s written

opinion that “his fees, including the time spent with claimant, the time spent on

the report[,] and the time spent reviewing claimant’s records, are reasonable.”

See Pexa, 686 N.W.2d at 156 (“The reasonable value of medical services can be
shown by evidence of the amount paid for such services or through the testimony

of a qualified expert witness.”). But in our view, under the 2017 amendment, an

additional step is required in the agency factfinding: the reasonableness finding

is to be “based on the typical fee charged by a medical provider to perform an

impairment rating in the local area where the examination is conducted.” Iowa

Code § 85.39(2). That step is missing in the commissioner’s decision. Sandlin

offered no evidence as to what fees are typically charged in the Cedar Rapids

area, and the commissioner made no finding on that issue. Today’s opinion in
this case is our first to clarify the meaning of the final sentence added in the
                                       21

2017 amendment to section 85.39(2). Under analogous circumstances, we have

remanded the case to reopen the evidentiary record for additional agency

fact-finding. See Gwinn, 779 N.W.2d at 209 (remanding the case “for additional

evidence to allow for a full and complete resolution of the issues presented under

the legal standards clarified in this decision”). We take the same approach today.

On remand, the parties        may   introduce   additional evidence,    and the

commissioner shall make the reasonableness finding as provided under section

85.39(2) “based on the typical fee charged by a medical provider to perform an

impairment rating in the local area where the examination is conducted.” Iowa

Code § 85.39(2). The commissioner should then award a reasonable fee for

Dr. Taylor’s examination.

      IV. Disposition.

      For these reasons, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals and the

district court judgment that Dr. Kennedy was chosen by the employer’s insurer

to conduct that examination of Sandlin. We vacate the court of appeals decision

that reduced Dr. Taylor’s IME fee award to $500, and we reverse the district

court ruling that awarded $2,020. We remand the case to the district court for

entry of an order of remand for further proceedings before the workers’
compensation commissioner consistent with this opinion.

      DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED IN
PART; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART,
AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.