Monday, July 25, 2022

 

Recent PENNSYLVANIA SUPREME COURT Petition for Allowance of Appeals

WORKERS' COMPENSATION CASES - DENIED; listed by date of Order

July 12 2022    

Kamp v. WCAB (Green Acres Contracting Co.) No. 1275 C.D. 2020

Published Opinion filed : January 21, 2022

WCJ denied Claimant’s Review petition seeking to limit the subrogation interest of Employer. Claimant argued Section 319 violates PA Constitution.

WCAB and Commonwealth Court affirmed.


July 12 2022      

Blythe v. WCAB (City of Chester) No.  437 C.D. 2021

Memorandum opinion filed: December 29, 2021

Employer was entitled to pension credit offset.

 

July 6 2022

Adams v. WCAB (School District of Philadelphia) No. 1060 C.D. 2020

Memorandum opinion filed: March 30,  2022.

IRE - Reinstatement date is as of filing date of Claimant petition to Reinstate

 

July 6 2022

Eastman Kodak v. WCAB ( Smith)

Memorandum opinion filed: December 23, 2021

IRE - Reinstatement date is as of filing date of Claimant petition to Reinstate

 

July 7 2022

Raymour & Flanigan v. WCAB (Obeid)

Published Opinion filed : August 16, 2021

An Employer may file a “Medical Only” NCP to change the benefit status of the injured worker.

Changing the benefit status after NTCP does not require “Notice Stopping” and “Notice of Denial”.

 

June 22 2022

Pullin v. WCAB (S.D. of Philadelphia) 727 C.D. 2021

Memorandum opinion filed: December 22, 2021

IRE – reinstatement date is as of filing date of Claimant petition to Reinstate.

 

June 22 2022

Regan v. WCAB (City of Philadelphia) : No. 1277 C.D. 2020

Memorandum opinion filed: December 13, 2021

Firefighter cancer claim; Claimant not meet burden to establish general causation, the burden of proof did not shift to Employer.

   

June 15 2021     

Hughes v. WCAB (Wawa Inc.) No. 333 C.D. 2021

Order to Publish filed February 28, 2022:

Memorandum opinion filed: December 13, 2021

Post C&R Utilization Review of excessive Oxycontin prescriptions concluded ongoing use was not Reasonable or Necessary.

 

June 7 2022

Haplin v. WCAB (City of Philadelphia) 647 C.D. 20221

Memorandum opinion filed: December 13, 2021

WCJ Reinstatement of benefits was reversed on appeal as Claimant made a unilateral mistake in interpretation of the stipulation

he entered into to suspend his benefits and relinquish future rights of reinstatement.

 

June 7 2022

Hutchinson v. WCAB (Annville Township) Nos. 16 & 17 C.D. 2021

Published Opinion filed August 9, 2021

IRE - Reinstatement date is as of filing date of Claimant petition to Reinstate

 

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

The Scope of injury description under review can be altered by an Impairment Rating Evaluator - so says a Recent PA Commonwealth Court decision

A recent Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court decision would allow the Impairment Rating Evaluator to alter/revise/expand the scope of the work-related injury 

The Impairment Rating procedure remains a powerful remedy for the Employer and Insurer to attempt to limit future indemnity wage loss benefit exposure. On October 24, 2018, Act 111 replaced the constitutionally infirm Section 306(a.2) with revised language. One requirement of  Section 306(a.3) is that an injured worker receive 104 weeks of total disability benefits before an employer may require one’s submission to an Impairment Rating Evaluation (IRE).

At this time - legal challenges to the constitutionality of Section 306(a.3) continue to course their way through the appellate courts.

Recently a Commonwealth Court panel decision impacts an important factor in an Impairment Rating Evaluation - the description of work-related injury under review. 

In Sicilia v. WCAB (API Roofers Advantage Program) No. 747 C.D. 2021, filed: June 7, 2022, a WCJ decision granting an Employer petition to modify a Claimant’s benefit status from total to partial disability pursuant to a Section 306(a.3) Impairment Rating Evaluation (IRE) was reversed by a three Judge Panel of the Commonwealth Court. The case was remanded for reinstatement of ongoing total disability benefits.

The Commonwealth Court determined that a limitation of the scope of the IRE to the accepted/recognized work-related diagnoses was an error of law, based upon their interpretation of the prior Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision in Duffey v. WCAB (Trola-Dyne,Inc.), 152 A.3d 984 (Pa. 2017) (cited as Duffey II).

The Sicilia opinion reviewed the factual background reflecting the “rounds of litigation” involving a 1999 work injury which the Notice of Temporary Compensation Payable initially described as a “lumbar strain and left knee contusion”.

A 2003 WCJ decision expanded the work injury description, approving a stipulation which
added: chronic pain syndrome; chronic adjustment disorder; anxiety; depression.
A 2011 WCJ decision found that 2007 back surgery was related to the work injury. The injury description remained unchanged.
A 2014 WCJ decision approved a stipulation, resolving a Penalty petition for unpaid medical
bills. The injury description remained unchanged.

In 2019 Employer secured an IRE, in accord with the “new” IRE procedures at Section 306a(3). Based upon the accepted work injury descriptions, the IRE whole person impairment was 23% which would  support a modification of claimant’s benefits to a partial disability status. A separate score for the  chronic pain syndrome diagnosis was not added as there was a diagnosis that covered the pain generator. The addition of a separate pain score would increase the Impairment percentage to 25%.

Significantly - the IRE physician report, clinical summary section included diagnoses secondary to the 1999 work accident, which were beyond the diagnoses described in the prior WCJ decisions: “lumbar protrusion or spondylolisthesis with lumbar radiculopathy”. The IRE physician qualified her rating,  stating that her rating was constrained to address only to the diagnoses accepted by the NTCP, NCP, Stipulations or WCJ decisions.

Importantly - to better understand the appellate court decision – the IRE evaluator stated that she was convinced that the additional diagnoses were in fact attributable to the work injury.

Employer requested an addendum IRE report to separately address the inclusion of Impairment scores for diagnoses beyond the accepted injury description - “lumbar protrusion or spondylolisthesis with lumbar radiculopathy”. With that inclusion, the whole person Impairment score was 43%. If one added a separate chronic pain score, the rate was 45%.  As this addendum report Impairment rating score exceeded the 35% threshold, there would be a presumption of continuing total disability. Section   306(a.3) (2), (4), (5), (7)).

The WCJ decision found the IRE initial report of 25% impairment was credible. The WCJ found the portion of the IRE physician-evaluator  testimony (and addendum report) that the 1999 work-related injury included the additional lumbar diagnoses, was not credible medical evidence.

The Court's opinion in Sicilia reversed the modification of claimant’s benefit status, commenting that the IRE physician-evaluator “misapprehended her responsibility as a physician-evaluator in her initial calculation of Claimant’s whole person impairment rating”, as she felt her initial rating was constrained to the accepted injury diagnoses.

The Sicilia Court exclusively relied upon the Supreme Court Duffy opinion in reciting:
- The IRE physician-evaluator is explicitly invested with the obligation to determine “the
degree of impairment due to the compensable injury,” (emphasis in original)
- “a physician-evaluator must consider and determine causality in terms of whether any
particular impairment is ‘due to’ the compensable injury”.
- Moreover, the required evaluation is of “the percentage of permanent impairment of the
whole body resulting from the compensable injury.”

The Sicilia Court acknowledged that the NCP (NTCP) should define “compensable injury” for purposes of this inquiry but the Court further stated that even under former Section 306(a.2) and the AMA Guides, “the physician-evaluator must exercise professional judgment to render appropriate decisions concerning both causality and apportionment.”

The Sicilia Court stated - the AMA Guides refer to an “event” rather than an “injury,” permitting the physician-evaluator to attribute a particular condition to the event in which the claimant was injured rather than the injury itself – “a physician-evaluator simply may not entirely disavow any and all responsibility to consider causality relative to a given condition.”

The Commonwealth Court reasoning rejected the Employer arguments that:
1. res judicata controls and Claimant is bound by the stipulated injuries incorporated in the
    2003, 2011 and 2014 WCJ decisions;
2. Claimant succeeded in obtaining payment of medical bills for lower back surgeries in the
    2011 decision but did not amend or expand the injury description;
3. the WCJ was within her discretion to reject the expanded scope of the lumbar injuries
    given the extensive case background. The WCJ is charged with assessing the credibility
    of medical evidence. The WCJ rejected the credibility of the IRE addendum report.
4. Duffey ll is distinguishable as the procedural posture differs. There was
    extensive litigation in this matter that addressed the compensable injuries, whereas in
   Duffey II a review petition seeking to modify the injury description was not filed until
   after the IRE.

The Commonwealth Court reasoned –
a. Employer’s arguments boil down to an assertion that the WCJ decision(s) description of
    the work injury controls the IRE process.
b. “While no petition or other request for such change was made in this case, it is
    disingenuous to assert that an injury description in one WCJ’s decision, or a string of
    such decisions, binds subsequent WCJs later in the history of a claim. Even when an
    injury description is not formally amended, a diagnosis may become an accepted injury
    if a WCJ finds it was caused or aggravated by the work injury. 
c. The WCJ’s reasoning for rejecting the IRE testimony concerning the additional
    diagnoses, and the higher rating resulting from such inclusion, was not, in fact, a
    credibility determination based on evaluation of the evidence, but rather a
    misapprehension of the discretion accorded an IRE physician-evaluator. The only
    reason proffered for discrediting the additional diagnoses was that they had not been
    previously found by other WCJs. Simply put, the WCJ erred as a matter of law in
    constraining the IRE review solely to the earlier accepted descriptions of Claimant’s
    work injuries.

The Dissent opinion stated - Duffey II has muddled the law in this area. It takes the IRE into issues of liability and causation for a work injury when the sole purpose of an IRE is to determine the claimant’s disability status after maximum medical improvement from the adjudicated work-related injury.      
See: Section 306(a.3)(8)(i) which defines “impairment” as “anatomic or functional abnormality or loss that results from the compensable injury and is reasonably presumed to be permanent.”

Dissent would affirm the WCAB and WCJ, as the WCJ simply rejected the credibility of the IRE evaluator’s addendum opinion that Claimant’s other symptoms were attributable to his work injury. Therefore, there was no credible evidence to support a finding that Claimant has a whole-body impairment greater than 35%.

PRACTICE RECOMMENDATIONS:

1. Continue to utilize the IRE remedy as a means of limiting the duration of work-related total disability status and the overall duration of future indemnity benefit liability.

2. Before filing the IRE physician designation request - Review the pre-IRE appointment records of medical treatment. Has there been a change or additional description of the diagnoses treated, when compared to the accepted injury description in the NTCP, NCP or prior WCJ decision?

If so, consider a pre-IRE medical document review to preliminarily assess the existence of additional    diagnoses that would exceed the 35% threshold. Is there a diagnosed condition that is improving … or declining?

3. If there are additional diagnoses, beyond the accepted work-related injury, then consider an IME to attempt to secure a medical expert opinion that the additional diagnosis IS NOT work-related.

In recent discussions, at least one Impairment Rating physician evaluator welcomes additional pre-exam information when there are issues regarding the description or scope of the work-related injury. An example is the case where a WCJ has defined the work-related injury in a manner that may include a medical condition that clinically is not typically attributed to the accepted type of injury.

4.  Also, one must consider the impact of a separate "chronic pain" diagnosis  score - where the medical condition, that is the pain generator, is not considered in the IRE score.

Once again, the best practice in handling this workers compensation issues depends upon the specific facts presented. One must take the time to review the medical records of treatment in your case – before
you select an appropriate worker's compensation remedy. 

As we always recommend, please discuss your case handling options with your workers compensation professionals.

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

The Pennsylvania Bureau of Workers’ Compensation has revised the Notification of Suspension or Modification Pursuant to 413 (c) & (d); form LIBC-751

This change is effective February 20, 2022.

What does this mean?  The form is simpler to use!

Here is a copy of the Bureau announcement -

On Dec. 22, 2021, Governor Tom Wolf signed Act 95 (House Bill 1837) into law. This act amended Section 413(c) & (d) of the PA Workers Compensation Act such that an affidavit is no longer required on the Notification of Suspension or Modification Pursuant to 413(c) & (d) - LIBC 751, effective February 20, 2022.


The Bureau of Workers Compensation has revised the Notification of Suspension or Modification, LIBC-751, to comply with Act 95. 

 

The notification now includes two verification boxes which must be checked before the document is signed. 

 

The notification must still be sent to the claimant and the bureau within seven days of the modification or suspension of benefits. 

 

Due to the substantive change to the form, the revised form must be used beginning February 20, 2022.

 After March 2, 2022, prior versions of the form will be marked incomplete.


Please upload completed forms into WCAIS. Filing in WCAIS is available 24/7 and reflects a "filed date" when uploaded. This practice offers cost savings,

timely filing to the bureau without the need for a valid US Post Mark and makes the document available for instant viewing by all parties to the claim. Uploading can be done within the Action Tab of a claim, using the "Document Type" Notification of Suspension or Modification (LIBC-751) in the tab's drop-down list. The form may also be mailed to the bureau for filing.

Here is a reproduction of the “new” sections – 

NOTIFICATION OF SUSPENSION OR MODIFICATION PURSUANT              TO §§ 413 (c) & (d)  LIBC-751 REV 12-21

INSTRUCTIONS

This form must be completed, mailed to the employee, and uploaded to WCAIS or mailed to the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation within seven days of the suspension or modification of benefits under the provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act. You must submit an EDI transaction to match the LIBC-751 to update the status of the claim in WCAIS.

*** 

You are notified that because you returned to work on  month day year  your weekly disability benefits for this injury have been:

 __  Suspended effective month day year  because you have returned to work at earnings equal to or greater       

        than your time- of-injury earnings of $._____.

 OR

__  Modified to the rate of $ ____ per week, effective month day year  because you returned to work at earnings

       less than your time-of-injury earnings.

 *** 

 ___   I confirm I have served a copy of this form to the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation.

___    I confirm I have served a copy of this form to the employee.

***                                             

Claims representative’s signature                                                   

Claims representative’s name (typed/printed) 

phone number

This Insurer’s Verification language appears to the right of the Claim rep signature lines -

 INSURER’S VERIFICATION

I verify that this information is true and correct based upon my knowledge, information and belief. I understand false statements are subject to the penalties of 18 Pa. C.S. Section 4904 relating to unsworn falsifications to authorities. Any individual filing misleading or incomplete information knowingly and with intent to defraud is in violation of Section 1102 of the Pennsylvania Workers’ Act and may also be subject to criminal and civil penalties through Pennsylvania Act 165 of 1994.

If you have any questions regarding the proper usage, preparation or filing of this revised form – please feel free to ask your workers compensation attorney at www.ChartwellLaw.com 

Friday, January 21, 2022

2022 Pennsylvania Workers' Compensation - State Wide Average Weekly Wage and Total Disability Benefit Rates

 
Pursuant to the Workers’ Compensation Act, Section 105.1, the Department of Labor & Industry has determined the statewide average weekly wage for injuries occurring on and after January 1, 2022, shall be $1,205.00 per week.  

The maximum weekly compensation rate for calendar year 2022 is $1,205.00. 

The weekly compensation rate is 66 2/3 percent of the employee's average weekly wage if the average weekly wage falls between $1,807.50 and $903.76.

The weekly compensation rate is $602.50 if the employee's average weekly wage is between $903.75 and $669.44.

If the employee's average weekly wage is $669.43 or less; the weekly compensation rate is 90 percent of the employee's average weekly wage.

 NOTE: For purposes of calculating the update to payments for medical treatment rendered on and after January 1, 2022, the percentage increase in the Statewide Average Weekly Wage is 6.6 percent.

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

PA Employers are not entitled to workers' comp benefit credit for Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation paid under the CARES Act

Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation paid to an Employee under the CARES Act is not equivalent to "Unemployment Compensation Benefits" for which an Employer is entitled to a credit under Section 204(a) of the PA Act.

See: Carbon Lehigh Intermediate Unit #21 v. WCAB (Waardal), a Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court decision published at No. 750 C.D. 2021; filed on January 3, 2022.

HOLDING: The sole issue before the Court was whether Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation under the CARES Act is the equivalent to UC benefits for which a PA Employer is entitled to a credit under Section 204(a) of the Workers Compensation Act.

The Carbon Lehigh decision relied upon its prior analysis iDietrich Industries, Inc. v. WCAB (Shank) (Pa. Cmwlth. 1999) to conclude that no credit is available to the Employer for the CARES benefits paid. In Shank the Court disallowed a credit under Section 204(a) for federally funded trade readjustment allowance (TRA) benefits a claimant received.

The Carbon Lehigh decision arose from Employer's  appeal of the WCAB order affirming the WCJ decision to deny the Employer a credit against its payment of workers’ compensation benefits for the Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation that Claimant received pursuant to Section 2104(b)(1) of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, 15 U.S.C. § 9023(b)(1).

REASONING of the COURT

As one may have anticipated, the Commonwealth Court relied upon its decision at Shank to deny the Employer a credit in the instant matter.

In Shank the claimant received sickness and accident benefits following a work-related lower back injury along with UC benefits and TRA benefits, which “were intended to supplement state unemployment insurance benefits.” Shank’s receipt of TRA benefits was subject to various statutory requirements, including exhaustion of his entitlement to “unemployment insurance benefits.”

Shank’s employer sought a credit against workers’ compensation in the amount of Shank’s UC and TRA benefits. A WCJ granted the credit for Shank’s sickness and accident and UC benefits but disallowed a credit for his TRA benefits.

The Commonwealth Court analyzed the employer’s right to a credit under Section 204(a). The Court noted that TRA benefits, which were intended to supplement UC benefits, were funded entirely by the federal government, as was the cost of administering the TRA program. 

Shank’s Employer argued that the funding source for Shank’s TRA benefits was irrelevant, as Section 204(a) made no such distinction when mandating a credit for a claimant’s receipt of UC benefits. The Court disagreed, stating that an Employer’s credit against its obligation to pay workers’ compensation stems from its payment of “regular stated amounts, out of its own general funds or from sick or accident benefits,” which do not constitute “wages or salary for work performed, but which are paid in relief of the employee’s incapacity to work.”

The Court further reasoned that TRA benefits were not among the types of payments delineated in Section 204(a) from which an employer could seek a credit towards its workers’ compensation obligation. They recognized that, where certain items are specifically designated in a statute, omissions are understood to be excluded. Having concluded that TRA benefits were “distinct from the type of benefits contemplated” under Section 204(a), the Court affirmed the denial of a credit to the Employer.

In support of its right to a credit for Claimant’s receipt of Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation, this Employer essentially resurrects the argument the Court rejected in Shank – that Section 204(a) makes no distinction as to the funding source of a claimant’s UC benefits.

The Court stated – “We are similarly unpersuaded by Employer’s attempts to distinguish this matter from our holding in Shank”. They found it was noteworthy that Pandemic Compensation is available to individuals who are not otherwise eligible to receive “regular” UC benefits, and the CARES Act provides for federal reimbursement of the amounts paid by a state for Pandemic Compensation. Furthermore, Pandemic Compensation is referenced separately from “regular compensation” throughout the relevant provisions of the CARES Act.

The Court concluded that these distinctions render Pandemic Compensation sufficiently “distinct from the type of benefits contemplated” under Section 204(a) of the Act.

It was acknowledged that Section 204(a), which was last amended in 1996, did not contemplate the benefits at issue here. However, it is clear that the General Assembly has not seen fit to amend Section 204(a) in the two decades following the decision in Shank, so as to specify that the credit provisions of Section 204(a) encompass the types of federally funded benefits at issue in Shank and the instant matter.

Ultimately, the legislative intent behind Section 204(a) is to prevent an employer from having to pay “duplicate benefits for the same loss of earnings.” (emphasis added). Allegheny Ludlum Corp. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd. (Bascovsky), (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). Disallowing a credit for Pandemic Compensation that is wholly paid for by another entity does no disservice to the overall purpose of Section 204(a), nor does it place Employer in the position of “paying duplicate benefits for the same loss of earnings.”