We granted certiorari in this appeal to consider whether OCGA § 34-9-207 requires an employee who files a claim under the Georgia Workers’ Compensation Act, OCGA § 34-9-1 et seq. (the “Act”), to authorize her treating physician to engage in ex parte communications with her employer or an employer representative in exchange for receiving benefits for a compensable injury. McRae v. Arby’s Restaurant Group,
The facts in this case are undisputed. Appellee Laura McRae sustained a work injury in February 2006 for which she filed a claim for workers’ compensation. Her employer, appellant Arby’s Restaurant Group, accepted the claim as compensable and commenced income benefits. As part of her claim for benefits, McRae signed a form authorizing the release of medical information. McRae’s treating physician subsequently issued a report concluding McRae had reached maximum medical improvement and had incurred a 65 percent permanent partial disability impairment. After receiving the report, counsel for Arby’s attempted to arrange an ex parte conference with her treating physician, but the physician refused to meet without McRae or her counsel present.
Arby’s then filed a motion to dismiss McRae’s hearing request or in the alternative to request an order authorizing the treating physician to communicate with an Arby’s representative. See OCGA § 34-9-207 (a) (authorizing board to withhold benefits or remove hearing from calendar during time that employee unjustifiably refuses to sign required medical release). The board issued an order directing McRae to sign a medical release to her treating physician “expressly authorizing [her treating physician] to meet privately with a representative (or representatives) of the Employer/Insurer and discuss or provide medical information about the Employee’s claim.” When McRae refused to sign the board-ordered medical release, her hearing request was removed from the hearing calendar. The appellate division of the State Board of Workers’ Compensation and the superior court upheld the board’s order. A majority of the Court of Appeals reversed, holding that OCGA § 34-9-207 (a) provides no support for the claim that an employer is entitled to engage in ex parte communications with a treating physician.
1. Under Georgia law, an employer in a workers’ compensation case is entitled to seek from any physician who has examined, treated, or tested the employee “all information and records related to the examination, treatment, testing, or consultation concerning the employee.” OCGA § 34-9-207 (a). The employee is
deemed to have waived any privilege or confidentiality concerning any communications related to the claim or history or treatment of injury arising from the incident that the employee has had with any physician, including, but not limited to, communications with psychiatrists or psychologists. This waiver shall apply to the employee’s medical history with respect to any condition or complaint reasonably related to the condition for which such employee claims compensation.
Id. Under the unambiguous language of OCGA § 34-9-207 (a), any privilege the employee may have had in protected medical records and information related to a workers’ compensation claim is waived once the employee submits a claim for workers’ compensation benefits or is receiving weekly income benefits or the employer has paid any medical expenses. The occurrence of any one of these triggering events waives the employee’s privilege in confidential health information and the information may be released by a treating physician.
Although OCGA § 34-9-207 (a) specifies the category of information for which the privilege is waived, it is silent with regard to the methods by which the requested information may be provided. The Court of Appeals construed OCGA § 34-9-207 (a) to preclude informal ex parte communications between McRae’s treating physician and her employer because, it concluded, the requirement to disclose “all information and records” could not reasonably be interpreted as requiring the disclosure of anything other than tangible documentation. McRae, supra,
As recognized by the dissenting judges in McRae, when considering the meaning of a statute courts must “afford the words of the statute their ‘ordinary signification,’ see OCGA § 1-3-1 (a), [and] we must presume that the General Assembly meant what it said and said what it meant.” Id. at 319. Further, when interpreting a statute courts must give meaning and intent to all words, bearing in mind that “[w]here the language of a statute is plain and unambiguous, judicial construction is not only unnecessary but forbidden.” Six Flags Over Ga. II v. Kull,
Despite the policy arguments set forth by McRae and amici curiae in this appeal, we discern no legal grounds for prohibiting ex parte oral communication between a treating physician and an employer to the extent confidentiality is waived by an employee in a workers’ compensation case. OCGA § 34-9-207 (a) does not expressly prohibit ex parte communications, and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act’s (HIPAA) privacy provisions do not preempt Georgia law on the subject of ex parte communications because HIPAA exempts from its requirements disclosures made in accordance with state workers’ compensation laws.
2. While neither OCGA § 34-9-207 (a), HIPAA, nor Georgia substantive law precludes ex parte communications between a treating physician and an employer in a workers’ compensation case as long as such communication is appropriately related to the compensable injury, we are aware that when a treating physician engages in ex parte communications with the employer there exists a risk that the communication may exceed the bounds of the privilege waived. This Court has vigilantly protected the privacy rights of our citizens in confidential health information and will continue to do so. See Baker, supra,
Finally, we note that while treating physicians are required under OCGA § 34-9-207 (a) to provide the relevant information “within a reasonable time and for a reasonable charge,” the statute does not demand that they agree to be interviewed ex parte. Under our statutory scheme, physicians may agree to be interviewed only on the condition that their own counsel, or the employee or her counsel, is present, may request that the interview be audio or video recorded, and may share the substance of the interview with the employee and her counsel.
3. Because OCGA § 34-9-207 (a) does not prohibit ex parte communications between McRae’s treating physician and defense counsel regarding health information for which any privilege has been waived, we conclude the board acted within its discretion by ordering McRae to sign a limited medical release or have her case removed from the hearing calendar. The contrary opinion of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
We note,
