Plaintiff Vivian Lee Cross began working at Blue Cross/Blue Shield in Durham, North Carolina, on 18 May 1987 as a medical review examiner. On 2 September 1987, after numerous, absences, plaintiff resigned from her position citing job-related stress as the reason. On 30 September 1987, plaintiff filed for benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act, alleging job-related stress disorder. A Deputy Commissioner for the North Carolina Industrial Commission (Commission) denied plaintiff’s claims for benefits, concluding she did not suffer from a compensable occupational disease. The Commission affirmed, adopting the opinion of the Deputy Commissioner. Plaintiff appeals. We affirm.
The sole issue on appeal is whether the Commission erred in denying the plaintiff benefits on the basis that she did not suffer from a compensable occupational disease. Our role in reviewing the Commission’s decision is limited to determining whether there is any competent evidence to support the.findings of fact, and
whether the findings of fact justify the conclusions of law.
Buchanan v. Mitchell County,
Plaintiff contends the Commission failed to properly consider the medical evidence in finding that
4. There is no evidence in the record to establish that any of plaintiffs physical or psychological conditions for which she sought treatment were causally related to her employment with defendant.
Plaintiff argues that since “all of the medical evidence indicated that the plaintiff’s symptoms . . . were directly precipitated by the conditions of her job,” the Commission must have based its decision on a misapprehension of the law. We disagree.
The evidence shows that Ms. Cross was employed at Blue Cross/Blue Shield from 18 May 1987 to 2 September 1987. As a medical review examiner, plaintiff was responsible for receiving telephone requests for authorization of medical procedures and expenses, processing the authorizations, and distributing information on medical claims. Plaintiff began having difficulty performing her duties and received at least three memoranda concerning her unsatisfactory performance. Plaintiff also missed several days of work, often without informing her employer and without offering requested medical verifications for the absences.
During her employment, plaintiff began experiencing muscle spasms, nervousness, high blood pressure and other ailments. Plaintiff’s personal physician prescribed a sedative. Ms. Cross testified that, beginning about the end of July, she went to the Duke University Emergency Room three or four times a week. On 19 August 1987, an emergency room physician attending to Ms. Cross recommended that she seek psychiatric treatment if her symptoms did not improve. On 8 September 1987, Ms. Cross went to the North Carolina Memorial Hospital Psychiatric Clinic where Dr. Albert J. Naftel, Jr., a third-year psychiatry resident, examined her.
Q Now, if you assume that the Industrial Commission finds that her job was as I described it to you, do you have an opinion satisfactory to yourself to a reasonable degree of medical probability as to whether working in that kind of job would increase her risk of psychiatric symptoms above members of the general public?
A I think that when you have someone that is having depressive symptoms, adjustment symptoms, anxiety, somatic complaints, they’re going to have difficulty handling any sort of stressor, including work. And that if you can decrease some of the stresses, yes, it will improve.
Q The question was, do you think the job would have increased her risk of—
A I think that stressors, job included, can exacerbate symptoms, okay?
Q Okay.
* * * *
Q The question has more to do with whether the job, her job, would have increased her risk of developing symptoms or having them exacerbated as compared to somebody else in the general population who did not have that kind of job. Would she be at a higher risk of that kind of thing, is the question.
A Anyone with — yeah, I don’t know quite how to answer you. Anyone that has these — that is having an adjustment disorder, any stressor will increase the risk for their symptoms becoming worse.
Q Okay.
A You know, one stressor alone may not have caused — or really affected her, but she had numerous stressors over a period of time, and any stressor is going to definitely increase anxiety itself.
Q Does the kind of job that I describe to you sound like the kind of job that would do that?
A It doesn’t sound pleasant. I mean, it sounds like the job you described would be stressful for someone that was — it sounds like you’re saying she was having trouble keeping up with what was going on there, and generally for people that’s stressful.
Although this portion of Dr. Naftel’s testimony arguably supports plaintiff’s contention, the Commission is free to accept or reject all or part of a witness’s testimony.
See Blalock v. Roberts Co., 12
N.C. App. 499, 504,
Moreover, the North Carolina Supreme Court has previously concluded in
Rutledge v. Tultex Corp.,
For example, in
Harvey v. City of Raleigh Police Dept.,
Similarly, we find in the case at bar that the Commission could reasonably conclude from all the evidence that the plaintiff did not establish a causal relationship between her employment and stress-related
Furthermore, there was evidence that plaintiff was having difficulties performing her duties. We agree with defendant that stress caused by the inability to properly perform one’s job is not the same as stress caused by the duties of the iob itself.
Plaintiff has the burden of proving compensability for an occupational disease.
Moore v. Stevens & Co.,
Therefore, the Opinion and Award of the Industrial Commission is
Affirmed.
