Claimant appeals from an order of the Workers’ Compensation Board, that affirmed the referee’s order affirming SAIF’s denial of petitioner’s claim. We affirm.
Claimant is a school-bus driver. On November 17, 1980, she completed her bus
Claimant saw her doctor at 5 p.m. that day for a regularly scheduled appointment to receive treatment for a previous work related neck and mid-back injury. She told her doctor that she had fallen that day and had some low-back pain. The doctor determined that the low-back injury was “completely separate” from the area previously injured and completed a claim form for a new injury. On that form, the doctor marked “Yes” in answer to the question, “Is the condition requiring treatment the result of the industrial injury or exposure described?” SAIF does not contest that the fall caused the low-back injury.
The referee found claimant to be a credible witness but concluded that she had not proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the injury was work connected, because there was no medical evidence of a work-connected cause of the collapse of claimant’s leg. On appeal, she argues that her case is indistinguishable from
Hubble v. SAIF,
The issue, as the referee saw it and as we see it, is whether the evidence shows that the cause of her
fall
was work-connected. The claimant in
Hubble
did just that. We conclude that claimant here had the same burden. There is
uncontroverted medical evidence that claimant’s back was injured by the fall. SAIF does not contest that she fell during working hours and on her employer’s premises,
i.e.
in the course of employment, but that is only one consideration in the analysis of the unitary work-connection test adopted in
Rogers v. SAIF,
We recently adopted Professor Larson’s analysis of unexplained falls.
Phil A. Livesley Co. v. Russ,
The lay evidence and medical reports here do not eliminate all idiopathic factors of causation. Unlike
Hubble v. SAIF, supra,
there was
no
medical evidence that claimant’s knee buckled as a result of a risk of her employment. Claimant’s testimony raised an inference of possible connection between extra work hours, low-back pain and the buckled knee, but the referee found that inference was insufficient to meet the preponderance of evidence burden. We agree. Claimant’s evidence showed no more than that it was equally possible that the cause of claimant’s fall, her buckling knee, was idiopathic as that it was connected. That is not enough to satisfy her burden
Affirmed.
Notes
As we did in Livesley, we use the term “idiopathic” here to mean “peculiar to the individual” and not as “arising from an unknown cause.”
