The question presented in this workmen’s compensation appeal by the employer, a self-insurer, is whether the claimant’s total disability resulted from a "new accident” caused by aggravation by continued work of a previous compensable injury, so as to authorize the present award to the claimant under cases exemplified by
Blackwell v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The evidence showed that the claimant suffered an original compensable injury on December 12, 1947, while employed by the appellant; that he returned to work on May 31, 1948, but continued to experience pain and difficulty throughout the continuing years of his employment; and that, on March 28, 1975, he became no longer able to continue his work due to traumatic arthritis. There was written medical evidence to the effect that the claimant had post-traumatic arthritis, which, in the absence of other trauma, the examining physician concluded, could be fairly assumed to be related to the accident related to him by the claimant, and that the claimant’s normal duties with the appellant could have aggravated this condition to the extent that he was unable to work after March of 1975. Medical testimony
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that employment duties or conditions
might
or
could have
contributed to the claimant’s injury or disability is sufficient to support a finding for the claimant.
Carter v. Kansas City Fire &c. Co.,
A contrary result is not demanded by the fact that the medical evidence recites that the original injury was one incurred only
nine
years previously, rather than the 1947 injury. As was pointed out in
Aetna Cas.
&c.
Co. v. Cagle,
The appellant argues that the case of
St. Paul Fire &c. Ins. Co. v. Hughes,
The award to the claimant was authorized by the evidence.
Judgment affirmed.
