Lead Opinion
This court employs the “some evidence” rule in determining the propriety of mandamus actions which challenge the commission’s factual findings. Where the record contains some evidence to support the commission’s factual conclusions, its decision will stand. Conversely, where the record contains no evidence to support the commission’s order, an abuse of discretion will be found. See State ex rel. Hughes v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (1986),
The final SHO order in the case sub judice found that Dr. Yoder’s “[office] notes plus his reports, taken in totality, show the claimant has reached maximum medical improvement.” Indeed, the only evidence cited by the commission was
In light of the parties’ arguments, and in light of the opinions rendered in the court of appeals, it is necessary to bifurcate the issue. We must first determine whether Dr. Yoder’s August 27, 1991 report is susceptible of differing interpretations regarding the permanence of claimant’s medical condition. If it is, the matter ends there, and the commission acted within its discretion. If it is not, we must then determine whether Dr. Yoder’s June 6, 1991 report plus his office notes afford the commission some basis upon which to reject the doctor’s August 27 report.
R.C. 4123.56(A) provides that TTD payments “shall not be made for the period * * * when the employee has reached the maximum medical improvement.” Maximum medical improvement is equatable with the concept of permanence. State ex rel. Youghiogheny & Ohio Coal Co. v. Kohler (1990),
Accordingly, Ohio Adm.Code 4121-3-32(A)(l) defines “maximum medical improvement” as “a treatment plateau (static or well-stabilized) at which no fundamental functional or physiological change can be expected within reasonable medical probability in spite of continuing medical or rehabilitative procedures. A claimant may need supportive treatment to maintain this level of function.”
Although the syntax of Ohio Adm.Code 4121-3-32(A)(l) is less than ideal in other respects, it clearly recognizes rehabilitative procedures as a viable treatment option for effectuating fundamental change in a claimant’s medical condition. Under this provision, the question of maximum medical improvement turns on whether the proposed rehabilitative procedure is expected to improve or merely maintain the claimant’s level of functionability.
In addition, the nature of the proposed rehabilitative procedure is indicative of whether or not functional improvement is expected. As the court of appeals aptly explained in State ex rel. Matlack, Inc. v. Indus. Comm. (1991),
“Thus, there is a distinction in the case law between physical rehabilitation and occupational-type therapy related to the condition’s improvement, and vocational rehabilitation or job training related to claimant’s vocational improvement. The former type of rehabilitation can signify continuing possibility of medical improvement while the latter cannot.”
Contrary to appellants’ assertions, the statement on Dr. Yoder’s August 27 report, that “there is little hope in improvement in Carl Eberhardt’s back symptoms unless he is treated through the Workers’ Compensation rehabilitation program,” is not susceptible of differing interpretations. “Unless” means “1: under any other circumstance than that; except on the condition that * * * ; 2: without the accompanying circumstance or condition that; but that; But * * Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1986) 2503. The stated purpose of the report was precisely to “clear up this matter.” Further, by indicating that it is claimant’s “back symptoms” which can improve if he is “treated through the Workers’ Compensation rehabilitation program,” Dr. Yoder made clear that the rehabilitation program “is the primary treatment modality that I have recommended * * *.” The only meaning that can be ascribed to Dr. Yoder’s August 27 statements, therefore, is that he was recommending physical or therapeutic rehabilitation with the expectation that it would improve the claimant’s medical condition. In order to ascribe a different meaning, it would be necessary to revive the very ambiguity that the report clarified.
We are well aware that in State ex rel. Copeland Corp., supra,
We hold that where an attending physician certifies a claimant as temporarily and totally disabled but indicates that there is little hope for improvement in claimant’s condition unless treated through rehabilitation, and there is no other medical evidence indicating that claimant has reached the maximum medical improvement, it is an abuse of discretion for the commission to deny TTD benefits on the basis that claimant has reached the maximum medical improvement.
The question remains, however, whether there was some other medical evidence before the commission indicating that claimant had reached the maximum medical improvement. Since the only medical evidence cited by the commission was generated by Dr. Yoder, the question becomes whether Dr. Yoder’s medical statements made prior to his August 27 report afford some basis upon which the commission may reject the doctor’s August 27 report.
“[I]t is the commission which determines the weight and credibility to be given to the medical reports admitted into evidence.”- State ex rel. Burley v. Coil Packing, Inc. (1987),
In this regard, appellants advance the following argument: “Even if one assumes that Dr. Yoder’s August 27, 1991 letter to Mr. Eberhardt’s attorney expresses a different opinion on maximum medical improvement than the June 6, 1991 report that Dr. Yoder had ‘little hope of improvement in this patient in the
Walters and Paragon do not lead to the conclusion advanced by appellants. A proper analysis must begin with State ex rel. Jennings v. Indus. Comm. (1982),
In Paragon,
“Although Dr. Cullen opines that appellant is totally disabled, he then states that he is uncertain. Dr. Cullen further indicates he does not believe appellant will ever return to work, yet he subsequently indicates that if the patient was ‘motivated,’ he could probably work. However, Dr. Cullen fails to clarify what he meant by the use of the term ‘motivated,’ and furthermore, it is unclear from the report whether the lack of motivation is directly attributable to the depressive neurosis. In short, Dr. Cullen’s report is, at best, equivocal and, accordingly, we conclude that it does not constitute evidence upon which the commission may either grant or deny appellant’s application.” (Emphasis added.)
In Walters,
“ * * * Dr. McCloud, subsequent to his medical report, changed his view concerning the effect appellant’s impairment had on his employment prospects. For example, during deposition, Dr. McCloud first agreed with Dr. King’s evaluation as to appellant’s total disability, then stated that appellant was not unfit for some type of gainful employment and then again specifically agreed with Dr. King’s findings as to both appellant’s impairment and total disability. At worst, Dr. McCloud contradicted himself; at best, his conclusion that appellant was not totally disabled was equivocal.
“In the instant case * * * [t]he apparent uncertainty in Dr. McCloud’s position gives the commission an insufficient basis to support its order denying appellant permanent total disability benefits.”
The rule that emerges from the foregoing is that equivocal medical opinions are not evidence. See, also, State ex rel. Woodard v. Frigidaire Div., Gen. Motors Corp. (1985),
Moreover, ambiguous statements are inherently different from those that are repudiated, contradictory or uncertain. Repudiated, contradictory or uncertain statements reveal that the doctor is not sure what he means and, therefore, they are inherently unreliable. Such statements relate to the doctor’s position on a critical issue. Ambiguous statements, however, merely reveal that the doctor did not effectively convey what he meant and, therefore, they are not inherently unreliable. Such statements do not relate to the doctor’s position, but to his communication skills. If we were to hold that clarified statements, because previously ambiguous, are subject to Jennings or to commission rejection, we would effectively allow the commission to put words into a doctor’s mouth or, worse, discount a truly probative opinion. Under such a view, any doctor’s opinion could be disregarded merely because he failed on a single occasion to employ precise terminology. In a word, once an ambiguity, always an ambiguity. This court cannot countenance such an exclusion of probative evidence.
In the present case, Dr. Yoder’s August 27 report does not express a different opinion as to whether claimant had reached the maximum medical improvement than was expressed in his June 6 report or his office notes. Each statement made prior to August 27, 1991 which appellants describe as contradictory indicates that Dr. Yoder had exhausted the treatment procedures at his disposal and recommended outside rehabilitative procedures. Nowhere did the doctor indicate that claimant’s condition was stabilized or static or that he had a poor chance of improvement, nor did the doctor ever use any other language suggest
Thus, Dr. Yoder’s statements previous to August 27, 1991 cannot serve as a basis for rejecting his opinion. Where a physician clarifies an ambiguity in stating his opinion, the Industrial Commission may not revive the ambiguity in order to reject that physician’s opinion. There was no evidence, therefore, supporting the commission’s finding that claimant had reached the maximum medical improvement.
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the court of appeals is hereby affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. This court must uphold a finding of the Industrial Commission when that finding is supported by “some evidence.” State ex rel. Burley v. Coil Packing, Inc. (1987),
The claimant’s medical condition did not improve during the two and a half years he was under Dr. Yoder’s care. Nearly two months after the claimant first came to Dr. Yoder, Dr. Yoder wrote that the claimant’s “back pain is unchanged.” Over two months later he wrote, “I feel [the claimant] has reached maximum potential that I can get him to and have recommended rehab program.” During this time, another doctor, Dr. Hill, also treated Mr. Eberhardt. Dr. Hill also was unable to help the claimant. Over two years later, on June 6, 1991, Dr. Yoder made a recommendation for rehabilitation in his report: “I have repeatedly tried to have [the claimant] involved in W.C. rehabilitation program, which for one reason or another has never worked out. I have reached the limits of my ability to find and correct a lesion and see only rehabilitation program, anti-inflamma
The majority incorrectly concludes that Dr. Yoder’s June 6, 1991 report can only be interpreted to support a finding of temporary total disability. In State ex rel. Copeland Corp. v. Indus. Comm. (1990),
The majority makes a vain attempt to distinguish this case from Copeland. The two doctors’ reports are in substance identical. The majority’s justification for its determination that the report in this case is susceptible of only one interpretation — supporting temporary total disability — is, at best, unconvincing. It is plain from the face of the opinion in Copeland that we found that report susceptible of more than one interpretation. One plausible interpretation was that the claimant had not yet reached maximum medical improvement. The only other possible, “differing” interpretation was that the claimant had reached maximum medical improvement.
Interpreting Dr. Yoder’s report to support a finding of maximum medical improvement is even more plausible in this case than in Copeland. First, the claimant in this case showed no signs of improvement from the beginning to the end of his treatment. Second, unlike the doctor in Copeland, Dr. Yoder’s report did not discuss the nature of the recommended rehabilitation program or the likelihood that the program would aid the claimant. Instead, Dr. Yoder’s report that he was not able to do anything more for the patient but prescribe anti-inflammatory medication and recommend rehabilitation is on its face susceptible of an interpretation that these were merely final gasps of a treatment regimen that had failed to produce results. Consequently, a reasonable interpretation of Dr. Yoder’s statements is that the claimant had reached maximum medical improvement and that should be the end of this matter.
Even if Dr. Yoder’s report can be interpreted to support only a finding of temporary disability, the fact that the claimant made no improvement in over two years of treatment independently qualifies as “some evidence” supporting the maximum medical improvement finding. The majority is correct when it finds that the rehabilitation recommendation is not in conflict with Dr. Yoder’s statements that the claimant’s condition is not otherwise expected to improve. Looking at the issue from only that angle, however, misses how the commission could • have properly arrived at the maximum medical improvement finding.
The commission could have arrived at its decision after weighing the evidence of no medical improvement against the recommendation of rehabilitation. The majority barely touches on an important part of our jurisprudence: the decision regarding the credibility and weight of evidence is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the commission. State ex rel. Hart v. Indus. Comm. (1993),
Because there is a proper way the commission could have arrived at its finding of maximum medical improvement, the commission did not abuse its discretion. Consequently, I would hold that, where a claimant has made no medical improvement in two and a half years of treatment, a commission finding of maximum medical improvement is supported by some evidence. Additionally, I would hold that a doctor’s mere recommendation of rehabilitation, without evidence of a reasonable medical probability that rehabilitation would improve the claimant’s condition, is insufficient to overcome a finding of maximum medical improvement where that finding is otherwise supported by some evidence.
Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
