Appellants, John and Debra Vargo, brought tort claims against several doctors for negligently treating Mr. Vargo — a firefighter retired on total permanent disability — at the Police and Firefighters Clinic. The Vargos also filed breach of contract, negligence, and loss of consortium actions against the District of Columbia for the same medical treatment. They sought damages on each count ranging from $300,000 to $2,000,-000.
1
Citing
Ray v. District of Columbia,
We conclude that the trial court did not err in dismissing these claims on the basis of
Ray,
a decision that binds this division of the court.
See M.A.P. v. Ryan,
I.
According to the complaint, Vargo began his employment as a firefighter with the District of Columbia Fire Department on June 23, 1974. A year and a half later, on January 31,1976, Vargo was injured while on duty in the District of Columbia. He therefore became entitled to, and began to receive, treatment at the District of Columbia’s Police and Firefighters Clinic for the injuries he received on duty. The Clinic is intended to provide qualifying uniformed personnel with the health care services mandated by the Disability Act. See D.C.Code § 4-614.
Clinic doctors treated Vargo with physical therapy and prescription drugs. As a result of continued pain in his back, neck, shoulder, legs, and left knee, doctors at the Clinic referred Vargo to Dr. Donald Cooney, an outside specialist. Dr. Cooney surgically removed a degenerative lumbar disk from Var-go’s spine in May 1977. Vargo continued to visit the Clinic regularly for treatment after the surgery. On October 1, 1977, Vargo retired on full disability subject to the terms of the Act.
Clinic physicians continued to treat Var-go’s symptoms for 13 years, from 1977 to 1990. In 1990, Dr. Lawrence Manning, a doctor employed at the Clinic, referred Var-go for orthopedic consultation in light of his complaints of persistent back pain and other symptoms. X-rays revealed that Vargo suffered from a fractured coccyx. Dr. Michael Dennis, a private neurosurgeon, surgically treated Vargo’s fracture in December 1991. Following the surgery, Vargo continued his treatment at the Clinic.
On December 10, 1993, the Vargos sued Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly (as a way of suing the District of Columbia), three physicians 2 at the Clinic, and Dr. Cooney, alleging medical malpractice in the diagnosis and treatment of Mr. Vargo’s original performance-of-duty injuries. Against the District, the Var-gos brought one count for breach of contract for the Clinic’s failure “to properly monitor and care for” Vargo’s medical needs, and one count for negligence alleging the Clinic’s failure “to detect [Vargo’s] broken coccyx for more than 17 years” and “to diagnos[e] and treat [his] post-traumatic stress.” The Var-gos also alleged one count of negligence on the same grounds against each of the individual Clinic doctors named in the complaint, as well as a count on Debra Vargo’s behalf for “loss of spousal affection.”
The District defendants (appellees here) and Dr. Cooney filed motions to dismiss, respectively, on March 27 and April 14,1994. The trial court granted the District defendants’ motion on April 22, 1994, relying on this Court’s decision in Ray without elaboration. The Vargos filed an appeal. Thereafter, the trial court, upon denying Dr. Coo-ney’s motion to dismiss, granted his motion for summary judgment. On November 4, the District defendants filed a motion for summary affirmance of the trial court’s dismissal of the complaint. By an order dated January 9, 1995, we denied the motion and *101 granted the Vargos’ motion to reinstate their appeal. 3
II.
We held in
Ray
that the Disability Act provides the exclusive remedy against the District and its employees not only for injuries sustained by uniformed police officers and firefighters in the performance of their duties, but also for injuries arising from negligent medical treatment that disabled retirees receive under the Act.
Ray,
This court in
Ray,
on facts similar to those presented here, considered whether the Disability Act provided the exclusive remedy for a total disability retiree who sought compensation for injuries to his back allegedly arising from the medical malpractice of Clinic physicians.
See Ray,
Because, as in Ray, John Vargo’s “original injuries and subsequent injuries are sufficiently connected,” id. at 871, our Ray decision is dispositive here. The trial court, therefore, did not err in dismissing the complaint. The Vargos are limited to their administrative remedies available from the Police and Firefighters Retirement and Relief Board under the Disability Act. See id. at 871.
III.
It is important to emphasize that the Ray court made clear — though not explicitly so— *102 that there is an administrative remedy for totally disabled, retired firefighters who can demonstrate injuries caused by treatment at the Clinic. According to Ray:
[T]he decision in Lindsay established that the responsibility of an employer to compensate for an injury carries with it a continuing obligation. The employer must compensate for any new injuries which grow out of or result from treatment or care provided in compensation for the primary injury.
We think the rule in Lindsay applies in this case. The Police and Firefighters Retirement and Disability Act has been recognized as a worker’s compensation plan for uniform employees in the District. Brown, supra,451 A.2d at 76 . We hold that the Act is the exclusive remedy for both injuries suffered in the performance of duty and those “legitimate consequences flowing from a compensable injury.” This rule is in keeping with the “comprehensive” nature of the compensation scheme. Lewis supra,499 A.2d at 913 . We believe that because the District was statutorily required to administer the medical services to Ray, the injuries are within that range of consequences to which the Act affords the exclusive remedy. The original injuries and subsequent injuries are sufficiently connected that Ray’s remedy for the latter was exclusively to be found by exercising his rights under the Act.
The question is not presented, and we do not address, what the scope of the administrative remedy is; the Police and Firefighters Retirement and Relief Board, see D.C.Code § 4-628, has primary jurisdiction 6 to define it, subject to judicial review. The lesson implicit in Ray, however, is that the Disability Act, D.C.Code §§ 4-614 -628, requires the Board to provide an administrative mechanism for receiving and addressing such treatment claims and for providing relief for injury in appropriate cases consistent with the purposes of the statute. 7
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For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s order dismissing the Vargos’ claims, leaving the Vargos to their remedy before the Police and Firefighters Retirement and Relief Board.
So ordered.
Notes
. The Vargos also sought $4,000,000 in damages for the alleged negligence of a private physician to whom a clinic physician referred John Vargo. The trial court granted the private physician's motion for summary judgment, which is not a subject of this appeal.
. The Vargos’ complaint named Dr. Robert Dyer, Dr. Lawrence Manning, and Dr. Eugene Short both in the capacity "as an agent, employee, [and] representative of the District of Columbia” and "as a physician with a conventional physician-patient relationship.” Dr. Short, however, was never served with process. The trial court did not address, and the Vargos did not present on appeal, the issue of the doctors' liability as ”physician[s] with a conventional physician-patient relationship.”
. The Vargos’ initial appeal from the trial court’s order granting dismissal was denied on the ground that the order was not final as long as there was a claim pending against Dr. Cooney.
. Appellants spend a great deal of effort attempting to convince the court that the Disability Act is not "a workers' compensation statute.” They raise several distinctions between the Disability Act and typical workers' compensation statutes, such as the Disability Act's failure to allow an individual to maintain an action at law against the employer in the event a qualifying employee does not receive benefits. While we are not unmindful of such distinctions, we already have decided the issue.
See Brown v. Jefferson,
. Recently, we noted in
Estate of Mary F. Underwood v. National Credit Union Administration,
. Under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction, "a statute an agency administers must first be interpreted by the agency before a court may interpret it.” 4 Kenneth C. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 22:11 at 120; (1983); see
id,
at§ 22:4, at 95. In other contexts we have observed that when an agency interprets a statute it is charged with administering, or interprets its own regulations, we defer to the agency as long as it is not plainly wrong or inconsistent with the legislature’s intent.
See Fort Chaplin Park Associates v. District of Columbia Rental Housing Comm'n,
. We express no opinion on whether the Vargos’ tort and breach of contract claims would be compatible with the kinds of administrative remedies available under the Disability Act. Likewise, we express no opinion on the possible effect of the repeal in 1992 of D.C.Code § 4-120. Finally, the Board also is free to consider the Vargos’ allegation that the District has failed to "properly monitor and care for the needs” of Vargo as mandated by statute, in addition to the alleged medical maltreatment.
