2. Plaintiff was an employee of defendant-employer on May 7, 1992, when she suffered an injury by accident compensable under the Act.
3. Plaintiff's average weekly wage for the purposes of this action is $382.62.
2. Plaintiff was out of work for 121 days, and thereafter returned to work for the same employer in a capacity different from that in which she was employed at the time of injury. She remains employed with this same employer.
3. Plaintiff suffered traumatic amputation at the left forearm. The deputy commissioner found that level of the amputation shown on the reverse of the Form 25-R supplied by Dr. Campbell, including the left hand and the distal two-thirds of the left forearm, is consistent with the plaintiff's physical appearance. The Full Commission has no information to cause it to question the deputy's finding as to the condition of plaintiff's arm, and accepts this finding.
4. Following her admission through the emergency room plaintiff was treated by Donald A. Campbell, M.D., orthopedic surgeon of Catawba County. After appropriate posttraumatic surgical care, Dr. Campbell prescribed a "hook" prosthesis as a temporary prosthesis, to be used for training and rehabilitation purposes until plaintiff could be fitted with another prosthesis that he described as a myoelectric hand (or arm). The hook was thereafter to be used as a backup to the myoelectric hand. Dr. Campbell indicated that plaintiff had not reached the end of the healing period and that, at the end of her healing period, she should be fitted with the myoelectric hand because it would allow her to function more closely to normal.
5. Dr. Campbell has indicated that plaintiff is an excellent candidate for a myoelectric hand. He described the myoelectric hand as more sensitive and more easily manipulated than is the hook, giving plaintiff the ability to use her left arm in a greater range of positions and for a greater range of applications.
6. The prescription for the myoelectric arm was made by Dr. Campbell in 1992. In particular, Dr. Campbell wrote a letter to defendant-carrier on October 6, 1992, indicating that the best course of treatment was to fit plaintiff with a myoelectric prosthesis, and that the hook was to be used as a backup to the myoelectric prosthesis. Defendants denied the request for the myoelectric arm.
7. There is no medical evidence contradicting evidence that plaintiff is a good candidate for myoelectric prosthesis and that the myoelectric arm is reasonably and medically necessary. Defendants have suggested that plaintiff is not using her hook and has adapted to life without an artificial arm.
8. Plaintiff testified that she has difficulty using the hook, that the hook is suitable only for a limited range of tasks, and that she can use it to grasp objects that are in front of her, at approximately waist height, and located on the right side of her body. She testified that she has been unsuccessful in using the hook in her household tasks. She does not use the hook on her job.
9. Around people who know her, such as other employees, plaintiff is comfortable using her stump to manipulate objects, to the extent possible, but in public she tends to hide her left arm, whether with or without the prosthetic hook, because of the reaction that she receives or perceives from the public.
10. Plaintiff was provided a glove to cover the hook in order to render the hook more cosmetically acceptable, although less functional. Plaintiff is of African-American descent and has a medium brown complexion. She testified that the covering for the hook was the same color as the skin of her attorney, who is Caucasian. Because of the difference in color between the plaintiff's skin and the color of the glove, the use of the glove did not alleviate the social stigma that plaintiff reasonably perceived.
11. Plaintiff has attended Duke University Medical Center for an evaluation as to the appropriateness of a myoelectric prosthesis. She was fitted for a short trial with the myoelectric prosthesis and found that she could manipulate the myoelectric hand (or arm) with reasonable facility, could use it comfortably, and believed she could put it to more extensive use at work and at home than she could the hook.
12. The hook frightens plaintiff's daughter and remains in a drawer in plaintiff's home.
13. The medical evidence has indicated the reasonable medical necessity of a myoelectric prosthesis since 1992, and the evidence has not changed in this regard since the plaintiff first filed her hearing request on June 13, 1994. Defendants were aware of the diagnosis and recommendations of Dr. Campbell, of plaintiff's request that these recommendations be followed, and of plaintiff's request that the Commission enter an order to require defendants to provide the arm. Dr. Campbell's deposition was taken on August 23, 1995, almost five years before the deputy commissioner hearing. At the hearing before the deputy commissioner, defendants requested a second opinion concerning the medical necessity for the myoelectric arm, and the deputy commissioner denied this request as manifestly untimely. Defendants abandoned this issue on appeal to the Full Commission, and the deputy commissioner's denial of the independent examination stands.
14. A myoelectric hand would allow plaintiff to reach a higher level of function in the use of her injured left arm because it would, among other benefits, increase the number of tasks which she is able to perform with the arm, increase her speed and accuracy in performing many tasks, and allow her to use a prosthesis without perceiving negative social feedback. These factors would be reasonably likely to result in relief to the plaintiff and a lessening of her disability.
15. The benefits of a myoelectric hand would be in addition to and complimentary to the benefits of using the hook prosthesis, in that different upper limb prostheses are analogous to different tools which are adapted to different tasks, and the provision of a myoelectric hand would enable plaintiff to reach a higher level of independence and function by adding significantly to the number of tasks and situations in which she can beneficially use her injured left arm.
16. At the hearing before the Full Commission, defendants abandoned their position that plaintiff was not entitled to the myoelectric arm. The issue remaining in dispute is defendant's obligation to provide future replacements. Plaintiff states that she wants the myoelectric arm but is reluctant to accept it without the assurance that she will be able to use it in the future. In other words, plaintiff is concerned that she will not be able to afford the required replacement parts, maintenance, and any necessary replacement. Plaintiff has presented evidence to suggest that the myoelectric arm, like other prosthetic devices, has an anticipated five-year life (replacement) cycle, that the arm will require four gloves per year at the cost of $788.00 per glove ($3,152.00 per annum) and an average of $894.60 per year1 for maintenance and repair costs, in addition to the estimated $29,822.00 payment for the arm and related equipment. The evidence is that the total anticipated expense for the myoelectric arm for the five year life cycle is $45,847.00, and that plaintiff has approximately ten cycles anticipated in her lifetime, or an undiscounted total of $458,470.00 over her lifetime. Defendants are willing to provide the initial myoelectric arm but take the position that they are not responsible for the maintenance, repair and replacement of the arm, pursuant to G.S. §
17. There is a substantial risk of necessary future medical care for plaintiff for her compensable injury.
18. The deputy commissioner concluded that plaintiff was entitled to attorney's fees and expenses pursuant to G.S. §
"The question of whether N.C. Gen. Stat. §
97-2 (19) (1991 version) applies to this claim and precludes an award of future replacement of artificial members need not be decided at this time as plaintiff has not reached the end of his healing period and has not been provided an "original" artificial member which is reasonably functional enough to lessen his disability arising from his compensable injury. N.C. Gen. Stat. §97-25 and N.C. Gen. Stat. §97-2 (19)."
Defendants assert that litigation of the unanswered question in Bardel is reasonable, and thereby plaintiff is not entitled to fees and expenses pursuant to Section
19. The deputy commissioner did not err in awarding attorney's fees to plaintiff's counsel pursuant to G.S. §
20. Having reviewed the entire record in this action, the Full Commission finds that defendants' appeal to the Full Commission is not groundless and that defendants have reasonable ground for bringing the appeal to the Full Commission on the issue raised by application of G.S. §
21. Plaintiff has also requested fees pursuant to G.S. §
22. Plaintiff filed her Form 33 to join the issue of whether she was entitled to the myoelectric arm on June 13, 1994.
23. Plaintiff has not received the myoelectric arm, as of the date of the hearing before the Full Commission, and thereby has not reached the maximum medical improvement which she would reach after being fitted with the myoelectric arm and adapting to its use.
2. Plaintiff is entitled to receive a myoelectric arm as reasonable and necessary treatment. G.S. §§
"Medical Compensation. — The term "medical compensation" means medical, surgical, hospital, nursing, and rehabilitative services, and medicines, sick travel, and other treatment, including medical and surgical supplies, as may reasonably be required to effect a cure or give relief and for such additional time as, in the judgment of the Commission, will tend to lessen the period of disability; and any original artificial members as may reasonably be necessary at the end of the healing period." [emphasis added]
In 1994, this provision was amended to read:
"Medical Compensation. — The term "medical compensation" means medical, surgical, hospital, nursing, and rehabilitative services, and medicines, sick travel, and other treatment, including medical and surgical supplies, as may reasonably be required to effect a cure or give relief and for such additional time as, in the judgment of the Commission, will tend to lessen the period of disability; and any original artificial members as may reasonably be necessary at the end of the healing period and the replacement of such artificial members when reasonably necessitated by ordinary use or medical circumstances. [emphasis added]
There is no question that the original artificial myoelectric arm is compensable under either version of Section
3. Defendants assert that the effective date provision of Senate Bill 906 is unconstitutional because it is an ex post facto change in the law. The Full Commission declines to rule upon this issue in this case.See, e.g., Utilities Commission v. Carolina Utility CustomersAssociation, Inc.,
4. Plaintiff has no current right to recover a monetary sum for the repair or replacement of the myoelectric arm. G.S. §
5. At the hearing before the deputy commissioner, defendants unreasonably contested plaintiff's right to a myoelectric arm, and plaintiff is entitled to reasonable attorney's fees in the amount of $2,000.00. G.S. §
6. Plaintiff is entitled to recover costs to the employee, including reasonable attorneys fees, pursuant to Section
2. Defendants shall pay for the replacement of plaintiff's myoeloectric arm "when reasonably necessitated by ordinary use of medical circumstances."
3. Defendants are hereby ORDERED to pay directly to plaintiff's counsel the sum of $3,625.86 for costs and attorney's fees, and plaintiff's attorney shall not charge these fees and expenses to plaintiff.
4. Defendants shall pay the costs of this action.
S/_______________ RENEE C. RIGGSBEE COMMISSIONER
CONCURRING:
S/___________________ BERNADINE S. BALLANCE COMMISSIONER
S/______________________ LAURA KRANIFELD MAVRETIC COMMISSIONER
